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Autor Tópico: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal  (Lida 308151 vezes)

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2100 em: 2024-08-26 16:40:24 »
Force majeure...


«Brent Prices Jump after Oil-Rich Libya Declares 'Force Majeure' Across All Oil Production

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by Tyler Durden

Monday, Aug 26, 2024 - 03:00 PM


Brent crude prices are surging above the $81/bbl mark on Monday morning, driven by two major headlines:

    Middle East on edge after Israeli strike on Hezbollah targets in southern Lebanon
    Libya's eastern-based government said it will stop all oil production and exports

The primary driver between the two headlines is Bloomberg's report that Libya's eastern government plans to shut down oil production and exports after its Tripoli-based rival moved to replace the central bank leadership.

Eastern authorities said the declared "force majeure" applies to all oil fields, export terminals, and all other oil facilities.

Infighting between the two governments has been ongoing for the last week, centering around who leads the Central Bank of Libya (CBL). There are mounting risks that a UN-brokered peace deal could collapse.

"The internationally acknowledged government in the country's west has been seeking to replace the governor Sadiq Al-Kabir, who has refused to step down. A government delegation entered the regulator's offices today to take over," according to Bloomberg.

Here's more on the situation from Bloomberg:

    The announcement comes amid an attempt to oust CBL governor Al-Siddiq al-Kabir. Earlier this month, the Tripoli-based Presidential Council (PC) voted unanimously to appoint Mohammed al-Shukri as CBL governor, replacing Al-Kabir.

    Over the weekend, local media outlets reported that the new board had taken up its duties and that armed men had abducted several CBL officials.

    The east-based House of Representatives (HoR) and the High Council of State (HCS) both issued statements condemning what they described respectively as attempts to "storm" and "seize control" of the CBL - in apparent reference to the board taking up office at the CBL headquarters.

    Last week, HoR Speaker Aguila Saleh had warned that removing Al-Kabir could result in shutting down oil production and stopping the transfer of oil revenues to the CBL.

In a separate Bloomberg report, the east-based government warned about "attacks" against employees at the CBL and the attempts by "outlaw groups" to enter "the CBL headquarters by force."

What's critical to understand is that a force majeure across all oil fields, ports, and installations will lead to the interruption of oil production, which totaled about 1.15 million barrels a day last month. The biggest oil field, Sharara, pumping about 270,000 barrels, has been halted.

    What Happens if We Lose All of Libya’s Crude Oil Exports?

    Daily Energy Report #Oil #Libya #OPEC #Russia #LNG https://t.co/UrSfvvIRdH pic.twitter.com/O1wL57sUpQ
    — Anas Alhajji (@anasalhajji) August 22, 2024

Brent crude prices jumped 2.6% in markets to $81.09/bbl. Prices have been range-bound since early 2023, basing around the $75-$80 level and occasionally jumping above $90 on geopolitical risks stemming from the Middle East. Down pressure on Brent in recent months originated from economic slowdowns in China and risks mounting of a downturn in the US.

Two weeks ago, we outlined to readers that bullish positioning in Brent by investors was cut to the lowest level on record, mostly due to rising concerns over a global economic slowdown. To us, this signaled a 'price rebound' was ahead.

"Oil blockades are a time-honored tradition in Libya. Unlike recent ones, that have been driven mostly by locals demanding jobs and better living conditions and are relatively easy to resolve, this one is political in nature. Political blockades tend to last several months. A Libya disruption will likely amplify the price impact we've seen over the weekend from the latest round of the Israel-Hezbollah airwar," said Fernando Ferreira, director of geopolitical risk service at the Rapidan Energy Group.

Citigroup analysts noted earlier that a decline in exports could temporarily push Brent prices into the mid-$80s range. Combined with rising geopolitical risks in the Middle East, further deterioration could send crude prices even higher.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/brent-prices-jump-after-oil-rich-libya-declares-force-majeure-across-all-oil-production
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2101 em: 2024-08-26 16:43:49 »
&

«ExxonMobil: Oil Demand Will be Over 100 Million Bpd in 2050

By Charles Kennedy - Aug 26, 2024, 10:30 AM CDT

As the rivalry over global oil demand projections continues to intensify, supergiant Exxon Mobil on Monday chimed in to forecast that crude demand will continue to be over 100 million barrels per day through 2050, contradicting other forecasts that come in much lower, Reuters reported.

The forecast from Exxon, which is planning to see output of 4.3 million barrels of oil and gas per day this year, is at odds with other forecasts, both among its peers and among analysts.

Exxon has also estimated that in 2050, 67% of the global energy mix will be fossil fuels, down from 68% last year.

Exxon’s full-year 2024 projected output represents 30% more than peer Chevron’s, according to Reuters, and the company’s demand projection is 25% greater than BP’s released in July, predicting that global oil demand will peak next year at around 102 million bpd, while wind and solar capacity will continue along their fast growth trajectory.

BP, which is planning to slash production to around 2 million bpd by 2030, sees oil consumption gradually declining over the second half of the outlook to around 75 million bpd in 2050. The drop is, however, much more pronounced in Net Zero, with demand falling to just 25 million-30 million bpd by 2050.

Late last week, Morgan Stanley revised its oil price forecast downward to reflect expectations of more OPEC and non-OPEC supply coupled with indications of weakening demand. Morgan Stanley lowered its global oil demand growth estimate from 1.2 million bpd to 1.1 million bpd for this year, saying it anticipates a tight Q3, with stabilization in Q4 and potentially a surplus by 2025. The firm also cut its Brent price forecast for the fourth quarter to $80 per barrel, down from $85, and now expects prices to gradually decline to $75 per barrel by the end of 2025, slightly lower than their previous estimate of $76.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/ExxonMobil-Oil-Demand-Will-be-Over-100-Million-Bpd-in-2050.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2102 em: 2024-09-01 19:43:41 »
Será??   :-\


«Hartnett: The Commodity Bull Market Is Just Getting Started

teaser image

Debt, deficits, demographics, reverse-globalization, AI & net zero policies all inflationary

SUN SEP 1, AT 12:20 AM»


https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hartnett-commodity-bull-market-just-getting-started
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2103 em: 2024-09-06 17:11:16 »
por agora, o crude está em crash...   :(
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2104 em: 2024-09-11 10:42:17 »
Shortages...    :-\


«Oil Facing Physical Shortage Crisis: API Crude Draws 9 Of Past 10 Weeks As Cushing Hits Tank Bottoms

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by Tyler Durden

Wednesday, Sep 11, 2024 - 12:20 AM


It was very much a given that ahead of tonight's debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, the one variable that the state does control - the price of oil - will move in the direction that gives its preferred candidate the biggest benefit, and sure enough oil plunged more than 3%, dropping to the lowest price since December 2021 (right before it quickly doubled over the next 3 months).

Yet while the pre-debate FUD was out in full force today, blaming everything from collapsing Chinese demand (which, by the way, is total bullshit as Jeff Currie explained), to soaring supply (which also is ridiculous, since oil - a commodity - trades on spot supply and demand, not what may or may not happen in 5 years),  something strange has emerged: as Goldman Yulia Zhestkova Grigsby wrote in a note today, we once again have unprecedented divergence between the physical oil market (where demand remains quite resilient) and the paper oil market (where, as noted earlier, funds and CTAs have never been more bearish).

This is what the Goldman analyst wrote (much more in the full note available to pro subs):

    The Brent crude price continued sliding down over the last week to the lowest level since December 2021, with the disappointing US jobs report on Friday pushing Brent below our $70/bbl floor in tandem with the broader risk asset sell-off. An extension of OPEC+ production cuts till December helped to keep the floor under crude prices last week. Brent edged up on Monday as well on increasing risks to Gulf of Mexico oil production from the strengthening Tropical Storm Francine and on higher US SPR purchases.

    Despite the macro-driven selloff, our trackable net supply decreased by -0.6mb/d last week on lower Russia and Canada production and on a moderate recovery in our China demand nowcast. In contrast to stronger physical demand, oil financial demand dropped to its new all-time low, and has plummeted by a massive average 7mb/d over the past two months. Together with the tightening physical market, any normalization from the currently extremely low speculative positioning and sizable undervaluation of the Brent 1M/36M timespread should help crude prices to recover further, and we expect Brent to average at $77/bbl next quarter.

This unprecedented divergence between paper and physical markets is why earlier today we warned that with prices artificially depressed in an environment of healthy physical buying, we will soon hit the dreaded "tank bottoms" in Cushing, which could results in a slingshot higher in prices as suddenly there is no accessible physical oil, and certainly no deliverable to satisfy all those record shorts. Think of it as a mirror image to what happened in April 2020 when the glut of oil, and inability to park it, send prices negative.

And we didn't have long to wait: shortly after the close, API reported that while crude stocks tumbled again, sliding by 2.8 million (the 9th weekly draw in the past 10), with gasoline down 513K barrels and Distillates fractionally higher, it was the plunge in Cushing that was - as we expected earlier today - the biggest shock: at -2.6 million, this was the biggest weekly drain in Cushing stocks since August 18, 2023.

And while we await the DOE to confirm this report (the DOE is well-known to manipulate the data in a way that will keep oil prices depressed until such time as it can't manipulate it any more and then prices explode), the chart of Cushing stocks - using the API update - suggests that we are now effectively at tank bottoms...

... which is stunning as it means just one large weekly draw and oil prices will absolutely erupt higher in what could be a short squeeze of financial bets for the ages.

For now, however, let the bears have their pyrrhic victory: after all, had oil not been artificially depressed to 3 year lows, Kamala would have zero talking points in today's debate.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/oil-facing-physical-shortage-crisis-api-crude-draws-9-past-10-weeks-cushing-hits-tank
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2105 em: 2024-09-18 03:46:08 »
O regresso do Peak Oil??   :-\


«Peak Oil: A Looming Threat to Economic Stability

By Gail Tverberg - Sep 12, 2024, 4:00 PM CDT

    Global crude oil production has been unable to recover to its 2018 peak, suggesting that we may have passed the peak oil era.
    Oil prices are influenced by a complex interplay of factors, including debt levels, interest rates, and geopolitical events, rather than simple supply and demand.
    The current debt bubble poses a significant risk to oil prices and the global economy, as a potential burst could lead to a sharp decline in oil production and economic activity.

Oil Barrels

World crude oil extraction reached an all-time high of 84.6 million barrels per day in late 2018, and production hasn’t been able to regain that level since then, sparking the question: has oil production already peaked?

Figure 1. World monthly crude oil production based on data of the US Energy Information Administration (EIA). The straight orange line represents the 24-month average during the period June 2022 through May 2024.

Oil prices have bounced up and down over the ten-year period 2014 to 2024 (Figure2).

Figure 2. Average monthly Brent spot crude price, based on data of the US EIA.

In this post, I show that changing oil prices have had varying impacts on production. Recently, lower prices seem to be associated with lower production because extraction has become less profitable for producers. A temporary spike in oil prices does little to raise production. The view of economists that crude oil extraction can continue to rise indefinitely because lower production leads to higher prices, which in turn leads to greater production, is not true. (Economists also believe that substitutes can be helpful, but this is not a subject I will try to cover in this post.)

[1] World crude oil production has not regained its level prior to the Covid restrictions.

According to EIA data in Figure 1, the highest single month of crude oil production was November 2018, at 84.6 million barrels per day (mb/d). The highest single year of crude oil production was 2018, when world crude oil production averaged 82.9 mb/d. The last 24 months of oil production have averaged only 81.7 mb/d of production. Compared to the year with the highest average production, world oil production is down by 1.2 mb/d.

Furthermore, in Figure 1, there is nothing about the world production path in the last 24 months that gives the impression that oil production will be surging upward anytime soon. It merely increases and decreases slightly.

World population continues to grow. If economists are to be believed, oil prices should be shooting upward in response to rising demand. However, oil prices have not generally been increasing. In fact, as of this writing, the Brent crude oil price stands at $69, which is lower than the recent average monthly price shown in Figure 2. There is concern that the US economy is going into recession, and that this recession will cause oil prices to fall further.
[2] OPEC oil production seems as likely as other source of production to be influenced by price, since OPEC sells oil for export and can theoretically cut back easily.
Figure 3. Monthly crude oil production for OPEC based on data of the US EIA.

One thing that is somewhat confusing about OPEC’s oil production is the fact that the membership of OPEC keeps changing. The data the EIA displays is the historical production for the current list of OPEC members. If former members left OPEC because of declining production, this would be hidden from view.

Based on the EIA’s method of displaying historical OPEC oil production, the peak in OPEC production occurred in November 2016, at 32.9 mb/d. The highest year of oil production was 2016 at 32.0 mb/d, with 2017 and 2018 almost as high. Average production during the last 24 months has been 29.2 mb/d, or 2.8 mb/d lower than the 32.0 mb/d production in its highest year. Thus, recent OPEC production has fallen further than world production, relative to their respective highest years. (World production is down only 1.2 mb/d relative to its highest year.)
[3] An analysis of OPEC’s production relative to price indicates that patterns change over time.

Prices have changed dramatically between 2014 and 2024. I chose to look at prices versus production during three different time periods, since these periods seem to have very different production growth patterns:

    January 2016 to November 2016 (rising OPEC production)
    December 2016 to April 2020 (falling OPEC production)
    May 2020 to May 2024 (rising and then falling OPEC production)

These are the three charts I created:
Figure 4. Brent oil price versus oil production for the months of January 2014 through November 2016 based on EIA data.

During this initial period ending November 2016, the lower the price of oil, the more OPEC’s Oil production increased. This approach would make sense if OPEC was trying to keep its total revenue high enough to “keep the lights on.” If some other country (such as the United States in Figure 7) was flooding the world with oil, and through its oversupply depressing prices, OPEC didn’t choose to respond by cutting its own production. Instead, it seems to have pumped even more. In this way, OPEC could make certain that US producers weren’t really making money from their newly expanded supply of crude oil. Perhaps the US would quickly cut back–something it, in fact, did between April 2015 and Nov. 2016, shown in Figure 7 below.
Figure 5. Brent oil price versus oil production for the months of December 2016 through April 2020 based on EIA data.

During this second period ending April 2020, prices plunged to a very low level, but production didn’t change significantly. It is difficult to change production levels in response to a specific shock because the whole system has been set up to provide a certain level of oil extraction, and it takes time to make changes. Other than that, prices didn’t seem to have much of an impact on production.
Figure 6. Brent oil price versus oil production for the months of May 2020 through May 2024 based on EIA data.

In this third period ending May 2024, OPEC producers seem to have been saying, “If the price isn’t high enough, we will reduce production.” Figure 6 shows that with higher prices, the amount of oil extracted tends to rise, but only up to a limit. When prices temporarily hit high levels (in March to August of 2022–the dots over to the right in Figure 6), production couldn’t really rise. The necessary infrastructure wasn’t in place for a big ramp up in production.

Perhaps if prices had stayed very high, for very long, maybe production might have increased, but this is simply speculation. Oil companies won’t build a lot of extraction infrastructure that they don’t need, regardless of what they may announce publicly. I have been told by someone who worked for Saudi Aramco (in Saudi Arabia) that the company has (or at one time had) a lot of extra space for oil storage, so that the company could temporarily ramp up deliveries, as if they had extra productive capacity readily available, but that the company didn’t really have the significant excess capacity that it claimed.
[4] US oil production since January 2014 has followed an up and down pattern, to a significant extent in response to price.
Figure 7. Monthly crude oil production for the US based on international data of the US EIA.

Figure 7 shows three distinct humps, with the first peak in April 2015, the second peak in November 2019, and the third peak in December 2023.

In the first “hump,” there was an oversupply of oil when the US was trying to ramp up its domestic oil supply of oil (through tight oil from shale) at the same time that OPEC also increasing production. The thing that strikes me is that it was OPEC’s oil supply in Iraq that was ramping up and increasing OPEC’s oil supply.
Figure 8. Split between Iraq crude oil production and the rest of OPEC’s crude oil production, using the 2024 definition of the countries in OPEC, based on data of the US EIA.

The rest of OPEC had no intention of cutting back if the US was arrogant enough to assume that it could raise production of both US shale and of Iraq with no adverse consequences.

Looking at the detail underlying the first US hump, oil production rose between January 2014 and April 2015 when production was “stopped” by low prices, averaging $54 per barrel in January through March 2015. The US reduced production, particularly of shale, since that was easy to cut back, hitting a low point in September 2016. The combination of growing oil supplies from both the US and OPEC led to average oil prices of only $46 per barrel during the three months preceding September 2016.

Eventually OPEC oil production peaked in November 2016 (Figure 3), leaving more “space” available for US oil production. Also, oil prices were able to rise, reaching a peak of $81 per barrel in October 2018. World crude oil production hit a peak in November 2018 (Figure 1). But even these higher prices were too low for OPEC producers. They announced they were cutting back production, effective January 2019, to try to further raise prices.

During the second hump, US oil production rose to 12.9 mb/d in November 2019. The oil price for the three months preceding November 2019 was only $61 per barrel. Evidently, this was not sufficient to maintain oil production at the same level. The number of “drilled but uncompleted wells” began to rise rapidly.
Figure 9. US drilled but uncompleted shale wells based on data of the US EIA.

Drillers chose not to complete the wells because the initial indications were that the wells would not be sufficiently productive. They were set aside, presumably until prices rise to a high enough level to justify the investment.

Figure 7 shows that the US oil production had already started to fall before the Covid-related drop in oil production, which began around April and May of 2020.
[5] The rise in US oil production since May 2020 has been a bumpy one. The peak in US oil production in December 2023 may be its final peak.

The rise in oil production since May 2020 has included the completion of many previously drilled but uncompleted (DUC) wells. There has been a trend toward fewer wells, but “longer laterals,” so the earlier wells drilled were probably not of the type most desired more recently. But these previously drilled wells had some advantages. In particular, the cost of drilling them had already been “expensed,” so that, if this earlier cost were ignored, these wells would provide a better return to shareholders. If production was becoming more difficult, and shareholders wanted a better return on their (most recent) investment, perhaps using these earlier drilled wells would work.

There remain several issues, however. Currently, the number of DUCs is down to its 2014 level. The benefit of already expensed DUCs seems to have disappeared, since the number of DUSs is no longer falling. Also, even with the addition of oil from the DUCs, the annual rise in US oil production has been smaller in this current hump (0.8 mb/d) than in the previous hump (1.4 mb/d).

Furthermore, there are numerous articles claiming that the best shale areas are depleting, or are providing production profiles which focus more on natural gas and natural gas liquids. Such production profiles tend to be much less profitable for producers.

I think it is quite possible that US crude oil production will start a gradual downward decline in the coming year. It is even possible that the December 2023 monthly peak will never be surpassed.
[6] Oil prices are to a significant extent determined by debt levels and interest rates, rather than what we think of as simple “supply and demand.”

Debt bubbles seem to hold up commodity prices of all kinds, including oil. I have discussed this issue before.
Figure 10. Figure showing the dramatic drop in oil prices when US debt levels collapsed in 2008. The existence of quantitative easing, which affected interest rates, also seemed to affect oil prices.

It seems to me that all the manipulations of debt levels and interest rates by central banks are ultimately aimed at maneuvering oil prices into a range that is acceptable to both producers of crude oil and purchasers of crude oil, including the various end products made possible through the use of crude oil.

Food production is a heavy user of crude oil. If the price of oil is too high, one possible outcome is that food prices rise. If this happens, consumers become unhappy because their budgets are squeezed. Alternatively, if food prices don’t rise sufficiently, farmers find their finances squeezed because they cannot get a high enough return on all of the required farming inputs.
[7] The current debt bubble is becoming overstretched.

Today’s debt bubble is driving up stock prices as well as commodity prices. We can see various pressures around the world associated with this debt bubble. For example, in China many homes have been built in recent years primarily for investment purposes, rather than residential use. This property investment bubble is now collapsing, bringing down property prices and causing banks to fail.

As another example, Japan is known for its “carry trade,” which is made possible by the combination of its low interest rates and higher rates in other countries. The Japanese government has a very high debt level; it cannot withstand more than a very low interest rate. There is significant concern that this carry trade will unwind, an issue that has already been worrying world markets.

A third example relates to the US, and its role of holder of the US dollar as reserve currency, which means that the US dollar is used heavily in international trade. Historically, the holder of the reserve currency has changed about every 100 years, in part because the high demand for the reserve currency allows the government holding the reserve currency to borrow at lower interest rates than other countries. With these lower interest rates, and the need to pull the world economy along, there is a tendency to “spur asset bubbles.” But an asset bubble is likely to have a debt bubble propping it up.

My previous post raised the issue of the economy today being exposed to a debt bubble. There has been excessive borrowing in many sectors of the economy that have been doing poorly. Commercial real estate is an example, as witnessed by many nearly empty office buildings and shopping malls. People with student loan debt often delay starting a family because they are struggling with repayment of those loans.

If any or all these bubbles should burst, there could be a swift downward fall in oil prices and commodity prices, in general. This could be a major problem because producers would tend to leave the market, and world GDP, which depends on energy supplies of the right kinds, would fall.
[8] Oil is an international commodity. Disruption of demand by any major user could pull prices down for everyone.

China is the single largest importer of oil in today’s world. Its economy seems to be struggling now. This, by itself, could pull world oil prices down.
[9] We don’t often think about the fact that oil prices need to be both high enough for producers and low enough for consumers.

Economists would like to think that oil prices can rise endlessly, allowing more oil to be extracted, but history shows that this is not what happens. If there are too many people for the available resources, wage and wealth disparity tends to increase, leading to many more very poor people. Lots of adverse things seem to happen: the holder of the reserve currency tends to change, wars tend to start, and governments tend to collapse or be overthrown.
[10] Simply because crude oil is in the ground and the technology seems to be available to extract the crude oil doesn’t mean that we can necessarily ramp up crude oil production.

One of the major issues is getting the price up high enough, and long enough, for producers to believe that there is a reasonable chance of making money through a major new investment. The only time that oil prices were above $100 for a sustained period was in the 2011 to 2013 period. On an inflation-adjusted basis, prices also exceeded $100 per barrel in the 1979 to 1982 period based on Energy Institute data. But we have never had a period in which oil prices exceeded $200 or $300 per barrel, even after accounting for inflation.

The experience of 2014 and 2015 shows that even if oil prices rise to high levels, they do not necessarily remain high for very long. If several parts of the world respond with higher oil production simultaneously, prices could crash, as they did in 2014.

There is also a need for the overall economic system to be available to support both the extraction of and the continuing demand for the oil. For example, much of the steel pipe used by the US for drilling oil comes from China. Computers used by engineers very often come from China. If China and the US are at odds, there is likely to be a problem with broken supply lines. And, as I said in Section 8, disruption of demand affecting even one major importer, such as China, could bring demand (and prices) down significantly.
[11] Conclusion.

The peak oil situation is far more complex than the models of economists make it seem. World crude oil supply seems to be past peak now; it may be headed down significantly in the next few years. Central banks have been working hard to keep oil prices within an acceptable range for both producers and consumers, but this is becoming increasingly impossible.

We live in interesting times!

By Gail Tverberg via Our Finite World»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Peak-Oil-A-Looming-Threat-to-Economic-Stability.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #2106 em: 2024-09-18 03:50:22 »
&

«Libyan Oil Production Plummets as Political Crisis Persists

By Michael Kern - Sep 13, 2024, 10:00 AM CDT

    Libya's crude oil exports have fallen significantly due to a political standoff over the leadership of the country's central bank.
    UN-mediated talks between rival Libyan governments have yet to yield a definitive agreement on the central bank leadership.
    The ongoing political crisis threatens Libya's oil production and exports, leaving the country's oil sector in a precarious position.

Oil Rig in Libya

Crude oil exports from Libya have further fallen in the past week as UN-mediated talks between the rival governments haven’t resulted yet in a definitive agreement on the leadership of the country’s central bank, the sole guardian of Libyan oil revenues. 

Over the past week, Libya’s crude oil exports have averaged about 314,000 barrels per day (bpd), down from 468,000 bpd of crude shipped in the first five days of September, according to tanker tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.

The latest crisis in Libya erupted at the end of August.

Part of Libya’s production and exports were halted due to a political standoff over the leadership of the OPEC producer’s central bank.

Oil production at several Libyan oilfields was halted on August 27 after the rival government in the east announced a stop to all oil production and exports from Libya.

Libya, which pumps about 1.2 million bpd of oil, was plunged into a deeper political crisis over the row about the leadership of the Central Bank of Libya, the only internationally recognized depository of Libya’s oil revenues.

The internationally recognized government in the capital city in the west, Tripoli, was trying to replace Sadiq Al-Kabir, the governor of the Central Bank of Libya. This has led to the latest controversy between the Eastern and Western governments and political factions, threatening again to reduce Libya’s oil production and exports.

Last week, Libya’s feuding political factions reached an agreement on the mechanism and timelines for appointing the Central Bank Governor and Board of Directors in consultations hosted by the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL).

The situation, however, remains uncertain.

On Thursday, UNSMIL said that despite two consecutive days of consultations, it “regrets that the two parties have yet to reach a final agreement.”

This uncertainty leaves Libya’s oil sector in a precarious position, with analysts wary that the ongoing political standoff could prevent a full recovery in crude exports for the foreseeable future.   

By Michael Kern for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Libyan-Oil-Production-Plummets-as-Political-Crisis-Persists.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Qui docet, discit; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's make Rome great again!
Oui, nous savons que la fin s'approche...