Producers - June 4
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
"Marri will seek to persuade council members that the oil production must be linked to the country's actual development needs not the needs of foreign consumers," Alriyadh newspaper said in a report from the capital Riyadh. "He will tell the Council that keeping sufficient oil quantities underground is a good investment for the future as oil prices will then be higher…he will argue that this will be better than producing more oil and generating financial surpluses on the grounds these surpluses are causing inflation."
Tokman added, however, that residential customers in Santiago won't be affected due to a surplus of gas accumulated in the GasAndes pipeline. "Argentine Planning Minister Julio de Vido has informed me that due to labor conflicts affecting the province of Santa Cruz and others, the production of natural gas in Argentina has fallen and for this reason it was necessary to cut the supply of gas to Chile for a few days this week," Tokman told reporters. Related: ... Argentina has guaranteed supply of natural gas for domestic and business needs in central Chile, home to the nation's capital and most of the population.
“The principal direction is the creation of a complete line of ships and equipment to extract and transport oil and gas from offshore deposits,” said Mr. Putin. “This includes drilling platforms, ice-class gas carriers and icebreakers.” Building new ships to develop Russia’s offshore resources was the FIRST item on the agenda of the FIRST cabinet meeting of the new Medvedev government. Russia will leverage its long and proud tradition of building exceptional vessels for its navy and commerce fleet. The maritime-industrial decline of the post-Soviet era is coming to an end. “Priorities have been decided,” said Deputy Prime Minister S. Ivanov, “We have enough money.” Ah, music to one’s ears… “We have enough money.” When was the last time anyone in the US heard a politician make such an affirmative, purposeful declaration? And to learn of these developments you have to read about them in the Sakhalin Times, not the New York Times or Los Angeles Times. U.S. news media, of course, have other things to cover — like motorists whining about the price of gasoline. Each nation has its different priorities, I guess. What you see depends on where you stand. So where does the US stand on “energy?” While Russia is developing, the US is ignoring events. The political class, and its media enablers, rush headlong towards the energy-equivalent of the Little Big Horn. More on the topic here ["Shipyards to Focus on Energy Vessels" at Sakhalin Times].
It gave no reason for the decrease.
... The main problem, however, is an extremely common one. Indonesia has exploited its fattest hydrocarbon targets, and the remaining exploration sites cannot make up for the decline from its existing oil fields.
The model is one way to analyze global oil flows and is useful to the extent that it dramatizes the very real fact that since oil exporters’ economies are growing rapidly with their new riches, they are using an increasing amount of their own oil internally. If their oil production also happens to be in decline, then their exports will decline even more rapidly. We have discussed this phenomenon extensively in regard to Mexico, which presents a stark challenge to U.S. oil supplies in particular over the next few years. What the ELM fails to consider is the exports by countries that are increasing their oil production sufficiently so that they are also increasing their exports. Moreover, the model tends to cover up the fact that much of the growth in global oil demand (in fact, about half of it presently) is from oil exporting countries like Russia and the Middle East. Therefore only the demand for oil from countries that do not export oil is required to be supplied from net exports, and that excludes a good deal of global demand. |
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