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    Oil Price Daily News Update


    Natural Gas Analysis for the Week of February 13, 2012

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 10:33 AM PST

    Last week, April Natural Gas traded in an inside range, indicating that it may be going through a transition period. This should come as no surprise to chart watchers because two weeks ago when the market formed a closing price reversal bottom, I warned that there may be a 2 to 3 week rally equal to at least 50 percent of the previous swing down. After bottoming at 2.438 on January 23, the market proceeded to confirm a weekly reversal bottom, but its subsequent follow-through rally fell well short of its first upside target at 3.102. The inside…

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    Many Fear New Government Reforms will Destroy the UK Solar Industry

    Posted: 13 Feb 2012 08:23 AM PST

    Young industries such as the renewable energy sectors rely heavily on government funding and incentives to help them achieve a level of competition with the well-established industries out there. The incentives are only needed for a few years to give the young industry time to find its feet and develop the necessary technologies and scale of production to fully support itself. UK government ministers have recently angered the solar industry with proposals that will see incentives cut by 35 percent; significantly lower than other renewable energies…

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    Canadian PM Shills Alberta Oil Sands in China

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 06:01 PM PST

    Canadian Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper is in the midst of an official visit to China. His mission? To convince Beijing’s mandarins to buy Canada’s Alberta oil sands hydrocarbon production, now that Republican Congressional overreach has effectively sidelined the Keystone XL pipeline, designed to transit the oil to U.S. Gulf of Mexico refineries, for the foreseeable future. Harper faces an uphill struggle, as China is questioning the delays in implementing the Northern Gateway pipeline, to transit Alberta’s…

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    Solar Insanity: Why is Obama Obsessed with Solar Energy?

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 05:59 PM PST

    The U.S. Energy Department is throwing a lot of money at solar power recently, with California seemingly getting the bulk of the federal money. President Obama last year set some pretty ambitious renewable energy targets, by American standards, and this year called for an “all-of-the above” strategy for domestic energy. But why put so much political energy into solar? Should there be a bulk renewable energy initiative? Energy Secretary Chu last week said he was putting $12 million behind a so-called incubator program that would fund start-up…

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    Physicists Meet at CERN to Discuss Progress Made on Cold Fusion

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 04:58 PM PST

    Francesco Celani and Yogendra Srivastava will be leading a kind of informal meeting called a colloquium at Europe’s fundamental physics facility, CERN.  The topic, “Overview of Theoretical and Experimental Progress in Low Energy Nuclear Reactions (LENR)” will be discussed March 22, 2012 in the CERN Council Chamber.  Of note is the event will be viewable – live – on the CERN Webcast Service.  Hopefully someone will save it to YouTube. Celani is a prominent Italian physicist at the Italian National Institute…

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    Tunisia – A Possible Electrical Savior of Southern Europe?

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 04:51 PM PST

    Europe, battered by a perfect storm of recession and rising energy requirements, is looking for additional electrical power reserves anywhere it can. Surcease may come from North Africa, and the leading potential state to supply that need might be… Tunisia. Tunisia is endowed with a reliable source of solar power in its southern Saharan region, where the sunshine generates 20 percent stronger solar radiation than even the best locations in Europe. Given its proximity to Italy, Tunisia is in an ideal position to transfer such renewable energy…

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    What Does the Future hold for the World Oil Markets

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 04:49 PM PST

    Never, it would seem, has the oil market been in such a state of disarray. Brent crude, the global benchmark, hit US$117 per barrel this week for the first time since August. The spot price has been rising on concerns over where the showdown with Iran is leading. European consumers have begun to cut back on purchases ahead of an outright ban when sanctions are introduced. Meanwhile the Chinese, usually buyers of some 20 percent of Iran’s output (or about 550,000 barrels a day) are said to have cut back by 285,000 barrels in January and February,…

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    Crude Oil Analysis for the Week of February 13, 2012

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 04:46 PM PST

    The lack of follow-through to the downside led to a fast turnaround in April Crude Oil last week. Although the market closed higher for the week, it remained inside of the previous week’s range and therefore posted an inside week. This pattern often indicates impending volatility with a slight bias to the upside. Besides the limited range week, the market also ping-ponged inside of a retracement zone created by the main range of $114.87 to $75.92. These levels are $95.40 and $99.99.  The longer the market stays hemmed inside of the 50…

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  • Three Major Journals Publish Articles On Limited World Oil Supply

    Three Major Journals Publish Articles On Limited World Oil Supply

    By Gail Tverberg

    13 February, 2012
    Our Finite World

    In the past month, three major peer-reviewed journals have published articles relating to limited world oil supply:

    1. In Science, Technology is Turning U. S. Oil Around But Not the World’s, by Richard A. Kerr;

    2. In Nature, Climate Policy: Oil’s Tipping Point has Passed, by James Murray and David King; and

    3. In Energy, Oil Supply Limits and the Continuing Financial Crisis, by Gail Tverberg.

    The fact that these articles have been published is significant, because articles in the mainstream press, such as Bloomberg’s recent article, Peak Oil Scare Fades as Shale Deepwater Wells Gush Crude, seem to suggest that our oil problems are past. While the US oil supply situation may be a little better, the world supply situation is still very bad, and oil prices are still very high around the world.

    Furthermore, high oil prices tend to have a recessionary effect, and can lead to debt defaults. These issues are described in both the second and third articles above. Thus, there is a substantial chance that high oil prices are contributing to the debt default problem in Europe, and to forecast low world economic growth.

    In this post, I briefly describe these articles.

    In Science, Technology is Turning U. S. Oil Around But Not the World’s, by Richard A. Kerr

    This article points out that even the optimistic estimates, such as BP’s recent Energy Outlook to 2030, see little growth in non-OPEC conventional oil production between now and 2030 (Figure 1).

    Figure 1. BP oil forecast to 2030, from BP Energy Outlook to 2030

    We are thus dependent on growth in OPEC crude oil and in OPEC natural gas liquids, neither of which is assured, given political uncertainties in the Middle East. While technology advances are making possible some new US oil production, this growth is needed to offset declines in existing fields around the world. There is a great temptation by those using new technology to make forecasts using an “overabundance of optimism.” History shows that US oil production has mostly fallen since 1970 (Figure 2).

    Figure 2. History of US production of crude oil, in figure created by EIA (similar to, but not the same as, figure shown Science article).

    In Nature, Climate Policy: Oil’s Tipping Point has Passed, by James Murray and David King

    According to the authors:

    There is less fossil-fuel production available to us than many people believe. From 2005 onwards, conventional crude-oil production has not risen to match increasing demand. We argue that the oil market has tipped into a new state, similar to a phase transition in physics: production is now ‘inelastic’, unable to respond to rising demand, and this is leading to wild price swings. Other fossil-fuel resources don’t seem capable of making up the difference.

    Such major spikes in fuel price can cause economic crises, and contributed to the one the world is recovering from now. The future economy is unlikely to be able to bear what oil prices have in store. Only by moving away from fossil fuels can we both ensure a more robust economic outlook and address the challenges of climate change. This will be a decades-long transformation that needs to start immediately.

    The article talks about how high oil prices erode family budgets, and points out that it seems likely that it wasn’t just the ‘credit crunch’ that triggered the 2008 recession. The oil price crunch was also involved.

    A call-out from the article summarizes a current problem:

    The price of oil is likely to have been a contributor to the euro crisis in southern Europe.

    In Energy, Oil Supply Limits and the Continuing Financial Crisis, by Gail Tverberg

    This is an article I wrote in early 2011, that wasn’t officially published until January 2012. The article can temporarily be downloaded free, as the fifth item down on this list of articles from the January issue.

    In this article, I explain why one would expect high oil prices to cause economic disruptions of many types. If consumers are spending more on high-priced oil (and high-priced food, because both costs tend to rise together), they will cut back on discretionary expenditures, such as going out to restaurants and taking vacations and buying new cars. Workers in affected industries will be laid off.

    There will also be indirect impacts. People who have been laid off from work will tend to default on their loans, as will people who are living paycheck to paycheck and find that the cost of commuting has rising, and the cost of food has also risen. Holders of sub-prime mortgages will be disproportionately represented in the group of those with defaults, since they were among the least qualified loan applicants.

    High oil prices can also be expect to affect housing prices. In part, this occurs because people who spend more on necessities (commuting and food) are less likely to want to buy a move-up home. As a result, there will be a cut-back in demand for homes, and thus in resale prices. Also, at the time that oil prices rose in the 2004-2006 period, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates in an attempt to try to bring oil prices back down. These higher interest rates also tended to reduce demand for move-up homes. I also show that the timing in the drop in US home values matches with what a person would expect, if it were high oil prices, and actions taken by the Federal Reserve in response to high oil prices, that were really behind the drop in home prices.

    Gail E. Tverberg graduated from St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota in 1968 with a B.S. in Mathematics. She received a M.S. in Mathematics from the University of Illinois, Chicago in 1970. Ms. Tverberg is a Fellow of the Casualty Actuarial Society and a Member of the American Academy of Actuaries. Ms. Tverberg began writing articles on finite world issues in early 2006. Since March 1, 2007, Ms. Tverberg has been working for Tverberg Actuarial Services on finite world issues. She is also a frequent contributor to the TheOilDrum.com website, under the name “Gail the Actuary”.

     

  • Peak Oil unable to avert energy crunch

    News 2 new results for PEAK-OIL
    Peak oil unable to avert energy crunch
    gulfnews.com
    By Saadallah Al Fathi, Special to Gulf News Last week I discussed peak oil which happens when the maximum rate of world oil production is reached and the production rate enters terminal decline. Conventional oil production seems to have reached a
    See all stories on this topic »
    Don’t overlook Aussie Gas Stocks
    TheBull.com.au
    No discussion of the outlook for the petroleum contribution to the Australian Oil and Gas Sector would be complete without considering the issue of Peak Oil. For Australia, Peak Oil is the date oil production begins to decline until all reserves are
    See all stories on this topic »
  • Google Oil news

    IEA: Future Sanctions Already Severely Effect Iranian Oil Exports

    Posted: 12 Feb 2012 02:37 PM PST

    In the IEA’s monthly Oil Market Report they have said that the European and US trade sanctions designed to impede Iran’s nuclear program could affect far more than the 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) that the EU normally imports.

    The sanctions are not set to come into effect for another 5 months, but already European customers are avoiding Iranian oil and many other countries such as China and India have been sourcing their oil imports from other nations such as Russia, Saudi Arabia and Africa. “Although there are five months…

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  • Danger to Nuclear Plants

    News 3 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    Study: Nuclear plant threatens drinking water
    Republican Eagle
    A small tritium leak of 27 gallons from the Prairie Island nuclear plant Feb. 3 resulted in opportune timing for two study groups already scheduled to discuss the effects of tritium on drinking water at a press conference Wednesday.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Japan’s Fukushima reactor may be reheating, operator says
    Herald Sun
    TEMPERATURE readings at one of the crippled Fukushima nuclear reactors rose above Japan’s stringent new safety standard but there was no immediate danger, its operator said today. Tokyo Electric Power said one of three thermometers on the No.2 reactor
    See all stories on this topic »
    America’s Green Enemies – OpEd
    Eurasia Review
    It was good news that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the nation’s first nuclear power plants on February 9th, clearing the way for the construction of two reactors by Southern Company at its Plant Vogtle site near Atlanta, Georgia.
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • The fate of new truths: Peak Oil depends on Nature

    The Fate Of New Truths: Peak Oil Appears On “Nature”

    By Ugo Bardi

    11 February, 2012
    Cassandra’s Legacy

    With the publication of a prominent article on “Nature” in January 2012, the concept of “Peak Oil” has made another step forward in the debate on resource depletion. This article has made me rethink of the past ten years of work that I did as a member of ASPO, the association for the study of peak oil. Were we right with our prediction of impending peak oil? In a sense, yes, but the crystal ball is always foggy and it cannot be otherwise. The ASPO predictions were basically right but, as all predictions, they were approximate.

    Working with a simplified model based on Hubbert’s early work of the 1950s, the founders of ASPO, Colin Campbell and Jean Laherrere, proposed in 1998 that the future of oil production would have followed a curve that was to peak at some moment between 2005 and 2010, to decline afterwards. Embedded within the Hubbert model was the concept that the gradually increasing costs of extraction would reduce the profits of the industry and force it to reduce investments.

    As a “first order” model, the Hubbert one is not bad and the ASPO models caught very well the problems that the oil industry was going to face. From 2004 onward, prices have shot up a levels that have changed forever the oil market. But oil production, intended as “all liquids” (that is, including oil from tar sands, biofuels, etc) didn’t show a well defined peak, nor the decline that the Hubbert model predicted. Stubbornly, production has refused to decline and it may even be showing a modest increase in recent times. That doesn’t make the model wrong: as all models, it is an approximation of reality.

    The “peak oil” concept has been often criticized on the basis of a classic idea in economic science: that prices mediate between demand and offer. Hence, oil prices should define what should be counted as “reserves”, intended as something that can, and will be, extracted. High prices should lead to more reserves and we would never run out of anything. It turns out that this criticism was not wrong, although not right, either, and its consequences were perhaps unexpected even for those who proposed it. When scarcity started to be felt in the oil market, the price correction mechanism kicked in. Prices rose and, according to the standard economic theory, that should have stimulated production. It did, in part, but with crude oil the mechanism has become a rat race. The more high prices made production profitable, the more production costs rose. That’s where we hit the ceiling.

    This mechanism is very nicely caught by Murray and King in their article in Nature. The figure reported at the beginning of this post shows it very clearly. Over a certain price, production doesn’t respond any more. It becomes “inelastic”. The graph has to be read taking into account the temporal evolution of both prices and production: very high prices are a recent phenomenon and what we see is what I called the rat race. Even with increasing oil prices, the best that the industry can do is to keep constant the production of combustible liquids.

    So, we are seeing that the price mechanism may slow down the expected production decline, but at the price of causing all sorts of problems. With high prices, the world’s economy must allocate more and more resources to oil extraction and these resources must come from somewhere. Since the economy doesn’t grow any more, keeping oil production constant means that some sectors must shrink and that is not without pain. Much of the present political turmoil in poor countries, for instance, is due to the high prices of food, in turn related to the high cost of oil. And, with prices so high, we see the perverse effect that producers can afford to consume more but, as a result, less oil is left for importers. In a sense, many importing countries have already passed their peak oil.

    As Thomas Huxley said long ago, it is the customary fate of new truths to begin as heresies and to end as superstitions. Peak oil surely began as a superstition and it is still considered as such in some circles. But, with the events of the past few years, it is also attaining the status of truth, as shown by the article by Murray and King, who have clearly understood what lies at the basis of the idea. In some sense, however, peak oil is also taking some elements of a superstition, since it fails to take into account the price mechanism. In the end, reality might be better described by something like the “Seneca model” which takes into account second order effects and that predicts a production plateau followed by a sharp decline. Also this model may be a heresy, right now, but one day may become truth and later on a superstition. As always, the future is never what it used to be.

    References

    The paper by Murray and King on Nature is here (behind a paywall)
    A summary can be found on Scientific American here
    A comment on the New York Times is here
    A criticism by Michael Levi can be found here
    And a defense by Mason Inman, here

    Note 1. I completely agree with the approach of Murray and King regarding the relation of peak oil and climate change. It is true that the two problems are strictly related and that they should be tackled together. However, I also think that the authors should have been more careful in the way they presented this issue. At the start of the article, they say, “….continuing debates about the quality of climate-change science and doubts about the scale of negative environmental impacts have held back political action against rising greenhouse gas emissions. But there is a potentially more persuasive argument for lowering global emissions: the impact of dwindling oil supplies on the economy.” Consider the number of conspiracy theorists around, this paragraph will surely be seen it as “proof” that peak oil is a hoax created by the evil oil companies in order to force customers to pay higher prices for gasoline. Besides, it makes no sense in my opinion to say that scarcity is a good argument to convince people to consume less. It would be, if people behaved rationally, but most people don’t. It reminds me of an experience I had some time ago, when I presented the peak oil case to a rich financial tycoon. He answered to me with something like, “I think you are right. So, I guess I should buy myself a new Ferrari and consume as much as I can, while I can.”

    Note 2. Italian readers of this blog may be interested in this paragraph from Murray and King’s paper. It think it is right on target. “Another powerful example of the effect of increasing oil prices can be seen in Italy. In 1999, when Italy adopted the euro, the country’s annual trade surplus was $22 billion. Since then, Italy’s trade balance has altered dramatically and the country now has a deficit of $36 billion. Although this shift has many causes, including the rise of imports from China, the increase in oil price was the most important. Despite a decrease in imports of 388,000 barrels per day compared with 1999, Italy now spends about $55 billion a year on imported oil, up from $12 billion in 1999. That difference is close to the current annual trade deficit. The price of oil is likely to have been a large contributor to the euro crisis in southern Europe, where countries are completely dependent on foreign oil.”

    Note 3. David King is an old acquaintance of mine and for many years we have been working in parallel in surface science studies. I am not sure if there are deep reasons that make people engaged in surface science to move to peak oil studies but, at least, there are at least two cases!

    Ugo Bardi is a professor of Chemistry at the Department of Chemistry of the University of Firenze, Italy. He also has a more general interest in energy question and is the founder and president of ASPO Italia.