Double-Dip Oil Rout Why an Oil Glut May Lead to a New World of Energy
Double-Dip Oil Rout
Why an Oil Glut May Lead to a New World of Energy
By Michael T. Klare
The plunge of global oil prices began in June 2014, when benchmark Brent crude was selling at $114 per barrel. It hit bottom
at $46 this January, a near-collapse widely viewed as a major but
temporary calamity for the energy industry. Such low prices were
expected to force many high-cost operators, especially American shale
oil producers, out of the market, while stoking fresh demand and so
pushing those numbers back up again. When Brent rose to $66 per barrel
this May, many oil industry executives breathed a sigh of relief. The
worst was over. The price had “reached a bottom” and it “doesn’t look
like it is going back,” a senior Saudi official observed at the time.
Skip ahead three months and that springtime of optimism has
evaporated. Major producers continue to pump out record levels of crude
and world demand remains essentially flat. The result: a global oil glut
that is again driving prices toward the energy subbasement. In the
first week of August, Brent fell to $49, and West Texas Intermediate,
the benchmark for U.S. crude, sank to $45.
On top of last winter’s rout, this second round of price declines has
played havoc with the profits of the major oil companies, put tens of
thousands of people out of work, and obliterated billions of dollars of
investments in future projects. While most oil-company executives
continue to insist that a turnaround is sure to occur in the near future, some analysts are beginning to wonder if what’s underway doesn’t actually signal a fundamental transformation of the industry.
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http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176035/tomgram%3A_michael_klare%2C_big_oil_in_retreat/#more
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