Peak Oil Review: A Midweek Update – 7 July 2016
A midweek update. Monday trading pushed oil prices close to $50 a barrel after a new round of insurgent attacks in Nigeria raised concerns about supply outages.
A midweek update. Monday trading pushed oil prices close to $50 a barrel after a new round of insurgent attacks in Nigeria raised concerns about supply outages.
A midweek update. Oil prices have dropped this week as the fundamentals of too much production and steadily building inventories overcame the enthusiasm among speculators for higher prices.
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including: -Quote of the Week -Oil and the Global Economy -The Middle East and North Africa -China -Russia/Ukraine -The Briefs
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including: -Quotes of the week -Oil and the global economy -The Middle East and North Africa -China -Russia/Ukraine -The Briefs
A mid-week update. Oil prices continued to fall on Monday of this week, pushing Brent prices to lows not seen since 2004 and West Texas Intermediate to below $34 a barrel for the first time since 2009.
A midweek update. After three days of increases which took oil prices up by over $4 a barrel, prices slipped on Wednesday after the weekly stocks report showed US crude inventories hitting a new all-time high.
A weekly review including Oil and the Global Economy, The Middle East & North Africa, China, Russia/Ukraine, Greece, The Briefs.
A weekly review including Oil and the Global Economy, The Middle East & North Africa, Russia/Ukraine, Quote of the Week, The Briefs.
The Wall Street Journal reports that the Saudis will not entertain production cuts even if oil prices fall further and that Riyadh expects that global oil will settle around $60 a barrel which it says is sustainable for the Gulf Arab states.
A weekly review including Oil and the Global Economy, The Middle East & North Africa, China, Russia/Ukraine, Quote of the Week, The Briefs.
The world’s two most egregious air polluters – the U.S. and China – announced a deal to cut greenhouse gas emissions during the next 20 years.
Faced with the prospect of losing market share to tight oil producers in the US, OPEC has simply taken the most prudent business decision. Keep the taps open.