ODAC Newsletter - June 27
by Staff
Welcome to the ODAC Newsletter, a weekly roundup from the Oil Depletion Analysis Centre, the UK registered charity dedicated to raising awareness of peak oil. The announcement from Jeddah on Sunday that Saudi Arabia is to raise oil production by 200,000 bpd did little at the beginning of the week to bring down oil prices. The announcement came against the backdrop of more attacks by militants in Nigeria, which reduced Shell’s off-shore production by 225,000 bpd as well as causing on-shore cuts from Chevron. What the Saudi meeting did indicate was that OPEC’s ability to manage the price as a cartel is under strain with both Saudi and Kuwait acting independently and other members already pumping flat out. In short Saudi Arabia has been unable to convince that it holds sufficient swing production to offset disruption in supply from elsewhere. The report from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) later in the week that non-OPEC production is falling, but that it estimates an increased global demand for fuel of 50% by 2030 and much of that in transport fuel, is chilling. Even if such production were remotely possible the consequences for the environment would be catastrophic. Clearly the EIA does now see limits to the potential for growth in Saudi output and has reduced its forecast, but head of the organization Guy Caruso is optimistic about Russia. This is not an optimism shared by ODAC trustee David Strahan in his piece on the state of Russian oil and the BP TNK row. The high price of fuel, especially for transport is however having an impact on demand and also habits. In the US demand is down. In March, Americans drove 11 billion fewer miles on public roads than in the same month the previous year - the sharpest one-month drop since records began in 1942. In Northern Mexico diesel supplies ran low as prices drew customers from over the border. In the UK public transport suppliers are seeing increased usage and in China the government implemented a major increase in prices in order to improve energy efficiency. It’s been a busy week for Gordon Brown who has realised that his own political survival relies on putting energy into energy. His speech today at the Government's Low Carbon Economy Summit announced a new determination to push through an energy “revolution”. He even stated that “... a low carbon society will not emerge from 'business as usual'. It will require real leadership from government.... It will mean new kinds of consumer behaviour and lifestyles”. So why then is his party sticking so tenaciously to business as usual in the form of globalization and the determination to build a third runway at Heathrow? Join us! Become a member of the ODAC Newsgathering Network. Can you regularly commit to checking a news source for stories related to peak oil, energy depletion, their implications and responses to the issues? If you are checking either a daily or weekly news source and would have time to add articles to our database, please contact us for more details. Oil Russia Food Climate Politics UK Editorial NotesText and commentary at original. Original article available here |
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