September 06, 2006

New oil field deep in the Gulf a potential giant

If projections hold up, it could yield 11% of U.S. output in 2012-14

By BILL HENSEL JR.
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle

Located 270 miles southwest of New Orleans and more than 5 miles below the water's surface, the potential of the Jack field was known about for years.

But three energy companies have now proved that what could be the most significant oil find since Alaska's Prudhoe Bay is both economically and technologically feasible.

September 28, 2005

Oil reserves are double previous estimates, says Saudi

Oil reserves are double previous estimates, says Saudi By Saeed Shah


Saudi Arabia, the biggest oil producer, and Exxon Mobil, the largest oil company, yesterday declared that the world had decades' worth of oil to come, in an attempt to calm fears about the record prices experienced in recent weeks.

Forming a powerful alliance, the Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi said, at an industry conference in Johannesburg, that the country would soon almost double its "proven" reserve base, while Exxon's president, Rex Tillerson, spoke of 3 trillion or more barrels of oil that are yet to be recovered.

Mr Naimi said that Saudi Arabia would "soon" add 200 billion barrels to its current reserves estimate of 264 billion barrels. The level of the kingdom's reserves and future production capacity are a controversial issue, with sceptics suggesting that it is running out of oil. Muhammed-Ali Zainy, of London's Centre for Global Energy Studies, said: "Since these Opec countries [like Saudi Arabia] are closed, the only information available is available to themselves alone. So they can come up with a new reserves figure and the rest of the world will just have to take it."

Mr Naimi also said that there were "no takers" for more oil right now, as a result of constrained refining capacity. Roughly a quarter of US refining capacity is still shut after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita struck the country's southern coast, but global refining capacity - to turn crude oil into petrol and other products - was struggling to keep up with demand even before that.

"Give us the customers and we will pump more oil," the Saudi oil minister told reporters at the 18th World Petroleum Congress, adding that more refineries needed to be built. He said that enough global output would be added in the next three to four years to restore "some margin of safety" to oil markets.

The comments did have a soothing impact on the market. Despite early reports that Rita has sunk several rigs and left at least nine others adrift in the Gulf of Mexico, crude oil slipped 75 cents to end at $65.07 in New York yesterday. US petrol prices, however, continued to rise, leading George Bush to call on Americans to conserve fuel.

Saudi Arabia is the world's key oil power, with more than a third of Middle Eastern reserves - on its existing estimate - and it currently pumps out 9.5 million barrels a day, providing well over 10 per cent of world supply.

Mr Naimi said talk of oil scarcity reminded him of the 1970s, when people also thought the end of the age of oil was at hand. "But in the intervening years, when we were supposedly facing a precipitous decline, world oil reserves more than doubled," he said.

It is widely accepted that demand for oil will rise over the next decade or two. Most projections of how that demand will be met assume that Saudi Arabia will be able to ramp up production to 15 million barrels a day or more by 2020.

However, sceptics, led by the US banker Matthew Simmons, have argued that production in Saudi Arabia's known oil fields is already declining and that no major new fields have been discovered. By extension, these critics suggest the world has reached, or is about to reach, the high point of production.

Separately, Exxon's Mr Tillerson told the convention in South Africa that his company estimated that global energy demand would increase by 50 per cent over the next 25 years. Mr Tillerson said that by some estimates there was as much as 7 trillion barrels of oil yet to be discovered. On a more conservative basis, the world still had more than 3 trillion barrels from conventional fields, oil sands deposits and other sources. "That is more than twice all the oil recovered up to now in all of human history," Mr Tillerson said.

Craig Pennington, an energy analyst at Schroders in London, said: "The message from these two [Naimi and Tillerson] is that, 'Don't worry. We do have enough oil. Just give us time to bring it in'."

Saudi Arabia, the biggest oil producer, and Exxon Mobil, the largest oil company, yesterday declared that the world had decades' worth of oil to come, in an attempt to calm fears about the record prices experienced in recent weeks.

May 06, 2005

Man Discovers Black Gold In Utah

Grand Rapids - Geologists are calling it a spectacular find in an unlikely place.

A small Grand Rapids oil company says there could be as much as one billion barrels of oil in central Utah.

April 19, 2005

Victor Niederhoffer and Laurel Kenner: Daily Speculations

Victor Niederhoffer and Laurel Kenner: Daily Speculations: "Refinery Problems Help Crude Oil Prices? by Ross Miller

Back in the old days, when I used to take my dinosaur out for his walk, the wise old economists taught of something called 'derived demand.' For example, that component of crude oil demand that goes into refined product is not demanded directly; instead, its demand is derived from the demand for the refined product. Now if something creates a bottleneck in the refining process, supply of refined products will drop and so their price will increase. Similarly, the bottleneck will cause a drop in demand of the raw input (crude oil) and its price will decrease. Of course, in a manipulated market in which the participants (and certainly none of the financial journalists) do not know economics, it is possible for the price of the raw good to go up, but only temporarily."

April 12, 2005

BlogginWallStreet: Scary Markets

Taleb's “black swan”, peak oil theorists, permanent bears, market con artists, deficit watchers, long wavers, and gold bugs all have one thing in common, profiting from your demise. Scaring people out of their money is an all too common marketing tactic.

March 24, 2005

PROOF YOU'RE GETTING ROBBED AT GAS PUMP

March 24, 2005 -- HERE'S all you need to know to understand that Americans are getting screwed at the gas pump.

Fact 1: The inventory of crude oil in the U.S. right now is 8 percent larger than it was this same week last year. And that's the biggest amount of crude on hand since the middle of 2002.

Fact 2: That the 8 percent increase doesn't include all the oil purchased by Washington and put into the emergency Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which now has 685 million barrels. That's up from 650 million barrels last year and 599 million in '03.

Fact 3: There is 7.5 percent more gasoline in stock right now in this country than during the same week last year. And you'd have to go back to this same week in 1999 to find more gasoline inventory — when the average price at the pump was only $1.01 a gallon.

Fact 4: Including everything made of oil, there is 4.9 percent more supply this year than when Spring began in 2004. And there's about 10 percent more of all petroleum products in stock today than when the Iraqi war began.

And, finally, Fact 5: American consumers are being conned by speculators — and a media that doesn't ask enough tough questions — into thinking there is some sort of supply problem.

March 23, 2005

Sheikh Yamani on Oil's Pendulum

The former Saudi Oil Minister has seen it all since 1962. Now he sees prices swinging back down "over the long term

...excerpt below...

"Another big change: the proliferation of speculators. Measured by fundamentals such as inventory levels, the oil markets aren't particularly tight these days. Many market participants say heavy buying by hedge funds and other financial types has played a sizable role in the current price run-up. If market psychology changes, these funds could push prices down even faster than they have risen. 'In the final analysis, fundamentals will work,' Yamani predicted. "