Showing posts with label crude imports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crude imports. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Phil Flynn: Peak Oil Mirage

The closer we get to peak oil the further it goes away. As high prices collapsed when the global economic system fell apart the world is now awash in oil. Back around the beginning of this decade Fed Chairman Allan Greenspan warned that peak natural gas production in this country could put us in a competitive disadvantage.

Now it appears that some of the same ideas that took us from peak natural gas to an abundant supply could also change the supply outlook for oil. The Financial Times is reporting that, “A band of entrepreneurial oilmen have found an economic way to extract oil from shale rock, fuelling a frenzy for prospects that has pushed up lease prices and lifted hopes of the first rise in onshore US oil production in decades”.

The Times says, “These small independent oilmen had used hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling to triple estimates of US natural gas supplies and are now applying that same technology to get oil from shale rock”. The FT says that the method could add one million barrels of oil a day to US supplies in five to eight years replacing 10 percent of US crude imports. And that might just.....Read the entire article.

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Oil Falls Most in Five Weeks as China Moves to Curb Liquidity


Crude oil dropped the most in five weeks as China, the world’s second largest oil consuming country, raised bank reserve requirements to curb a credit boom and prevent the economy from overheating. Oil fell as much as 2.1 percent as China increased the proportion of deposits banks must set aside for the first time since 2008. China boosted oil purchases to a record last year, the government reported this week. Crude prices also fell amid forecasts a U.S. cold snap will abate this week. “This is a significant move on the part of the Chinese, and they’re the difference makers on whether the oil demand picture remains robust,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Round Earth Capital, a New York based hedge fund that focuses on food and energy commodities. “If they’re going to try to trim the sails, it’ll be tough for crude to even keep $80 a barrel.”

Crude oil for February delivery fell 76 cents, or 0.9 percent, to $81.76 a barrel at 10:02 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier, the contract touched $80.80 in the biggest daily decline since Dec. 9. Futures rose to $83.95 a barrel yesterday, the highest since Oct. 14, 2008, following the report that China’s crude imports reached a record 203.8 million metric tons last year, or 4.1 million barrels a day.
Today’s move will help remove about 300 billion yuan of liquidity from the Chinese economy, according to estimates by Xing Ziqiang, an economist in Beijing at China International Capital Corp., ranked the top China local brokerage by Asiamoney magazine last year.....Read the entire article.

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