- Joined
- 20 July 2021
- Posts
- 11,836
- Reactions
- 16,486
The issue is indeed capacity and time required to do any large scale transformation.run out of crude probably not , difficulty supplying petrol and diesel ( and kerosene ) to the pumps MAYBE
BPT has several capped wells waiting to go into production ( i assume waiting for an attractive price ) , i would guess some other players would have some capped wells also , HOWEVER several older refineries are being repurposed into storage facilities , and we MIGHT have a transport problem coming to boot
now gas will depend on how much we export ( and how much is kept for local consumption )
In Syria, people where pinching crude and refining it in kitchen and shed process.so man ingenuity is highThe issue is indeed capacity and time required to do any large scale transformation.
When it takes a week to have a parcel in qld from victoria after just a couple of sneeze....
not optimistic on the ability to do anything of scale if tankers do not dock at the terminal..but we will have grid power at midday daily.
How?@over9k
I don't think anybody is making the case that we *will run out of oil. The case, or at least case I'm making is that we are quite vulnerable to a tail occurrence.
Let's say China moves on Taiwan, that could set off a chain of events that could leave us isolated for supplies of, well, all sorts of sh¹t.
Will that happen?
Probably not but, it could and we could be seriously farked if that does go down.
Gas is up fivefold whereas oil is only "just" at about $75/barrel. Not even doubled.
Of course. But we were talking about a societal collapse on account of coronavirus.The real concern though isn't that oil's at $75 but the trend in price. It's up almost 50% year to date.
Natural gas is getting seriously expensive not only in Europe but in any place with pricing linked to LNG.
Coal also expensive and with physical shortages in some places (notably China).
Oil not yet expensive but it's rising.
Put together that increases the cost of producing and delivering every physical item from food to electronics. It also increases consumer living costs and the cost of running other facilities (buildings etc). That sounds rather inflationary to me.....
Ok I realise I'm getting way way way out into black swan territory here, but let's say China and the US have a nuclear exchange and all West coast ports are disabled for some time, suppose China, really having the sh¹ts with Australia, use their navy to disable sea traffic to us.How?
Like I said, the oil will just come across the pacific from USA.
0% probabilityOk I realise I'm getting way way way out into black swan territory here, but let's say China and the US have a nuclear exchange and all West coast ports are disabled for some time, suppose China, really having the sh¹ts with Australia, use their navy to disable sea traffic to us.
Let's say the San Andreas fault finally cracks the big one and the modelled tsunami takes out just about the entire Southern US coast.
Let us even suppose that at some point in the future a us administration imposes sanctions on Australia for our newfound totalitarianism (as has already been proposed over there).
All unlikely, but possible. And that's just a couple of scenarios out of a whole basket of unknown unknowns.
This.I don't think anybody is making the case that we *will run out of oil. The case, or at least case I'm making is that we are quite vulnerable to a tail occurrence.
I wasn't interpreting the thread quite so drastically.But we were talking about a societal collapse on account of coronavirus.
It started from wayne talking about buying 44 gallon drums of diesel and just snowballed from there.I wasn't interpreting the thread quite so drastically.
I'm seeing it as simply economic impacts - businesses shut, costs increased, supply chain disruption and so on is a definite economic impact even if society as a whole carries on.
Pandemic > disruption to lots of physical things including energy industries > physical shortages and price impacts.
Same with anything. Every worker who's spent time sitting at home in lockdown, without being able to carry on working because they do something physical, means lost labour from the economy. It means something didn't get made, built, maintained, repaired or whatever and in due course the effects of that are going to show up.
Energy prices would seem to be an early and obvious example of those effects.
Well that was a little bit tongue in cheek. However I am half serious about that. I do now have a years supply of non perishable food, a veggie garden and a few chooks... And yes the prospect of horse meat jerky is real.It started from wayne talking about buying 44 gallon drums of diesel and just snowballed from there.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?