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  • Oil Supermajors' Resources Might Be Drying Up [View article]
    Good read, thanks for the info. Is the Bakken field in North Dakota/Montana considered an EOR? It's a pretty rich field from what I hear, but requires horizontal drilling in a narrow layer fairly deep down.
    Nov 30 18:04 pm |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • International Oil Companies: The Challenges Ahead [View article]
    Interesting read, although I'm not sure what the recycle ratio is. I heard on the news radio this morning about the EIA overstating future supply in recent years due to political pressure. Big surprise there.
    Nov 10 10:30 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Geopolitical Energy: Centered on the Caspian Sea (Part 2 of 2) [View article]
    Fitzman, I haven't read the book, altho it definitely sounds interesting, so I don't know the timeline of talks with the Taliban. I'm sure funding for Afghanistan dropped significantly after the Russia pull-out however, and we couldn't ignore the terrorist aspect after 9/11. For the years in between I need more information.

    WRT Iranian nukes, it's probably a combination of motivations. Close neighbors (including Israel and Shiite-run countries) are definitely part of it, but upsetting the U.S. would be a good side-affect for them.

    Mythbuster - We will still use fossil fuels in the future, but the idea that the U.S. can support its current rate of use by North American supplies (let alone just U.S. supplies) is a dangerous fallacy. Efficiency and conservation are the first two steps we should take for immediate improvement, then renewables, including geothermal and improving the grid to handle varying loads of wind power. Recharge electric cars overnight. Battery R&D. These are things to improve the American economy, not thinking that drilling is our only solution.
    Jan 08 12:58 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Geopolitical Energy: Centered on the Caspian Sea (Part 2 of 2) [View article]
    Good article, good food for thought. But I disagree on the Talibans - I think they were considered our friends while they were fighting Russia (there is the line of thought that the bankruptcy of U.S.S.R. from low oil prices during the Reagan years and their military defeat in Afghanistan is what allowed Poland and the Communist Bloc countries to break free of Russia). Once we no longer needed the Taliban to fight Russia, we lost interest (see Charlie Wilson's war), in the subsequent vacuum they joined up with Al Qaeda and bin Laden. They always treated their women and history badly, but only after 9/11 did we agree they were really terrorists and actually enemies.
    Jan 05 16:36 pm |Rating: 0 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Americans Forget High Oil Prices Too Quickly [View article]
    Totally agree with a columnist, which is kind of unusual, but I have a couple comments:
    1) the good years under Clinton were probably due in large part to the exceptionally cheap oil of that time. I expected a recession to come from high oil prices, but was surprised by the extent of the housing/finance collapse. (This might buy us time with oil supply). Even with today's cheap-ish oil I doubt we'll ever get back to times like the Clinton years in the next couple decades as oil prices cannot sustainably drop any lower than what they are. There was speculation on the top side in summer, now there's speculation on the low side.

    2) I am continually surprised by conservatives who think the status quo is patriotic and we need to buy big American vehicles. Putting our economy totally under the will and abilities of unstable and unfriendly countries is so dangerous it should be considered un-American, even treasonous, to use an SUV for commuting to an office job.
    Dec 08 11:04 am |Rating: +2 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Reasons to Love 3-Digit Oil [View article]
    sharksm, I agree with your basic points (We shouldn't mandate XOM, BP, etc. to do or not do certain things, though they may do it on their own, and we should invest in alt. energy R&D and production).
    But we can't drill our way out of this problem. We simply don't have enough oil in our control (ANWR, off-shore, etc) to raise production enough to lower prices. I'm sure eventually we'll drill there anyway., but let's save it for the real crisis yet to come.
    And your original post suggested electric cars are expensive & unrealistic, which I disagree with. We are going to see an explosion of new cars (finally!) in the next 4 years - hybrids, PHEVs, BEVs, due to market forces. CARB, PNGV and other government mandates tried to lead companies here proactively, but it took market reaction to get real movement. Unfortunately American companies were slower to react than others.
    Jun 19 11:22 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Reasons to Love 3-Digit Oil [View article]
    Stockpikr has a point. Fuel cells in particular are not a magic bullet. But electric cars are more efficient than ICE, they haven't been used because of entrenched beliefs and perception about battery needs. We need to make rational changes when faced with a coming crisis (it isn't here yet, folks!). Electric cars are part of the solution, but not the only part. Unfortunately, Brahm might be more correct than we want to think.
    PaulK, even if abiotic oil is true (definitely not a mainstream idea), it would be so hard to find and so far to drill to these ultra-deep sources that oil prices wouldn't be any lower than they are today. Read the above story about Brazil's ultra-deep wells.
    Jun 18 12:48 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Reasons to Love 3-Digit Oil [View article]
    Sharksm, the energy companies (XOM, CVN, etc) are in the energy business. Their oil supplies are drying up or being taken over by nationalized corporations. They need to come up with new energy sources to stay in business, BP is not promoting itself as 'Beyond Petroleum' for nothing. Get informed.
    Electric cars do not need to cost $45K, with mass production they will be equivalent to cars on the market, with a lot less maintenance and repair needed. They can be powered by unused electric capacity at night, with a very minimal increase in CO2 - saving CO2 by reducing (by attrition) the number of inefficient gas guzzlers on the road. An existing ICE vehicle is <30% efficient (converting fuel to motion), electric vehicles are about 90% efficient.
    Last point - our own oil supplies will be fully tapped, I'm sure, but why not wait until we need the oil to keep our farms running, no reason to use our own oil now just to keep John Doe driving to the grocery store in his Chevy Tahoe. We don't have enough to keep ourselves powered for long at all, or we would already have done this in the oil embargo of '79.
    Jun 18 12:41 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Oil Manipulations Exposed [View article]
    Brian Pursley - The first article trusts the middle east numbers for their oil reserves, even though there is good evidence those are politically manipulated (their country quotas are based on that) and there is no verification of any of those numbers. The last two articles don't argue for abiotic production, but do say there are large, biological sources of oil deeper down. If that is the case, they are feeding the higher sources sporadically or only in certain locations, since most sources of oil have not shown any signs of recovery, in fact many have post-peak production declines sharper than expected (North Sea, Mexico). Certainly not a 'renewable, infinite' resource as you say, and I'm hanging onto my '06 Prius for many more years.

    T Stephens - good post, even with the typos. If the hedge funds/futures market were suddenly the cause for the run-up in prices like the author is saying, why not the other commodity markets, and why not ten years ago also? I'm not going to say there is no manipulation or deceit at all in the market place, but that's not the cause of our current high prices. We're hitting peak oil production, and the sooner we accept that, the sooner we can create real solutions.
    May 27 17:30 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Oil Manipulations Exposed [View article]
    Brian - Not sure about your post. Oil is not infinite, even if you buy into the fringe abiotic hypothesis (mostly championed by Russia, which is now in production decline). We didn't take Iraq's oil in 1990, Bush Sr. knew there was no exit strategy if we took out their government, we just kicked them out of Kuwait (which would substantially increase their oil reserves and shipping access for oil, so yes, it was about oil, intelalum).
    Timsinoil - price of crude has risen more often than not lately, why single out 2000's election? You could look at the terror alerts in the 2004 election for easier political manipulations.
    Mikey - if this is a bubble (and it could easily be froth on top of a fundamental increase) it will hurt us at the pump, then at the grocery store, then in the unemployment line, and that's bad for everybody. That's why this is important, even if you personally can make short-term profits in trading.

    We can't drill our way out of this. It can help marginally, but it's not a major piece of the solution. It's things we can do - driving the speed limit, with tires at proper pressure, will reduce our gasoline consumption 10%. Efficient , reasonably sized vehicles will save another 25%-50%. Electric vehicles and living close to work will be a part of our future.
    May 27 11:28 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Oil Manipulations Exposed [View article]
    Interesting article. But the Nymex trading mechanisms haven't changed dramatically in the last four years that I know of, so why is that the cause of the higher prices?

    Peak oil is hitting, the demand and supply curves are separating, global demand has increased despite the author's statement otherwise, and supply is peaking and will go down. I am not an oil "apologist" to use the author's biased terms, I am a realist. I've read about the petroleum supply for years. I know Mexico's supply has peaked, the North Sea has peaked, Prudhoe Bay has peaked. Saudi Arabia's king has stated they won't increase production after next year, and give reasons for only minor increases now, indicating they are really peaking but not admitting it. We can definitely drill more here in the states, but it is a drop in the bucket, we peaked a long time ago. What we need is a presidential administration that will support real answers like conservation, cellulosic ethanol and electric vehicles. Efficiency = productivity, it's a good thing for business and the home.
    May 27 11:11 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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