- Joined
- 14 February 2005
- Posts
- 15,295
- Reactions
- 17,525
Agreed but realistically it's more than any other single measure is likely to do in practice.The US release of strategic reserves is SOOOOOO insignificant to the daily US or global current supply/demand.it will have a blip of affect on the oil price.
Just now.The US release of strategic reserves is SOOOOOO insignificant to the daily US or global current supply/demand.it will have a blip of affect on the oil price.
I don’t know if POO will go down or up in the short /medium time. But the US reserves release will not have any significant effect.
Gunnerguy.
Unprecedented US oil release to ‘make a difference’
US President Joe Biden will tap up to 180 million barrels of government oil reserves to help tamp down near-record high fuel prices, an unprecedented government intervention into oil markets following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
In remarks from the White House on Thursday (US time), Mr Biden framed high energy prices as a wartime issue that requires a robust and wide-ranging response.
The oil release – about 1 million barrels a day for six months, starting in May – would be the biggest-ever drawdown from the country’s emergency stockpile of roughly 568 million barrels
Mr Biden said he would also invoke the Defence Production Act – a Korean War-era national security mobilisation law – to boost domestic output of minerals used in batteries for electric vehicles and other clean-energy technology
And he called on Congress to pass a new law that would push oil companies to drill faster when they have leases on federal lands, including by imposing fees on companies for unused leases
“The action I’m calling for will make a difference over time,” Mr Biden said
“But the truth is it takes companies months, not days to increase production … This is a wartime bridge to increase oil supply until production ramps up later this year.
Mr Biden’s remarks drew criticism from the oil industry, which said that he unfairly blamed US energy companies for not pumping more oil in response to shortages stemming from the Russian invasion and the economic rebound from the Covid-19 pandemic
“The best thing the White House can do right now is to remove barriers to investment in American energy production and infrastructure,” Mike Sommers, leader of the American Petroleum Institute, said in a statement.
“Unfortunately, today we heard more mixed signals about developing affordable, reliable and secure American natural gas and oil.
Charging companies for unused leases would only add to rising costs that oil producers face due to inflation and supply-chain delays, said Tyler Glover, chief executive of Texas Pacific Land Corp., a big landowner in the Permian Basin in West Texas.
The Biden administration has also repeatedly asked the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries to speed up production increases, which the cartel has repeatedly rejected. OPEC decided again Thursday to stick with a production plan it has arranged with Moscow in which members will raise their collective oil output by a modest 432,000 barrels a day.
Posted this in the inflation thread too but the two are obviously quite interlinked. Well worth a watch.
You'd think the government could promise to buy X amount at A price, Y amount at B price, Z amount at C price etc etc as reserve topups to give the oil companies some kind of certainty.Pretty much the same as it has always been.
Yes, countries releasing there reserves this year are going to have to replenish next year. Meaning that they may cause the price to stay high because of increased demand. However, if prices fluctuate the purchases could be made when on the low side and stopped as it increases. It wasn't long a go when oil prices where in the negative.
Shale production, the President is asking a lot for companies to ramp up production immediately. First there is labour shortages, wells have been capped will require workers and time to put back into production, prices a fluctuating too much to ensure a profit will be made once the extra sites are up and running, other oil nations are increasing supply, which could reduce prices.
Perfect storm?
What all this leads to is massive investment and development of alternative energy sources and storage. Watch the prices of materials for electrics and batteries.
You'd think the government could promise to buy X amount at A price, Y amount at B price, Z amount at C price etc etc as reserve topups to give the oil companies some kind of certainty.
It strikes me as lunacy not to both A: top the reserves up if prices drop and B: not promise to do so as well, but there could be more going on than I know about.
Well they could, but no. I'm saying the producers aren't going to want to up capacity without some kind of assurance that there will actually be a market for said capacity. If the government promised to refill the reserves at price X (which bolsters demand) then that would obviously be quite a large carrot and create a bit of a price floor for the producers.Are you saying that the government should force the seller to sell at a certain price?
My thinking is simply that they won't actually do it regardless of what opportunities they might have.It strikes me as lunacy not to both A: top the reserves up if prices drop and B: not promise to do so as well, but there could be more going on than I know about.
Seems unnecessary seeing as all the production is now onshore I agree, but still, if there's going to be more events like this they could at least use it to smooth prices out a bit.My thinking is simply that they won't actually do it regardless of what opportunities they might have.
The US hasn't replaced the drawdown in 2011 yet and that's despite having had Presidents from both parties during that time and an oil price crash as well.
Hence my thinking that once it's drawn out, it'll very likely never be refilled or at least not in a timeframe relevant to discussion today.
That is just an assumption in my part though looking at the past 11 years. Politics will no doubt come into it.
Data is here: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=MCSSTUS1&f=M
Weekly. Might be chopping and changing between sources lately Smurf?There's plenty of reports emerging regarding fuel switching from gas to oil in some countries due to the situation with natural gas and that's going to put upward pressure on oil consumption so long as it remains the cheaper option for firing boilers and so on.
I wouldn't be surprised to see $80 tested, $90 probably a given.POO? Expecting to see it head lower for a little while, before it resumes an uptrend again.
The IEA’s decision to bolster the US’s oil release adds to the bearish pressure being created by the Covid surge in China, so you may very likely be correct in expecting a bigger decline.I wouldn't be surprised to see $80 tested, $90 probably a given.
I'm giving this corrective pricing pattern time to play out properly (a few weeks, even months, perhaps?), before expecting a resumption of longer term trend.
Weekly. Might be chopping and changing between sources lately Smurf?
Looks like gas is going for another harder run.
View attachment 140057
View attachment 140058
I wouldn't be surprised to see $80 tested, $90 probably a given.
I'm giving this corrective pricing pattern time to play out properly (a few weeks, even months, perhaps?), before expecting a resumption of longer term trend.
Poo's recent "stiff peaks" (seen on weekly as ranging bars) have been over whipped the last few weeks by the "entities" and geo fears, but reality is melting it down again.
AEI announcements in coming days will, imo, dampen prices.
I'm trying to drive as little as possible these days.
Don't think it's a "Zoolander" style bowser fest going on out there, like it was mid 2020, if you had dared to leave your home that is!...? ?
"A Model, Idiot?" haha.
I must admit @frugal.rock and @CityIndex that the POO is extremely volatile.The IEA’s decision to bolster the US’s oil release adds to the bearish pressure being created by the Covid surge in China, so you may very likely be correct in expecting a bigger decline.
The break below the key psychological $100 level and uptrend support coming from early December really opens the door for this, especially as volume was higher on the day.
However, volatility is likely to continue as price remains closely tied with headlines relating to Russia, so it’s important to keep in mind that all trading carries risk as there’s no telling what the next development will be.
Surely you'd like to fill the Arnage up at lower prices GG ?I do not share the hope that Brent will fall to $80.
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?