David Seaton's Energy Links®

"The Stone Age came to an end not for a lack of stones and the oil age will end, but not for a lack of oil.'' 

Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani


 

Table of Contents
Editorial
*Oil above $74 - The Economic Times - India
*What Would Happen If Oil Hit $100/Barrel? - Fox News
*High crude oil prices could be here to stay - NBC News
*Venezuela blames U.S. for high oil prices - Business Week
*NIGERIA: Delta militants denounce Obasanjo's plan for oil region- Reuters
*Oil frenzy fuels threats to economic stability - Agence France Press


David Seaton's Energy Links® Editorial - Blueprint for a Nightmare With less than seven months remaining before the midterm congressional elections, which if the Republicans lose could leave Bush vulnerable to impeachment, 55 percent of registered voters told pollsters of Washington Post – ABC News that they plan to vote for the Democrats. That is the largest share of the electorate favoring Democrats in Post-ABC polls since the mid-1980s.  In only one month Bush’s approval rating has fallen 3 percent to a record low of 38 percent and 47 percent "strongly" disapprove of Bush. In the words of Tom Engelhardt, “Is there another example of the rulers of a dominant global power -- who fancied themselves the leaders of a New Rome -- crashing and burning quite so quickly?” Desperate times call for desperate measures; an attack on Iran might save the November elections.
Bush's ratings and credibility are so low that he could never "sell" any new war in advance, especially one featuring a possible nuclear first strike, so this time we may just wake up one morning and find out the nightmare has already begun. As Richard Clarke and Steven Simon wrote in the New York Times, “The current level of activity in the Pentagon suggests more than just standard contingency planning or tactical saber-rattling. The parallels to the run-up to war with Iraq are all too striking: remember that in May 2002 President Bush declared that there was ‘no war plan on my desk’ despite having actually spent months working on detailed plans for the Iraq invasion.” There will be no lack of provocations as Iranian president Ahmadinejad has just as solid reasons to go to war as Bush does, because an American attack on Iran would rally Iran's huge generation of restless, unemployed, but patriotic youth firmly behind the Islamist hardliners.

The usual suspects, the Neocons Weekly Standard, National Review, Wall Street Journal and Commentary, are pushing hard for war. Caroline Glick wrote in the rightwing Israeli, English language Jerusalem Post, “The greatest battle of this war - the battle to prevent the world's most dangerous regime from attaining the most dangerous weapons known to man - has begun. The moment has arrived for President George W. Bush to make clear if he is, in the final analysis, the leader of the free world or its undertaker.” But an editorial in the Forward, the leading U.S. Jewish newspaper, warned against attacking Iran, “It is possible that a surgical strike against Iran's nuclear facilities, executed with competence and precision, could avoid the worst of these nightmares. But that assumes a competence in Washington that we know, based on the record, is absent. Nothing is more certain than that.”
David Seaton


David Seaton's Energy Links®

Oil above $74 - The Economic Times - India
Brent crude hit a new high of $74.22 on Thursday after a sharp drop in US gasoline stocks and concern over supplies due to the row over Iran’s nuclear programme. Brent for June delivery traded 21 cents higher at $73.94 while May delivery Nymex West Texas Intermediate (WTI) rose 9 cents to $72.26, having hit a high of $72.49. The high prices are bad news for Indian oil marketing companies who are already losing money on fuel retailing. They are now also being hit by depressed refining margins. The oil companies are making cash losses of over Rs 5 for every litre of petrol sold and Rs 3/ litre on diesel. In the latest weekly US inventory data, gasoline stocks sank 5.4 million barrels, more than double the expected 2.5 million fall. The US Department of Energy reported supplies are now 4.6% below the levels a year ago. This is the time of the year when refiners usually begin stocking up for the summer driving season, but many refineries which ran at higher capacity to cover for those closed following last year’s hurricanes, are now undertaking extended and deeper maintenance. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran’s president, said oil had not yet reached its “real value” despite the recent price surge, while Kazem Vaziri-Hamaneh, the country’s oil minister, said Iran backed the current Opec output ceiling and said the cartel was producing at full capacity. The head of the International Energy Agency, responsible for 4 billion barrels of potential emergency reserves, reiterated on Wednesday that the agency was ready to release oil stocks if Iran stopped exports. But the concern remained that the world’s fourth largest producer may cut supplies if its nuclear ambitions lead to sanctions. Oil analysts say losing Iranian supplies will have a massive impact on the market and there is no way other middle eastern producers are going to be able to make up for that loss. Light sweet crude is favoured by refiners to make gasoline but Opec’s spare capacity is heavy crude. WTI is a light sweet crude. Nigeria produces the in-demand light crude, but nearly a quarter of its output, some 5,50,000 barrels per day, has been shut for two months due to militant attacks. Separately, Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez has threatened to blow up the country’s oilfields in the event of a US invasion, which he considers a serious possibility.
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What Would Happen If Oil Hit $100/Barrel? - Fox News
Gas five bucks a gallon? Easy, if oil hits a hundred bucks a barrel. What else happens if oil goes that high? I got a lot of e-mail which you'll see later from people claiming lots of good things would happen, just like Thomas Friedman of The New York Times said a day or two ago. People would buy gas-stingy cars. Detroit would make gas-stingy cars. OK, there are two good things. Friedman probably wouldn't consider it a good thing, but I think we'd punch holes in ANWR and get the oil out. The New York Times once called that drilling in the cathedral, so I assume they wouldn't like that result. We might build some new refineries — which various laws now block — which is good unless you live nearby. Overall, I am hearing a lot of glib commentary on what improvements we would see because Americans would break their oil habit. But I think people are forgetting what a worldwide economic contraction would really look like. In this country people who need oil to get to work would be hurt — commuters and all those contractors you see racing around in pick-ups. And as American shoppers cut back on their mall addiction, you would see the economy hurt. After all this is a consumer driven economy and that would ripple around the world and put a bunch of just emerging economies on the ropes. Too bad for you people in the developing world who just got off subsistence living — go back to it —because here in the big countries we're expecting great things from this hundred buck a barrel oil. Even if you foresee the greater good in high priced oil, somebody is going to get hurt bad and it could be you. Careful of what you wish for, you may get it.
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High crude oil prices could be here to stay - NBC News
Oil prices continued to march higher this week, briefly hitting record levels Thursday before easing slightly. And with the global economy demanding more oil every day to fuel rapid growth, and oil producers struggling to expand supplies, the upward pressure on prices shows no signs of letting up. Futures contracts for light, sweet crude, available for delivery within a month, changed hands on the New York Mercantile Exchange well above $72 a barrel, extending a run that has lifted prices by more than $10 in the past month. The sources of the upward price pressure are varied. For starters, the world's thirst for oil seems to be undiminished by rising prices. On the eve of President Hu Jintao’s U.S. visit, for example, China announced that its red hot economy had grown by more than 10 percent in the fourth quarter -- stronger than expected. That’s more than twice as fast the U.S. economy, which is posting healthy economic gains of its own. The world’s demand for more oil comes as supplies are more vulnerable than at any time in the past 30 years. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which has long provided global markets with a cushion of extra production capacity, is now pumping as fast as it can. Production facilities by OPEC producers Nigeria and Iraq are under attack by armed insurgents, raising the threat of supply interruptions. Growing tensions with Iran have raised fears that the 4.1 million barrels a day it produces could once again become a political weapon, much as it did when a cutoff of oil after the Iranian revolution of 1979 touched off a spike oil prices and long lines at American gasoline stations. With multiple pinch points looming, even minor threats to the global oil supply chain can send prices surging. “If somebody sneezes in any part of the world everybody catches cold.” said Fadel Gheit, an oil industry analyst at Oppenheimer and Co. Ordinarily, higher commodity prices encourage development of new supplies to take advantage of greater profit potential. As oil prices have risen, so has investment in developing new supplies. But it takes years to bring new supply to market. Despite the billions invested worldwide in new production capacity, those new supplies haven’t come online fast enough to prevent the doubling in crude oil prices over the past two years. And it remains to be seen whether additional investment will bring down long-term prices. With most of the world's potential new oil finds mapped and explored, discoveries of major new reserves of oil have been few and far between. Some analysts and oil industry veterans believe that most of the world’s cheap oil has already been found. Higher prices are also supposed to cut demand, and there are some early signs that may be happening. Sales of gas-guzzling SUVs and light trucks have fallen sharply in the U.S. But overall demand for oil continues to rise. One reason: adjusted for the effects of inflation, oil is still cheaper than it was when prices spiked in 1979 -- to levels over $80 a barrel in today's dollars. And despite the visibility of pump prices, and the outrage they provoke among consumers, the overall impact on the average family budget is still relatively small. “A 50-cent rise in gasoline still represents less than 1 percent of disposable income,” said Matthew DiFrisco, an analyst who follows the restaurant industry at Thomas Weisel Partners. "So it's roughly about $200 to the average American.” The same is true for the entire U.S. economy. After the oil shocks of the 1970s, big gains in efficiency -– from homeowners insulating their attics to businesses streamlining supply chains to cut shipping costs -– helped make barrel of oil work harder. Today, it takes about half the oil to produce each dollar of U.S. Gross Domestic Product than it did before the oil price spikes of the the 1970s. But those statistics are only averages. If you're selling digitally-recorded songs over the Internet, higher oil prices have little impact on your bottom line. If you’re a trucking company or an airline, on the other hand, your profits are getting hammered -– despite the increased business that a growing economy is providing. “For most airlines, I think all the gains that they're seeing on the revenue side are being wiped out by these high fuel costs," Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly said Thursday. Like many heavy users of fuel, Southwest has hedged in the futures market, buying oil when prices were lower but taking delivery years in the future -- Kelly said the airline has locked in oil deliveries through 2009. That’s another big reason impact of the rise in oil prices has been blunted -– so far. When headlines describe oil prices at new highs, that price only applies to oil bought today and delivered in 30 days or less. But much of the oil used by industrial users like refiners or manufacturers has already been bought at a lower price. That means the price of each barrel left unspoken for on the open market -- bought and sold by speculators as well as end users -– is instantly whipsawed by any news that could have an impact on supply or demand. So even as oil today flows smoothly through the system, with relatively strong reserves in storage, the threat of future supply interruptions can send prices spiking today. And a part of the price spike ends up the pockets of the investors who are on the winning side of each of those trades. “All the major investment houses in the world are making huge amounts of profit trading oil futures,” said Gheit. “And guess what? There is no shortage of oil today. This is speculation that is driving this higher.”
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Venezuela blames U.S. for high oil prices - Business Week
enezuelan President Hugo Chavez blamed the United States for the high cost of oil Thursday, saying the American hard line on Iran was driving prices to record levels. Chavez predicted that the cost of oil would soar far higher if the standoff over Iran's nuclear program led to a U.S. attack on the Islamic republic. Oil prices fell slightly Thursday after reaching a record high above $72 a barrel. "It could reach $100 ... It is up to the United States," Chavez told reporters as he arrived in southern Brazil on a trade mission. He attributed the already-high price to American "bellicose statements and the American president's threats against Iran." "They must abandon the option for war against Iran," Chavez said. "Iran has the right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes." The U.N. nuclear watchdog agency is preparing to release a report next week on Iran's nuclear program, which the Iran says is for peaceful energy generation. The U.S. and its allies believe Iran is seeking nuclear weapons. President Bush has dismissed media reports that the U.S. has made plans to attack Iran if its nuclear program is not halted. Chavez, a constant critic of U.S. policy, warned Wednesday that his government would blow up its own oil fields if the United States ever were to attack Venezuela, the world's fifth-largest oil exporter. Chavez said his country would continue exporting petroleum to U.S. ports, "unless they attack us, in which case there will be no oil." The U.S. ambassador to Venezuela, William Brownfield, told reporters in Caracas on Thursday that he hoped oil exports to the U.S. would continue, saying the two countries were "natural partners for geographic reasons." Chavez is looking to diversify Venezuela's all-important petroleum markets away from the United States as he seeks to increase oil exports to Latin America, the Caribbean and energy-hungry China. Brazil, Venezuela and Argentina have been studying a proposed transcontinental pipeline linking their countries to Venezuelan natural gas fields.
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NIGERIA: Delta militants denounce Obasanjo's plan for oil region- Reuters
Militants targeting oil installations in Nigeria's southern Niger Delta on Wednesday denounced plans unfolded by President Olusegun Obasanjo to redress grievances in the impoverished region, vowing instead more attacks to increase local control of oil wealth. Attacks and hostage-taking against oil operations since January by the group which calls itself the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) recently cut Nigeria's oil exports of 2.5 million barrels a day by more than 20 percent. Earlier this month, the same group released 13 foreign oil workers after a five-week hostage ordeal. Obasanjo met with moderate Niger Delta leaders in the Nigerian capital Abuja on Tuesday and unfolded a plan to create 20,000 jobs in the region and invest in roads, education and health for its people. While hard line Niger Delta leaders boycotted the meeting, MEND dismissed Obasanjo's offer of "menial jobs". "For 50 years the wealth of our people has been looted by the Nigerian government and it believes this injustice can be remedied by providing menial jobs to indigenes of the Niger Delta," MEND said in a statement emailed to reporters. "What we have demanded…is the control of our resources which the Nigerian government has so far ignored," it added. MEND also restated its demands for the release of militia leader Moujahid Dokubo-Asari held on treason charges and former state governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha who is facing corruption charges. It also wants Royal Dutch Shell, the largest oil operator in Nigeria, to pay US $1.8 billion as damages for pollution to ethnic Ijaw communities in oil-rich Bayelsa state as ordered by a Nigerian court. While no new attacks have been carried out by MEND in more than a month, the group is still warning oil companies to end their operations in the Delta, which produces nearly all of Nigeria's 2.5 million barrels of oil production. "Our halt in attacks was more of a tactical suspension which has come to its end," it said. "At a time of our choosing we will resume our attacks with greater devastation and no compassion on those who choose to disregard our warnings." MEND claims to be fighting for the interests of the impoverished inhabitants of the Niger Delta, who live with no electricity or running water and feel cheated out of the oil wealth by Western oil companies and the government of Nigeria, the world's eighth largest crude producer.
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Oil frenzy fuels threats to economic stability - Agence France Press
While western countries have so far managed to avoid recession despite a trebling of oil prices, economists fear the surge is fuelling imbalances in the world economy and increasing the threat of a financial crisis. Oil prices touched a historic peak of 70 dollars a barrel over the past week, just ahead of the International Monetary Fund’s Spring Meetings starting April 22. In Washington, the IMF is expected to deliver a warning about the more pernicious effect of persistent high oil prices. Global current account imbalances are likely to persist for longer than if oil were, "heightening the risk of a sudden, disorderly adjustment," according to lender. "In some ways, this is the third act in the saga of imbalances," said Raghuram Rajan, research director at the IMF. "In the first act in the late 1990s, foreign capital was attracted to the United States causing a counterpart current account deficit. In the second act, expansionary policies in the US caused the deficit to widen," he added. With little sign that oil traders are likely to temper their ardour as long as international tensions over Iran—OPEC’s second largest oil producer—persist, economists believe the situation is increasingly fraught. "The likelihood of a bond market crash has increased considerably in recent months and there is a joint risk of a slide in the dollar," Veronique Riches-Flores, chief economist at the French bank Societe Generale, said. The persistent rise in oil prices is "a major risk for bond markets and consequently a major risk for the world economy," she added. The United States is relying on the huge dollar reserves held by Asian central banks and oil producing countries to finance its deficit. Without them, the US currency would lose a crucial prop and could collapse. "The big fear is a chain reaction that would start with the external creditors of the United States, especially the central banks," said Antoine Brunet, chief economic strategy at HSBC CCF bank. Brunet points to the recent surge in the price of gold, a traditional refuge for investors. "It’s a sign of concern about inflation and about the US external deficits," he emphasized. "All this is obviously not only down to oil, but it’s clear that, in the current context, oil represents a far greater risk than anything else we’ve seen in recent years," Roche-Flores explained.
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