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The net oil export problem begins to bite

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GliderGuider Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-29-08 10:18 AM
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The net oil export problem begins to bite
Jeffrey Brown has been promoting his Export-Land Model for the last year or two. It explains how post-peak oil exports could (will) decline at a faster rate than overall production. In fact, the possibility exists for the international oil market to dry uop entirely, something Brown thinks could happen by the early 2030s. Now there is official confirmation of declining oil exports for exactly that reason:

WSJ: Oil Exporters Are Unable To Keep Up With Demand

Domestic Needs,
Sluggish Investment
Crimp Shipments
By NEIL KING JR. and SPENCER SWARTZ
May 29, 2008; Page A8

The world’s top oil producers are proving unable to put more barrels on thirsty world markets despite sky-high prices, a shift that defies traditional market logic and looks set to continue.

Fresh data from the U.S. Department of Energy show the amount of petroleum products shipped by the world’s top oil exporters fell 2.5% last year, despite a 57% increase in prices, a trend that appears to be holding true this year as well.

There are several reasons behind the net-export decline. Soaring profits from high-price crude have fueled a boom in oil demand in Saudi Arabia and across the Middle East, leaving less oil for export. At the same time, aging fields and sluggish investments have caused exports to drop significantly in Mexico, Norway and, most recently, Russia. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries also cut production early last year and didn’t move to boost supplies again until last fall.

In all, according to the Energy Department figures, net exports by the world’s top 15 suppliers, which account for 45% of all production, fell by nearly a million barrels to 38.7 million barrels a day last year. The drop would have been steeper if not for heightened output in less-developed countries such as Angola and Libya, whose economies have yet to become big energy consumers.

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phantom power Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-29-08 10:48 AM
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1. I noticed no MSM coverage of Indonesia's exit from OPEC.
A rube such as myself would think that was... significant.
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