Why Oil Prices Could Remain Low

(Seeking Alpha) There is much hope in the financial markets, with individual investors and oil company employees that oil prices will rise in the months ahead. Many point to the 2008 commodity crash as THE example as to why the oil price decline is likely temporary. However, if we look back further in history we see another situation where the crash in commodity prices marked an extremely long period of oil price suppression.

Posted On :

Why the falling oil price may not lead to boom

(Guardian) There was a time when Blue Monday meant a song by New Order. These days it is the third Monday in January, allegedly the most depressing day of the year.

Whether there is any scientific basis for this claim is debatable, but for what it’s worth the argument is that people feel miserable because Christmas is over, the credit card bills are arriving, it’s dark when you go to work in the morning and it’s dark when you head home.

Posted On :
A Saudi Aramco oil installation in the desert east of Riyadh.

Saudi Aramco – the $10 trillion mystery at the heart of the Gulf state

(The Guardian) Along the King Fahd highway in downtown Riyadh, signs of the country’s wealth glitter and dazzle. Monuments include the massive Kingdom Centre – instantly recognisable by the giant bottle-opener feature formed by its two wings – and the beautiful and futuristic Faisaliyah building. New ones are still rising, like the King Abdullah financial district, still under construction: a reminder of the fat years of high oil revenues under the previous monarch.

Posted On :

All Roads Lead To Peak Oil

(Seeking Alpha) I follow the JODI World Oil Database primarily because it is now four months ahead of the EIA international database. I make some adjustments however. I use the OPEC MOMR “secondary sources” for all OPEC data, where JODI also uses the MOMR but uses their “direct communication” data instead.

Posted On :

What Happened to Oil Prices in 2015?

(Motley Fool) The U.S. Energy Information Administration routinely puts out a Short-Term Energy Outlook, and one component of that outlook is an oil price forecast. Last year at about this time, its STEO forecast that crude would average around $77.75 per barrel in 2015.

Posted On :

Looking Back 10 Years After Peak Oil

(Peak Oil Barrel) Guest post by Verwimp Bruno.

Peak Oil is the moment in time when, on a global scale, the maximum rate of oil production is reached. The moment after which oil production, by nature, must decline forever. Since Earth is a closed system, next to this production (supply) event, there must be an equal demand event: Peak Oil Consumption.

Posted On :