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	<title>Commodity Blog &#187; gas prices</title>
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		<title>World Oil Demand to Fall for First Time in Decades</title>
		<link>http://www.commodityblog.com/commodity-prices-oil/world-oil-demand-to-fall-for-first-time-in-decades</link>
		<comments>http://www.commodityblog.com/commodity-prices-oil/world-oil-demand-to-fall-for-first-time-in-decades#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2008 17:26:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mario</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Commodity Prices - Oil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[diesel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fuel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gas prices]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.forexhome.net/commodity-prices-oil/world-oil-demand-to-fall-for-first-time-in-decades.html</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Global oil demand will contract for&#160;the&#160;first time since the&#160;early 1980s as&#160;world economic growth slows to&#160;a&#160;near standstill, the&#160;US government says. The&#160;forecast for&#160;2008 and&#160;2009 is bad news for&#160;energy companies and&#160;oil producing nations that depend on&#160;robust prices, but could benefit cash-strapped consumers by&#160;sending gasoline and&#160;heating costs lower, according to&#160;a&#160;US Energy Information Administration report. World oil demand is projected [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Global oil demand will contract for&nbsp;the&nbsp;first time since the&nbsp;early 1980s as&nbsp;world economic growth slows to&nbsp;a&nbsp;near standstill, the&nbsp;US government says.<br />
The&nbsp;forecast for&nbsp;2008 and&nbsp;2009 is bad news for&nbsp;energy companies and&nbsp;oil producing nations that depend on&nbsp;robust prices, but could benefit <nobr>cash-strapped</nobr> consumers by&nbsp;sending gasoline and&nbsp;heating costs lower, according to&nbsp;a&nbsp;US Energy Information Administration report.<br />
World oil demand is projected to&nbsp;fall by&nbsp;50,000 barrels per day in&nbsp;2008 and&nbsp;450,000 barrels per day next year, the&nbsp;EIA said, led by&nbsp;a&nbsp;1.2 million bpd contraction in&nbsp;top consumer the&nbsp;United States this year a&nbsp;200,000 bpd drop in&nbsp;2009.<br />
The&nbsp;report marked the&nbsp;first major forecast for&nbsp;shrinking energy demand tied to&nbsp;the&nbsp;current global financial crisis.<br />
The&nbsp;lower forecast came as&nbsp;the&nbsp;EIA revised down its projection for&nbsp;2009 global economic growth to&nbsp;0.5 per cent next year, from the&nbsp;1.8 per cent projection it made in&nbsp;its previous report issued in&nbsp;November.<br />
&#8220;The&nbsp;current global economic slowdown is now projected to&nbsp;be more severe and&nbsp;longer &#8230; leading to&nbsp;further reductions of&nbsp;global energy demand and&nbsp;additional declines in&nbsp;crude oil and&nbsp;other energy prices,&#8221; the&nbsp;EIA said.<br />
The&nbsp;last time world petroleum demand fell was in&nbsp;1983, part of&nbsp;four years of&nbsp;straight declines in&nbsp;oil consumption that began in&nbsp;1980, the&nbsp;agency said.<br />
The&nbsp;weak economy and&nbsp;lower petroleum demand has already caused US crude oil prices to&nbsp;sink from a&nbsp;record $US147 a&nbsp;barrel in&nbsp;July to&nbsp;$US43 on&nbsp;Tuesday&nbsp;&#8212; a&nbsp;slump that has rattled energy producing nations like Saudi Arabia, Russia and&nbsp;Venezuela, and&nbsp;triggered massive cutbacks in&nbsp;investment in&nbsp;oil projects like those in&nbsp;Canada&#8217;s oil sands.<br />
&#8220;The&nbsp;increasing likelihood of&nbsp;a&nbsp;prolonged global economic downturn continues to&nbsp;dominate market perceptions, putting downward pressure on&nbsp;oil prices,&#8221; the&nbsp;EIA said.<br />
Demand still is expected to&nbsp;grow next year in&nbsp;emerging economies such as&nbsp;China, which helped drive the&nbsp;<nobr>six-year</nobr> rally in&nbsp;oil prices to&nbsp;record highs. Still, the&nbsp;latest EIA report revised demand from this group down by&nbsp;40,000 bpd.<br />
Price drop<br />
The&nbsp;EIA slashed its 2009 forecast for&nbsp;crude oil prices to&nbsp;$US51 a&nbsp;barrel from $US63.50 a&nbsp;barrel in&nbsp;its previous forecast.<br />
&#8220;I&nbsp;don&#8217;t think they are done revising. I&nbsp;think next month will be lower. I&#8217;m having a&nbsp;hard time seeing GDP growth anywhere&nbsp;&#8212; we may see pockets of&nbsp;growth&nbsp;&#8212; but not worldwide or&nbsp;regionally,&#8221; said Peter Beutel, president of&nbsp;Cameron Hanover, based in&nbsp;New Canaan, Connecticut.<br />
Meanwhile, the&nbsp;World Bank said on&nbsp;Tuesday that the&nbsp;world financial crisis will sharply slow world economic growth next year, ending the&nbsp;<nobr>five-year</nobr> global price boom for&nbsp;crude oil and&nbsp;other commodities.<br />
The&nbsp;weaker energy prices could mark a&nbsp;bright spot for&nbsp;consumers who have been hard hit by&nbsp;the&nbsp;financial turmoil.<br />
The&nbsp;EIA said it cut its winter heating oil forecast to&nbsp;$US2.53 a&nbsp;gallon from $US2.75 a&nbsp;gallon, and&nbsp;its 2009 gasoline price forecast to&nbsp;$US2.03 a&nbsp;gallon from $US2.37.<br />
Average US gasoline price are currently running about $US1.70 a&nbsp;gallon, down from a&nbsp;record $US4.11 this summer.<br />
&#8220;We&#8217;ve lowered the&nbsp;bar for&nbsp;gasoline demand so much that it&#8217;s going to&nbsp;take years for&nbsp;it to&nbsp;recover to&nbsp;the&nbsp;type of&nbsp;demand numbers that we had in&nbsp;the&nbsp;past,&#8221; Phil Flynn, analyst at&nbsp;Alaron Trading in&nbsp;Chicago, said.</p>
Posted on <a href="http://www.commodityblog.com/">Commodity blog</a>.]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The sky isn&#8217;t falling, but fuel prices are</title>
		<link>http://www.commodityblog.com/commodity-prices-oil/the-sky-isnt-falling-but-fuel-prices-are</link>
		<comments>http://www.commodityblog.com/commodity-prices-oil/the-sky-isnt-falling-but-fuel-prices-are#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Oct 2008 17:15:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mario</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Commodity Prices - Oil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[diesel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fuel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gas prices]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[With oil prices tumbling below $70 US per barrel on&#160;Thursday &#8212; to&#160;their lowest levels since August 2007 &#8212; one might think the&#160;sky is falling. It&#8217;s equally tempting to&#160;start pointing fingers at&#160;all the&#160;elected officials who were crying for&#160;inquiries last July regarding the&#160;high price of&#160;oil; if they were so convinced the&#160;price had been driven upwards to&#160;the&#160;record close [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With <a href="http://www.commodityblog.com/category/commodity-prices-oil">oil prices</a> tumbling below $70 US per barrel on&nbsp;Thursday &#8212; to&nbsp;their lowest levels since August 2007 &#8212; one might think the&nbsp;sky is falling. It&#8217;s equally tempting to&nbsp;start pointing fingers at&nbsp;all the&nbsp;elected officials who were crying for&nbsp;inquiries last July regarding the&nbsp;high price of&nbsp;oil; if they were so convinced the&nbsp;price had been driven upwards to&nbsp;the&nbsp;record close of&nbsp;$145.29 price by&nbsp;speculators, it&#8217;s surprising they are not suggesting the&nbsp;<nobr>short-sellers</nobr> have driven it down.<br />
But no. The&nbsp;high price is about politics. The&nbsp;low price of&nbsp;crude means consumers are no longer phoning constituency offices to&nbsp;complain about be gouged at&nbsp;the&nbsp;gas pump. It&#8217;s safe to&nbsp;assume, therefore, taxpayers dollars will not be wasted looking into why oil prices have fallen so far, so fast.<br />
All kidding aside, however, it would be foolhardy to&nbsp;suggest that there hasn&#8217;t been a&nbsp;collective gasp in&nbsp;Canada&#8217;s oilpatch as&nbsp;crude prices have plummeted; investors had gotten used to&nbsp;seeing a&nbsp;<nobr>triple-digit</nobr> price for&nbsp;crude, even though the&nbsp;market was not valuing energy stocks at&nbsp;that level, nor were companies planning capital expenditures with oil beyond the&nbsp;century mark.<br />
While no one really believed an&nbsp;oil price beyond $100 was sustainable, companies and&nbsp;investors had gotten used to&nbsp;it. It&#8217;s now back to&nbsp;reality &#8212; where prices will be a&nbsp;more accurate reflection of&nbsp;supply and&nbsp;demand, at&nbsp;least for&nbsp;now.<br />
Here are a&nbsp;few things to&nbsp;chew on.<br />
First, the&nbsp;oilsands projects that are up and&nbsp;running are not at&nbsp;risk. As&nbsp;FirstEnergy&#8217;s William Lacey was quick to&nbsp;point out Thursday, oilsands operations did not shut down when oil hit $10 a&nbsp;barrel in&nbsp;1998 and&nbsp;early 1999.<br />
&#8220;They will keep running, no matter what. .. unless there is a&nbsp;massive shift somewhere. .. these are not easy projects to&nbsp;shut down or&nbsp;start up. But it&#8217;s the&nbsp;new projects like Fort Hills that we estimate need a&nbsp;$115 oil price to&nbsp;achieve a&nbsp;10 per cent <nobr>after-tax</nobr> return, that are in&nbsp;the&nbsp;territory of&nbsp;now being uneconomic,&#8221; he said.<br />
As&nbsp;to&nbsp;what the&nbsp;<nobr>break-even</nobr> oil price is for&nbsp;these operations, Lacey says the&nbsp;way to&nbsp;look at&nbsp;it is the&nbsp;cash cost per barrel to&nbsp;operate. The&nbsp;cash cost calculation typically includes operating costs, including expenses such as&nbsp;general and&nbsp;administrative costs, royalties and&nbsp;interest expense.<br />
He says Suncor&#8217;s <nobr>all-in</nobr> cash cost is $46 a&nbsp;barrel, with $33 being associated with operating costs. Canadian Oil Sands Trust pays out $43 per barrel, of&nbsp;which $27 is related to&nbsp;operating expenses.<br />
Meanwhile, Imperial Oil&#8217;s Cold Lake operations are the&nbsp;cheapest to&nbsp;run &#8212; $30 per barrel, with $17 being the&nbsp;operating component.<br />
In&nbsp;the&nbsp;context of&nbsp;Suncor and&nbsp;its $20-billion Voyageur expansion that was announced in&nbsp;January, Lacey says the&nbsp;company has the&nbsp;luxury of&nbsp;slowing down the&nbsp;development of&nbsp;the&nbsp;<nobr>four-phase</nobr>, <nobr>in-situ</nobr> development.<br />
&#8220;At&nbsp;$60 a&nbsp;barrel, Suncor doesn&#8217;t have enough credit to&nbsp;get through 2009 in&nbsp;terms of&nbsp;funding Voyageur from debt and&nbsp;cash flow, but at&nbsp;$80 a&nbsp;barrel it can easily meet the&nbsp;costs through 2009,&#8221; he says.<br />
The&nbsp;good news, then, is that in&nbsp;each of&nbsp;these cases, a&nbsp;$60 oil price doesn&#8217;t shut anything down. Besides, the&nbsp;lower commodity price environment that is driving down the&nbsp;value of&nbsp;the&nbsp;Canadian dollar means cash flows go up for&nbsp;any company producing a&nbsp;commodity priced in&nbsp;U.S. dollars. The&nbsp;price for&nbsp;WTI might have closed at&nbsp;$69.85 US per barrel on&nbsp;Thursday, but Edmonton Light ended the&nbsp;day at&nbsp;$85.89 Canadian.<br />
So that&#8217;s one argument against the&nbsp;&#8221;sky is falling&#8221; sentiment. And&nbsp;that&#8217;s the&nbsp;<nobr>short-term</nobr> view.<br />
The&nbsp;<nobr>long-term</nobr> view gets more interesting.<br />
That&#8217;s because a&nbsp;low oil price &#8212; and&nbsp;therefore low gasoline price &#8212; is going to&nbsp;do nothing in&nbsp;the&nbsp;context of&nbsp;encouraging conservation or&nbsp;prompting reinvestment.<br />
If the&nbsp;oil price &#8212; and&nbsp;therefore prices at&nbsp;the&nbsp;gasoline pump &#8212; remain low for&nbsp;the&nbsp;next 12 months, there is no reason to&nbsp;believe that the&nbsp;dramatic drop in&nbsp;gasoline consumption that has been recorded in&nbsp;the&nbsp;U.S. will continue; low gas prices means the&nbsp;mothballed Hummer will soon be back on&nbsp;the&nbsp;freeway. And&nbsp;this does nothing to&nbsp;solve the&nbsp;<nobr>long-term</nobr> issue of&nbsp;the&nbsp;U.S. addiction to&nbsp;oil.<br />
The&nbsp;second point is that low prices, tight credit markets and&nbsp;no possibility of&nbsp;raising money through the&nbsp;sale of&nbsp;shares means companies will not be stretching themselves on&nbsp;the&nbsp;reinvestment front. When the&nbsp;global economy resumes its growth, the&nbsp;supply issues will not have been solved; they will have been made worse. Don&#8217;t forget that the&nbsp;Middle East accounted for&nbsp;a&nbsp;big share of&nbsp;the&nbsp;growth in&nbsp;oil consumption in&nbsp;2007, while China was responsible for&nbsp;about a&nbsp;third. Then there&#8217;s the&nbsp;subsidy factor &#8212; with Venezuela selling gasoline at&nbsp;16 cents a&nbsp;litre; these practices or&nbsp;consumption patterns are not about to&nbsp;change.<br />
The&nbsp;only thing that might come out of&nbsp;all this is a&nbsp;round of&nbsp;acquisitions by&nbsp;companies &#8212; especially the&nbsp;super majors &#8212; that have big cash positions on&nbsp;their balance sheets and&nbsp;have struggled to&nbsp;add reserves. ExxonMobil has been one company whose name keeps surfacing; it could easily scoop up the&nbsp;30 per cent of&nbsp;Imperial Oil it doesn&#8217;t already own for&nbsp;about $8 billion and&nbsp;still have money left over. There were also reports Thursday that BP &#8212; which has suffered in&nbsp;Russia with its <nobr>BP-TNK</nobr> joint venture &#8212; might just be looking at&nbsp;natural gas producer Chesapeake Energy because it too has been challenged in&nbsp;terms of&nbsp;reserve additions. Royal Dutch Shell is another company whose name keeps coming up, for&nbsp;similar reasons.<br />
As&nbsp;they like to&nbsp;say in&nbsp;these parts, all these companies with sizeable cash positions are sporting big hunting licences.<br />
In&nbsp;the&nbsp;<nobr>short-term</nobr>, however, hard as&nbsp;it may be, it&#8217;s important to&nbsp;remember that the&nbsp;oilpatch has been through much worse over the&nbsp;years. It is better capitalized than it has ever been and&nbsp;even at&nbsp;$60 oil will be generating more than enough cash flow to&nbsp;fund operations &#8212; even reinvestment &#8212; because costs are coming down.<br />
The&nbsp;reality is that the&nbsp;high prices over the&nbsp;past year had stymied the&nbsp;asset sale world because of&nbsp;the&nbsp;huge gaps in&nbsp;terms of&nbsp;expectations between buyers and&nbsp;sellers; lower prices and&nbsp;the&nbsp;tight credit markets means the&nbsp;<nobr>old-fashioned</nobr> values of&nbsp;succeeding on&nbsp;the&nbsp;basis of&nbsp;competitive advantages, looking for&nbsp;growth opportunities at&nbsp;reasonable prices and&nbsp;using plain vanilla financial instruments to&nbsp;meet financing needs are back.<br />
The&nbsp;world has changed. But in&nbsp;the&nbsp;context of&nbsp;<nobr>long-term</nobr> oil prices, the&nbsp;question of&nbsp;supply has not been solved and&nbsp;low oil prices only serve to&nbsp;push up demand. All this does is set the&nbsp;world up for&nbsp;higher prices in&nbsp;the&nbsp;years to&nbsp;come.</p>
Posted on <a href="http://www.commodityblog.com/">Commodity blog</a>.]]></content:encoded>
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