Grim News on the Oil Front!

most people who drive the honda civic CNG use a home compressor, and they network just like the people with electric vehicles so that people can share the use of compressors. several states already have initiated development of places to fill, along with a number of corporate or guvment filling spots for fleet use. fleet use is the predominant use in this country.

imagine how backwards pakistan is leading the world with over 3k filling spots and the most CNG vehicles in the public transport fleet and even iran is far ahead of the US in use of CNG. the chinese are even now making the next step to use of liquefied natural gas LNG (not LPG which is propane) and for public transport buses they also use natural gas stored at atmospheric pressure in gas bags on top of the bus. they also are building a fleet of natural gas direct injection diesel engines based on westport's design and cummins engine to power their bus fleets.

thanks to our congress, best that money can buy.
 
Ira must be laughing his ass off. Here we are trying to wean ourselves offa lead and along comes magnesium:
http://www.tecca.com/column/car-tech-weekly-toyota-to-use-magnesium-batteries/
Car Tech Weekly: Toyota to use magnesium batteries

Magnesium is pure metal that is the eighth most plentiful substance found in the earth's crust. In its pure form, it burns with a white-hot flame, which makes it ideal for use in camping gear as a fire starter. But in this case, it's the primary substance needed for magnesium-sulfate batteries, which can hold twice the electrical capacity as the same size lithium-ion models on the market today.

So why aren't these already in production? More research is still needed to optimize the batteries. In addition, creating them isn't as cheap as the more common lithium-ion. But that's not a deterrent for Toyota, where the research is ongoing even as you read this article. At a research center just outside Ann Arbor, Michigan, Toyota continues to experiment and hopes to see a viable magnesium battery for the car market by 2020.

I mentioned Iras other company earlier... US Magnesium outta Salt Lake City, formerly Magcorp. The only US-based producer of magnesium, about 43,000 metric tonnes per year:
http://www.usmagnesium.com/

Notorious `cause when the US EPA tried to sued Magcorp back around 2001 for $902 million in environmental damage the company declared Chapter 11 bankrupcy... Assets went up for sale and Ira created US Magnesium and bought the production facilities back, but not the approx. 84 square miles of lands polluted by PCBs, dioxins, hexachlorobenzene (HCB), chlorine gas, hydrochloric acid...

The lawyer wars have been going on for years since:
http://www.epa.gov/superfund/sites/supdoc/sd1789.pdf
http://www.nysb.uscourts.gov/opinions/reg/78282_140_opinion.pdf

tks
l0cK
 
Civil strife - revolution, in Egypt, Libya, other middle east countries, is pushing up the price of oil. Experts fear that any further spread might cause the price of crude to double or worse. If it does, rather than letting the world economy be wrecked, there might be some form of indirect, or direct, intervention.

The good news? EVehicles will be increasing, greatly, in value. Resale value might bump up 10 or 20 grand, in the next few weeks!
 
Perfect timing for the regularly scheduled spring oil price hype up. They got lucky this year, and will be able to double their profits.

Meanwhile big oil strangles the goose that lays the golden egg. (the world economy) Oh well, no matter, they likely have lots of money invested in the armamanets industry.
 
Their is and will be no peak oil in regard to output. It's a plateau. As supplies diminish, more money is spent trying to extract oil from deeper and less accessible wells. Output will continue at todays rates for many years, but price will continue to rise. Oil won't run out per se, but quickly approaches the day where living the western lifestyle will become unaffordable for many Americans.
 
Oil won't run out per se, but quickly approaches the day where living the western lifestyle will become unaffordable for many Americans.

This is a very important concept. It resembles what happened to the whaling industry that supplied lamp oil before the development of kerosene. They didn't run out of whales, but the distance they had to travel to get them got longer and longer.

IIRC, oil has plateaued already, but petroleum has not. In other words, if you add in natural gas, we can keep going at current levels for a while. Two things to keep in mind, we can't go on forever since there is a limited supply and any increase in demand will be a problem. But there will be an increase in demand if per capita consumption is constant and the population grows. Since we can expect the number of people using energy to increase, the per capita needs to go down.
 
auraslip said:
Their is and will be no peak oil in regard to output. It's a plateau. As supplies diminish, more money is spent trying to extract oil from deeper and less accessible wells. Output will continue at todays rates for many years, but price will continue to rise. Oil won't run out per se, but quickly approaches the day where living the western lifestyle will become unaffordable for many Americans.

Yeah, we'll just keep extracting and burning oil from crap sources like oil sands, tar, shale, and other forms of unruly rude crude ;)

Part of me wants to buy a newer v8 car with good emissions controls and help burn through this oil to intentionally get us running out of it, lol..

The other part of me wants to start saving for an electric car build and never touch gas again.

The reality is that we won't start really conserving until there is a crisis; that's the American way and i don't see things changing, ever.
 
Gas prices up 20% in the past 3 months. Projections are, at least, another 15%, before Summer starts.

Electric vehicles might be "feasible" much sooner than predicted.
 
No reduction in oil production!Saudi Arabia made up for Libyan shortfall.

The present increase in oil price is due solely to speculation in the commodities market. It is Hot! The entire world oil supply is traded, daily, eight times over!

Of course, there is price manipulation! During the initial mideast "crisis", oil price was expected to rise, so many purchased "oil futures", guaranteeing a specific higher price at some future date. If oil price does not rise, million, perhaps billions, will be lost. And ... of course, all oil producers profit from higher prices.

But, would rich oil producers spend some of their investment surplus on oil futures, in order to help force up the price of oil? That would be a great Win-Win situation, for them!

Naw ... that might make them look greedy ...
 
Just checkin' in on my neighbours in PA... Looks like if all goes according to plan they might have about 180,000 abandoned gas wells in 50 years, and thousands of miles of empty pipelines... Covering about half the state, that'll be seven wells and one drill pad every square mile, much of it across National and State forests...(well, watts left of them - PA holds about nine percent of all wooded areas remaining in the US.) Amazing!
http://articles.lancasteronline.com/local/4/361158

LocK
 
Great read. I always knew it was driven by speculation. I just didn't realize that speculation was driven primarily by the investment banks via exceptions to the law. Everyone loves to hate big business, but the Wall St frockers go in the same boat with most lawyers. At least big business create product. The investment bankers and lawyers produce nothing of actual value, so they are essentially able to print their own money, since they create money from thin air.

Just like the sign said
Jump frockers
 
John in CR said:
Great read. I always knew it was driven by speculation. I just didn't realize that speculation was driven primarily by the investment banks via exceptions to the law. Everyone loves to hate big business, but the Wall St frockers go in the same boat with most lawyers. At least big business create product. The investment bankers and lawyers produce nothing of actual value, so they are essentially able to print their own money, since they create money from thin air.

Just like the sign said
Jump frockers

*terrorist fist bump*
 
why would joe retiree be holding oil futures if he is not in the business? you guys don't know which side of your ass to blow this shit out of. grow up. sticking your head in the sand while the real world goes forward doesn't help you advance in life. just puts you deeper in the hole. total nonsense, and problem is you guys don't know it.
 
why would joe retiree be holding oil futures if he is not in the business? you guys don't know which side of your ass to blow this shit out of. grow up. sticking your head in the sand while the real world goes forward doesn't help you advance in life. just puts you deeper in the hole. total nonsense, and problem is you guys don't know it.
People have been sticking their head in the sand about our monetary situation too. OPEC and the Federal Reserve both cartels. Both have options available to resolve the issue, yet here we go following the yellow brick road.
Both can be solved by competition: Oil would be efficiency, alternative energy, natural gas, coal etc etc. Federal Reserve would be competing currencies: Gold, silver, copper, barter, trade etc.
More people profit from fear than from rational thought :|
 
from barron's:

Commodities Sell-Off: Correction or More?
by Randall W. Forsyth
Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Goldman says to cash in winning bets as demand destruction takes hold. Will the slide extend to other risk assets?

The cure for high prices is high prices. That is the ineluctable logic of the commodity markets, and it is on display in the trading pits.

Commodities took another hit Tuesday after Goldman Sachs' analyst team advised cashing in chips on its winning bets on CCCP — crude oil, copper, cotton and platinum — after a 25% run-up since December.

(Goldman seems to have an affinity for acronyms after having come up with the ubiquitous BRICs, for the emerging economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China, a few years ago. As for CCCP, one presumes the acronym is not out of nostalgia for Soviet Union, given those are English letter analogs for the Cyrillic initials of the USSR.)

High prices cure high prices through "demand destruction" as scarce supplies are rationed to those willing to pay high prices. Goldman contended in a report Monday that was beginning to happen in the U.S. as retail gasoline prices approach $4.00 a gallon.

That also was the view of the International Energy Agency. "There are real risks that a sustained $100 dollars a barrel-plus price environment will prove incompatible with the currently expected pace of economic recovery," the IEA said in its monthly report.

Those assessments followed a downgrade of global growth prospects by the International Monetary Fund in part because of the impact of rising food and energy prices, which take a greater toll on the fast-growing emerging economies, which have led the rest of the world out of recession.

Growth is likely to slow to 4.5% in 2011 and 2012, from 5% in 2010, the IMF estimated, as government's economic stimulus programs are wound down.

That's also the view of Richard Russell, long-time publisher of the Dow Theory Letters. In his daily Remarks to subscribers Tuesday, he wrote:

"Looking over [Monday's] close, oil down, CRB Commodities index down, gold down, silver unchanged, copper down, XLE [the Select Sector SPDR-Energy exchange-traded fund] down. In fact, just about everything I follow from the NYSE average to the Russell 2000 to the housing sector to the semiconductors to the oil-service sector — all closed down. Taking all this into consideration, I have to wonder whether the markets aren't preparing for the Fed to end its quantitative easing program. That could be a shock to the markets, and it could put the brakes on business, and lastly, it could be deflationary — as [Monday's] closings suggest."

It's gratifying when Russell, the dean of market watchers, concurs with the view expressed previously here. That is, the markets are beginning to discount the eventual end of the Federal Reserve's purchases of $600 billion of Treasury securities, which has been the main thrust behind the liftoff in the price of assets as well as the cost of commodities.

Stocks took their cue from commodities Tuesday with the major averages down about 1%, led by a 6% drop in Alcoa (AA - News), the archetypal industrial-commodity producer, after its first-quarter results met profits expectations but fell a bit short on revenues. West Texas crude oil traded in the U.S. fell 3.3%, extending its decline this week to 5.8%. Meantime, Dr. Copper — the commodity with a PhD in economics — fell 1.7% while cotton fell 2.4%. Gold edged down only 1% after having hit a record last week.

A number of commodities set fresh peaks Monday only to close lower — a pattern technicians call a key reversal, which often is a symptom of a peak in a rising trend. Further technical evidence is necessary to call a top definitively, however. Lacking that, the declines of the past few days would be just a correction in a bull trend. The near-term action could be telling.

A continued slump in commodity prices would call into question the lock-step advance in so-called risk assets, from junk bonds, emerging markets and to equities, especially small-capitalization stocks. The tide of central-bank liquidity has floated all those boats. Commodities may be indicating these markets are near their high-water marks.

Comments? E-mail: randall.forsyth@barrons.com
 
Methods to sell gas rights to landowners. Not surprising, but somewhat interesting.

http://www.treehugger.com/files/2011/04/obtained-oil-company-document-instructs-agents-mislead-landowners-drilling-dangers.php
 
of course you have it completely backwards, as i would expect from the source of your information and how you use it.

of course none of these people own any property to begin with so they could not even begin to comprehend mineral rights or royalty fee bonuses. of course it doesn't matter if some idiot is influenced by these ignorant lies since the resources can be accessed by drilling on adjacent properties anyway.

the renewed drilling activity and increased production in the US is helping a lot of desperate people who own property and have to pay taxes and mortgages too, in texas, ohio, pennsylvannia, viginia, and of course north dakota which is now the largest frontier oil province in the US.
 
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It was BP's business parters and owners of the oil rig 'Transocean' who's equipment i.e their cement slurry that was meant to prevent a gas leak in the well which caused the explosion, which caused the leak. :wink:

BP were used as high profile scape goats
 
Gas prices expected to double this year! Maybe triple!
 
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