Showing posts with label Oil and gas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oil and gas. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Oil...................

 Modern energy in general and oil in specific is what separates our contemporary world from the preindustrial.  It separates what we define as "civilization" from what came before. . . .

     Without oil, the American-led global Order would have never had a chance.  Nor would have passenger cars. Or global food distribution.  Or global manufacturing. Or modern health care.  Or the shoes most of us are wearing.  Oil's power is such that in many ways, it has almost enabled us to ignore nothing less than geography itself. . . .

     Oil is different.  Because oil is central to everything from the shingles on your roof to the phone in your hand to the spatula in your kitchen to the pipes and hoses in your plumbing to the diapers on your kid to the paint on your walls to your daily commute to how products cross the ocean, a slight increase in demand for oil or a slight decrease in supply for oil results in wild price swings that are most assuredly not proportional. . . .

     The specifics will be as wild and unpredictable as the rest of the post-Order chaos, but a good starting point is to assume that 40 percent of global supplies fall into the Kashagan-style bucket:  too-dangerous export routes to survive globalization's end, too-expensive projects to maintain without outside financing, too difficult technically to operate without an army of out-of-region workers.  Such projects will go away and not come back for decades.  If ever.  And oil's absence for a few weeks, never mind a few decades, would be more than enough to crash modern civilization as we know it.

-Peter Zeihan, The End of the World Is Just the Beginning:  Mapping the Collapse of Globalization

Sunday, October 30, 2022

On a scale of problems, this one is near the top...

 But there’s a problem: despite more than $2 trillion in spending on renewables over the past three decades, there is scant evidence that an energy transition is underway. Last year, according to data from the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, in both the US, and the world as a whole, the growth in hydrocarbons—oil, natural gas, and coal—far exceeded the growth of wind and solar by huge margins.

-as cut-and-pasted from here

Saturday, December 15, 2018

Have you hugged a fracker lately........?


If you want to reduce carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, maybe a good place to start would be to produce more natural gas.

























    via

Thursday, July 13, 2017

Remember when we were told..............


.................we couldn't "drill our way out" of an oil crisis"?

Divining the reasons behind ordinary Americans’ disenchantment with the political class is a robust industry these days. They might, in their searches, want to consider that smug, unequivocal assertion that “we can’t drill …” And that patronizing, “addicted to oil” line. The people saying these things were so sublimely confident in their predictions. Seems they weren’t familiar with the wisdom of Yogi Berra who said, immortally, that, “Predictions are hard. Especially about the future.”

-as excerpted from here

via

Sunday, May 28, 2017

God knows, this is true......................


“You can’t have a bunch of wussy sand that falls apart when you squeeze it,” Robertson says.

-Althouse has the rest of the story - here.

Monday, May 22, 2017

Productivity's new disguise..............


It’s possible that the productivity increases are appearing as lower prices rather than as higher incomes. If the price of oil falls from $100 per barrel to $50 per barrel due to increasingly cheap and efficient methods of production, then everybody in the industry is more productive in terms of barrels of oil per hour of work, but since the oil price has gone down, that productivity increase won’t be captured by statistical methods that calculate productivity in terms of money.
And that is just part of the larger story: that the extraordinarily deep and sustained collapse in the price of information is disguising the enormous increase in the productivity of everyone who works with the defining product of our time. ..At the same time, the collapse in the cost of information helps disguise the enormous increase in living standards for most people. 
-Walter Russell Mead, as collected from this essay

Thursday, May 18, 2017

Have I told you lately.........................


........................how much I love my BP credit card.   For every hundred dollars charged on the card a reduction in gas prices is offered.   It has become my go-to credit card.   Gas hasn't been this cheap since I was in college.   Think I'll take My Sweetie out for dinner.



Wednesday, January 18, 2017

People acting like they know..........


..........................................what they are writing about:





The news article, as clipped from here, seems to suggest there is a proper "balance" between supply and demand.  Is there?  Says who?  One assumes their measure would be price per barrel, but at what price?  Who is smart enough to figure all this out?  The tone of the article suggests the smart people have it all figured out.  Color me doubtful.

Friday, December 2, 2016

Talking Mount Rushmore..................................?



There are many ways a Trump administration can fail, and the President-elect faces the most challenging international environment since the end of the Cold War, but after so many failed prophecies of Trump failure, it’s at least a worthwhile mental exercise to speculate on how a Trump administration might actually succeed.


-excerpted from this Walter Russell Mead post

Sunday, August 28, 2016

A free lunch...................




That's is correct.  $1.60 to fill the car up.  Not $1.60 per gallon, $1.60 for 14.707 gallons.   Perhaps an explanation is due:  a month or so I got something in the mail from a credit card company.  I've had their card for ages, but rarely use it.  Their advertisement suggested riches awaited me if I would but use their card.  (You should know, faithful reader, that we pay our credit card balances off in full promptly when the bills arrive.  No credit card interest rates at this house, but please don't tell them that.)  So, trusting to the fates, for the past month their card has been the only one I've used.  If they keep this up, it will likely be the only one I ever use.  Stay tuned.

Friday, May 6, 2016

It is an abundant universe...............................



.............................we should act like it (and be grateful).


"The global oil market is no longer dominated by a psychology of scarcity, but rather one of abundance."

-as excerpted from this The American Interest blog post

Monday, February 15, 2016

Transfers...........................


"The continuing plunge in the price of oil from $115 a barrel in mid-2014 to $30 today is really, really good news. I know just about every economic commentator says otherwise, predicting bankruptcies, stock market crashes, deflation, political turmoil and a return to gas guzzling. But that is because they are mostly paid to see the world from the point of view of producers, not consumers. Yes, some plutocrats and autocrats won’t like it, but for the rest of us this is a big cut in the cost of living. Worldwide, the fall in the oil price since 2014 has transferred $2 trillion from oil producers to oil consumers."

-Matt Ridley, as excerpted from here.

Friday, January 15, 2016

Friday, January 8, 2016

Well, good..............................


The lowest oil prices since 2009 translated into a $115 billion windfall for consumers last year, according to the American Automobile Association — about $550 per driver. Analysts say four-fifths of that cash got spent ...
-as culled from this The American Interest post