Someone ought to educate our ever-so-popular prime minister on this as she spouts nonsense about petrol price increases.
This is not going to be remedied by boycotts of petrol stations and the like.
The government and media are conspiring to keep this information from the NZ public. I have yet to see even ONE item that would reflect this reality.
In May of this year, Iran exported 2.7 million barrels of oil per day, which accounted for nearly 3% of the world’s daily crude oil consumption. The new sanctions are expected to impact about 1.5 million BPD of Iran’s exports.
A true emergency would be the outbreak of violence in a major oil-producing country that took millions of barrels offline. In other words, a sudden, unexpected event that rocks that oil markets.
Source: OilPrice.com
This is not going to be remedied by boycotts of petrol stations and the like.
The government and media are conspiring to keep this information from the NZ public. I have yet to see even ONE item that would reflect this reality.
Oil
Price Is Heading Higher, Nothing Can Prevent November 4 Shock
- It likely won't climb to $100 as some fear but despite Russian concerns, American threats and Saudi bravado there is no way the dent in Iran exports due to US sanctions won't have a major impact
- The Saudis -- who have a vested interest in Iran sanctions -- simply don't have the spare capacity they claim
Robert
Rapier
8
October, 2018
As
U.S. sanctions on Iran have forced some countries to stop importing
oil from Iran, crude oil prices have inevitably risen. The U.S.
started down this path earlier this year when President
Trump announced the withdrawal from the Obama-era Iran
nuclear agreement.
Some
sanctions went into effect in August, but the sanctions with
potentially the most significant global implications go into effect
in November, when the sanctions target Iran’s oil exports."
In May of this year, Iran exported 2.7 million barrels of oil per day, which accounted for nearly 3% of the world’s daily crude oil consumption. The new sanctions are expected to impact about 1.5 million BPD of Iran’s exports.
Under
pressure from the U.S., many countries have begun to reduce oil
exports from Iran. As the market has slowly absorbed the implications
of this loss, crude oil prices have steadily risen. As recently as
August, a barrel of Brent crude oil was still in the upper $60s.
Today, the price has risen to $83/bbl — a four-year high. West
Texas Intermediate is now over $73/bbl.
This
was entirely predictable. The world simply does not currently have a
lot of spare crude oil capacity. But there is a widespread belief
that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) has excess capacity that can be used to offset the loss of
Iranian oil.
In
fact, President Trump has tweeted his ire at OPEC on several
occasions, most recently on September 20th when he wrote:
We protect the countries of the Middle East, they would not be safe for very long without us, and yet they continue to push for higher and higher oil prices! We will remember. The OPEC monopoly must get prices down now!
Saudi
Arabia claims about 1.5 million BPD of spare capacity but
that would take their production to an all-time high. A number of
people have asked if I believe their claim. Yes, I think they do have
some excess capacity, but the bulk of that is reserved for true
emergencies. High oil prices do not constitute an emergency.
A true emergency would be the outbreak of violence in a major oil-producing country that took millions of barrels offline. In other words, a sudden, unexpected event that rocks that oil markets.
Publicly,
Saudi Arabia and Russia rebuffed President Trump’s
request. Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih stated “The
markets are adequately supplied. I don’t know of any refiner in the
world who is looking for oil and is not able to get it.”
Privately,
Saudi Arabia is expected to increase production somewhat to offset
Iran’s lost barrels. It won’t be enough to make up for all
of Iran’s lost exports, and it will put the world in a more
precarious situation in case of a real emergency. But it may be
enough to stave off a quick return to $100/bbl, as some analysts are
predicting.
Source: OilPrice.com
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