Dear Clavertonians,
Some of you will have heard me ruminate in person, or somewhere on my
weblog, about my theory that given the conflation of economic collapse
and Peak Oil, and the consequent Peak Natural Gas that inevitably
attends, there are already signs that the prices of energy are being
controlled.
You may think that energy markets are, in fact, free, but that is far
from the reality.
Ask yourselves this - how did the price of oil rocket so much a few
years ago - and what on Earth brought it back down again ? Clearly,
any kind of theory about a relationship between the price of oil and
it being a Function of Supply and Demand was blown right out of the
window at that point.
What are the mechanisms and tools used to keep oil and gas prices low
- particularly in the the rumour mill of the USA ?
Well, there are the obvious ones - "market confidence" in media
reporting, state and federal pronouncements. Why, they even roll out
Rex "Rexx" Tillerson of ExxonMobil when they need to to swear there is
a glut of oil, and the market prices duly drop.
It doesn't do for the economy to suffer high energy prices - and I
think you will see a much stronger political effort in this regards
going forwards (to use a much-hated management-speak term). Any
untoward things that had been blindly ignored may now be unpacked -
for example :-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/nov/12/libor-like-manipulation-gas-markets
The tax and duty associated with oil and gas will be suppressed :-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2012/nov/13/treasury-fuel-duty-rise-osborne
whilst tax breaks, and even subsidies, will increase (socialising the
costs of new exploration and production) :-
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sponsored/earth/statoil/9533958/george-osbourne-oil-gas-tax-break.html
Energy prices have to be controlled by storytelling, as direct
intervention in the "markets" would be taken apart. I think that the
emphasis placed on shale gas production in the United States of
America is part of this narrative - there is so much public relations
associated with the idea that shale gas is the gamechanger that is
keeping the price of gas down.
But do you believe parts of this narrative ? Can the USA really become
energy-independent ? Far from it :-
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/nov/12/us-biggest-oil-producer
Despite the projections from a few years ago that shale gas could
provide a huge proportion of US gas even going into the 2030s, the
International Energy Agency yesterday published a much different
chart. Compare and contrast this position :-
From EIA 2011 :-
http://images.angelpub.com/2011/20/8699/eia-shale-gas.jpg
http://greenmatterscsg.files.wordpress.com/2011/04/eia-annual-energy-outlook-sahle-gas-offsets1.jpg
with this : November 2012 EIA :-
http://www.eia.gov/forecasts/steo/report/natgas.cfm
Can the shale gas miracle be continued ? Really ?
If you are sceptical, this means that the IEA WEO 2012 pronouncements
and projections should in fact be taken with a huge pinch of fracking
sand. Can we believe the shale gas projections in this, given the
current state of (shale gas) play(s) :-
http://www.carbonbrief.org/media/130739/screen_shot_2012-11-12_at_12.25.47.png
The USA may well become the leader in global oil production, but the
envelope on combined oil and gas production is now being projected as
depleting, so that "USA leads in oil" story is spin :-
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/13/business/energy-environment/report-sees-us-as-top-oil-producer-in-5-years.html
The energy market price structure continues to be weighed down by
subsidies for fossil fuels, for as Peak Oil (and the shadow of Peak
Natural Gas behind it) and Peak Coal loom, economic dependence on
fossil fuels will dictate increasingly favourable governance in order
to keep the whole ship sailing :-
http://theconversation.edu.au/fossil-fuel-subsidies-up-nuclear-power-down-iea-10703
Regards,
jo.
--
Ms J. Abbess MSc
+447717221396
http://www.joabbess.com