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Author Topic:   Exxon Shell and Mobil post record profits
BeWare
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posted 10-27-2005 11:38 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for BeWare     

This Pi$$es me off. Its time to make Congress do something or replace them with someone that will regardless of what political party they belong to.

I am going to vote for whomever supports immdediate Tax reform, regulation of the Oil Industry and to stop Off Shoring of US Jobs.

The article:


Exxon Mobil, Shell Post Record Profits
Oct 27 12:20 PM US/Eastern
Email this story

By STEVE QUINN
Associated Press Writer


IRVING, Texas


High prices for oil and natural gas propelled Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC to their best quarterly results ever on Thursday, with Exxon becoming the first U.S. company ever to ring up quarterly sales of $100 billion.

To put Exxon's performance into perspective, its third quarter revenue was greater than the annual gross domestic product of some of the largest oil producing nations, including the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. The world's largest publicly traded oil company also set a U.S. profit record with net income of almost $10 billion, according to Standard & Poor's equity market analyst Howard Silverblatt.

Both Exxon and Shell said their performances were buoyed by higher crude-oil and natural-gas prices, even as output suffered due to a busy hurricane season in the Gulf of Mexico.

Exxon's net income ballooned 75 percent to $9.92 billion, compared with $5.68 billion a year ago. The previous oil-industry earnings record was Exxon's 2004 fourth-quarter profit of $8.42 billion. Revenue grew to $100.72 billion from $76.38 billion in the prior-year period.

At Shell, third-quarter net income attributable to shareholders grew 68 percent to $9.03 billion, compared with $5.37 billion a year earlier. Including income attributable to minority interests, profit rose 67 percent to $9.39 billion at the Anglo-Dutch company. Revenue rose 8 percent to $76.44 billion, in spite of an 11 percent decline in oil and natural gas output.

"We are capturing the benefits of high oil and gas prices and refining margins," Shell Chief Financial Officer Peter Voser said, referring to the profit margin on each barrel of crude that is refined into gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.

Excluding certain items, Exxon's profit was $8.3 billion, or $1.32 per share, or slightly below the $1.38 per share expected by analysts polled by Thomson Financial.

Shell said adjusted earnings on a current cost of supplies basis _ a measurement that strips out the fluctuating value of the company's oil and gas inventories _ was $7.37 billion, sharply higher than analysts' forecasts.

Shares of Exxon rose 56 cents, or 1 percent, to $56.76 on the New York Stock Exchange, where U.S.-traded shares of Shell rose $1.11, or 2 percent, to $60.61.

Exxon said the hurricanes slashed U.S. production volumes by 5 percent from a year ago, while global daily production slipped to 2.45 million barrels of oil equivalent from 2.51 million barrels.

___

On the Net:
http://www.exxon.com
http://www.shell.com

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast


Dustis
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From: Acworth,GA,USA
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posted 10-27-2005 11:50 AM           
...and don't forget the "nice" tax break the Oil companies got handed from the current administration...


toys
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posted 10-27-2005 12:54 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for toys     
So whats NEW!!!!!!!!! Have they EVER!!!!!!!!! lost MONEY!!!!!!!!

Toys

MIKE GATLIN
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posted 10-27-2005 03:26 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for MIKE GATLIN     

quote:
"We are capturing the benefits of high oil and gas prices and refining margins,"

You can find that definition earlier in the dictionary under gouging.

Kruisin Kat
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From: Rochester, NH, USA
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posted 10-27-2005 04:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Kruisin Kat     
You can always refuse to buy Exxon Shell and Mobil products! That'll fix'm!!!

With all my motorized vehicles and home heating I probably will spent $6000 this year. Thats better than 10% of my income (before taxes). Good thing I don't have drinking and smoking to pay for too! Also, whats up with my grocery bill, remember when you could feed a family of 4 on $50 a week? Now you can't feed a child of 4 on $50 a week!! By the way, Whats up with the price of bottled water? $1.50 for a 16oz. Thats more than gasoline!!!

Well if your going to get a "Law", why don't we make it so that everything is free! I'll vote for that.

SirReal
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posted 10-27-2005 05:12 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for SirReal     
Amen Rich Amen!


Kraut
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posted 10-27-2005 05:36 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Kraut     
I've voted Republican my entire life, but I think it's time for a change. I have no other options.



halicat
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Posts: 1300
From: Plymouth, MI
Registered: OCT 2002

posted 10-27-2005 05:50 PM           
guys ..
I'm involved in the industrial plastics industry and have seen our market blow up in our face.... product is no longer available and what you can get is double the price than it was before the hurricanes...
most agree its a huge money grab by the big producers who seem to have everyone by the nuggets....
consumers are sholdering the burden and all we get are lame excuses....

big companies are taking advantage of these disasters...and all we can do is sit back and watch...

Where are the guys that were elected to take care of the common man....???

Fat Pat
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posted 10-27-2005 06:13 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Fat Pat     
I sure wish your vote meant something Beware, because I support you 100%. If I'm not mistaken we have had a few prez's in thee last several years that DID NOT win the popular vote!! Not trying to promote anything here...but please go to www.fairtax.org It is a grass roots group that I have been active in for several years. Simply read and come to your own conclusions.


MDProwler
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posted 10-27-2005 07:32 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for MDProwler     
I don't get it. When times are tough we want the government to save us. When times are good we don't want the government to interfere. Can't have it both ways.
I agree that I hate big oil companies but 10 billion profit on 100 billion in sales is still only 10% profit.
I'm part of the problem. I use Exxon/Mobil in all our work trucks because of the 'wand' that controls what my employees can buy. I need to look for alternatives I think to buy from another source. But...what are the profits and sales of the others? BP? Texaco? Who sells to the convenience stores. It's hard to tell who gets the money.

This message has been edited by MDProwler on 10-27-2005 at 08:04 PM

Chromer
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posted 10-27-2005 07:41 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Chromer     
Article_What is Driving Oil Prices

NO WAY am I here to defend "greedy" Oil Compainies (who are driven by every day people like US who buy stocks). I would just like folks to read the link AND imagine how angry they would be (been there done that) if it was again 1973 waiting in line to buy a five gallon limit of gasoline?

??

ed monahan
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posted 10-27-2005 08:54 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for ed monahan     
FatPat, what in the world does the fact that Dubya did not win "the popular vote" have to do with anything? The elections have been based on electoral votes for all these years. If your boy Clinton had not won the "popular vote" but won the electoral vote, would that have been okay.
I am not saying Dubya is doing a good job but he really did not cause the catastrophes. I agree the gov't needs to do something but it is not just one branch of gov't that is not doing a thing. And it is not just in the past few years when Congress has been a total waste. ALL politicians are out to get re-elected. I seldom vote for an incumbent in any election. Let a new crook get a chance to steal from us.
You can read anything you want. People slant things to prove THEIR points and ignore everything else. They don't want to hear the other side and if you agree with them, you think they are the second coming.
A perfect example is all the b.s. about the shootings, rapes and murders in New Orleans and the Super Dome. All the media printed it, it MUST be true. They print whatever they want and people take it for gospel. None of the b.s. was true, we find out later.
I'm from the gov't and I am here to help you.


Fat Pat
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posted 10-27-2005 10:03 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Fat Pat     
Moneyham....my point exactly "the popular vote means nothing" so why bother. I am saying the popular vote SHOULD mean something...the electoral college is obsolete and has been for 50 years or more. If my buddy Clinton had not won the popular vote...my belief is that he should not be prez!!
What is it about that statement you don't understand?? I'll tell AC to send some of that Yak poop over your way!


ed monahan
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posted 10-27-2005 10:17 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for ed monahan     
The part I didn't understand was the thread was about enormous profits by the oil companies and you are griping about the electoral college. I presumed you were insinuating it was Dubya's fault. He won fair and square. Your vote does count since to win the electoral college, you have to win enough states. To win the states they count the votes to determine the winner.
By the way, tomatoes and peppers will be going up due to Wilma wiping out the crop.
Dubya's fault? I think not. He might be heavy into agriculture, too.


Fat Pat
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posted 10-27-2005 10:22 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Fat Pat     
Nope...not blaming Dubya for anything except the high cost of gasoline and the deficit...oh and the economy sucks!!
I think BP just may be short for Bush Petroleum!!

This message has been edited by Fat Pat on 10-27-2005 at 10:23 PM

BeWare
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posted 10-27-2005 10:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for BeWare     
quote:
Originally posted by Fat Pat:
I sure wish your vote meant something Beware, because I support you 100%. If I'm not mistaken we have had a few prez's in thee last several years that DID NOT win the popular vote!! Not trying to promote anything here...but please go to www.fairtax.org It is a grass roots group that I have been active in for several years. Simply read and come to your own conclusions.

Pat I have already written my Congressman and informed him that my vote will be largely based on who supports the Fair Tax Plan. I have been watching it and I am all for it.

ed monahan
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posted 10-27-2005 10:51 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for ed monahan     
quote:
Originally posted by Fat Pat:
Nope...not blaming Dubya for anything except the high cost of gasoline and the deficit...oh and the economy sucks!!
I think BP just may be short for Bush Petroleum!!


I guess it has to be really embarassing to the Democrats to think this idiot beat their best candidate and is now making millions off the gas stock he owns. Vote for Hillary in a couple of years, she will straighten out the health care mess. lol The only problem then will be the real estate deals in ARK.
I don't know why I thought it was only one party causing us problems. lol


Fat Pat
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posted 10-28-2005 04:36 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Fat Pat     
Moneyham....may a diseased Yak lick your next ballot!!


Bob Miller
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posted 10-28-2005 07:17 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Bob Miller     
Exxon-Mobile's quarterly profits were 75% higher than the same period last year. I doubt anyone disputes two factors accounted for this: (1) tax break give to oil companies by this administration and (2) enormous price increases. I know "Dubya" says he wants to be a friend to business but this is ridiculous, especially when energy prices impact virtually every segment of our economy.

As for the electoral college, I think it should be eliminated. It's original purpose was to ensure an "uninformed" public didn't go off and elect someone who should not be in public office. I like to joke with my Republican friends (yes I have several...) that the last two elections seemed to justify keeping the Electoral College.

Tom Santella
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posted 10-28-2005 08:32 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Tom Santella     
There is an article in the paper today with this info. It is buried so far back it is a wonder that anyone could find it. It should be HUGE front page news. WHY NOT?

------------------
BackinBlack


Wayne Finch
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posted 10-28-2005 11:54 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Wayne Finch     
I thought you guys lived in a capitalist state, not a communist state. Free enterprise. Companies should be able to charge whatever the market will bear. And if they make huge profits, others will enter the market.

No one complains when Google makes billions and they have almost no equity invested in the business, yet oil companies have spent billions of their own money investing in drilling equipment, refineries, transportation, etc.

And don't forget, oil prices are not set in the US. You pay almost the lowest price for gas in the world. Everyone is paying a high price. Is that W's fault too? This has zero to do with government policy or which government is in power. Do they control the burgeoning demand coming from China and India.

No one was complaining 5-10 years ago when oil companies were not making money and virtually every Canadian oil exploration company was going bankrupt because the price was so low.

People need to deal with issues themselves instead of expecting the government to bail them out of everything that doesn't go hunky dorey.

Just deal with it. If you don't like the amount oil companies are making, then buy oil stocks. If you don't like drug prices, buy drug stocks.

I don't like high oil prices either, and I don't own oil stocks. But it is just a fact of live and you have to deal with it.

One day, we will run out of oil. Don't forget, we have only been sucking this out of the earth ground for a very short period of time (in relation to the amount of time it took to form the oil). So get ready for $200 a barrel oil. Hopefully by then, our cars will be running on something else.

Why don't people really complain about sky-high insane real estate prices.........................because they are participating!!!!!!!!!!!!!

BeWare
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From: Acworth,GA,USA
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posted 10-28-2005 02:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for BeWare     
Wayne , no offense man. But let me get this straight. Companies can go the Government for tax breaks, Chapter 11 protection or protection from having to honor their pension plans when they get into trouble (which ends up coming out of the tax payers pockets). Yet when many of these same companies make obscene profits which again is at tax payer expense, your saying we don't have the same right to expect the Government to do something about that.
Seems a little one sided to me.
As far as buying stock as you suggested, I can't afford to. I keep losing benefits at work, have not had a salary increase in 3 years, live in fear every day that I am going to be laid off at any moments because my company is sending more and more jobs off shore.
Corporate America is selling out this country a piece at at time. I think its my right as a tax payer and as a citizen to demand something be done to stop it. Corporations use lobbyist to promote their needs an agenda with the Government. The only power we have as citizens is to threaten the politicians positions by voting them out if they don't support our needs. That's what we pay taxes for.


SuperKat
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posted 10-28-2005 06:25 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for SuperKat     
Throw the bums out. That's my policy and it is not party specific, it's incumbent specific.
All of them every time.


Chromer
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posted 10-28-2005 06:31 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Chromer     
Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan
Energy
Before the Japan Business Federation, the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and the Japan Association of Corporate Executives, Tokyo, Japan
October 17, 2005

Even before the devastating hurricanes of August and September 2005, world oil markets had been subject to a degree of strain not experienced for a generation. Increased demand and lagging additions to productive capacity had eliminated a significant amount of the slack in world oil markets that had been essential in containing crude oil and product prices between 1985 and 2000. In such tight markets, the shutdown of oil platforms and refineries last month by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita was an accident waiting to happen. In their aftermath, prices of crude oil worldwide moved sharply higher, and with refineries stressed by a shortage of capacity, margins for refined products in the United States roughly doubled. Prices of natural gas soared as well.

Oil prices had been persistently edging higher since 2002 as increases in global oil consumption progressively absorbed the buffer of several million barrels a day in excess capacity that stood between production and demand. Any pickup in consumption or shortfall in production for a commodity as price inelastic in the short run as oil was bound to be immediately reflected in a spike in prices. Such a price spike effectively represented a tax that drained purchasing power from oil consumers. Although the global economic expansion appears to have been on a reasonably firm path through the summer months, the recent surge in energy prices will undoubtedly be a drag from now on. In the United States, Japan, and elsewhere, the effect on growth would have been greater had oil not declined in importance as an input to world economic activity since the 1970s.

How did we arrive at a state in which the balance of world energy supply and demand could be so fragile that weather, not to mention individual acts of sabotage or local insurrection, could have a significant impact on economic growth? Even so large a weather event as August and September's hurricanes, had they occurred in earlier decades of ample oil capacity, would have had hardly noticeable effects on crude prices if producers placed their excess supplies on the market or on product prices if idle refinery capacity were activated.

The history of the world petroleum industry is one of a rapidly growing industry seeking the stable prices that have been seen by producers as essential to the expansion of the market. In the early twentieth century, pricing power was firmly in the hands of Americans, predominately John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil. Reportedly appalled by the volatility of crude oil prices that stunted the growth of oil markets in the early years of the petroleum industry, Rockefeller had endeavored with some success to stabilize those prices by gaining control by the turn of the century of nine-tenths of U.S. refining capacity. But even after the breakup of the Standard Oil monopoly in 1911, pricing power remained with the United States--first with the U.S. oil companies and later with the Texas Railroad Commission, which raised limits on output to suppress price spikes and cut output to prevent sharp price declines.

Indeed, as late as 1952, crude oil production in the United States (44 percent of which was in Texas) still accounted for more than half of the world total. Excess Texas crude oil capacity was notably brought to bear to contain the impact on oil prices of the nationalization of Iranian oil a half-century ago. Again, excess American oil was released to the market to counter the price pressures induced by the Suez crisis of 1956 and the Arab-Israeli War of 1967.

Of course, concentrated control in the hands of a few producers over any resource can pose potential problems. In the event, that historical role ended in 1971, when excess crude oil capacity in the United States was finally absorbed by rising world demand. At that point, the marginal pricing of oil, which for so long had been under the control of international oil companies, predominantly American, abruptly shifted to a few large Middle East producers and to greater market forces than those that they and the other members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) could contain.

To capitalize on their newly acquired pricing power, many producing nations, especially in the Middle East, nationalized their oil companies. But the full magnitude of the pricing power of the nationalized oil companies became evident only in the aftermath of the oil embargo of 1973. During that period, posted crude oil prices at Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia, rose to more than $11 per barrel, a level significantly above the $1.80 per barrel that had been unchanged from 1961 to 1970. The further surge in oil prices that accompanied the Iranian Revolution in 1979 eventually drove up prices to $39 per barrel by February 1981 ($75 per barrel in today's prices).

The higher prices of the 1970s abruptly ended the extraordinary growth of U.S. and world consumption of oil and the increased intensity of its use that was so evident in the decades immediately following World War II. Since the more than tenfold increase in crude oil prices between 1972 and 1981, world oil consumption per real dollar equivalent of global gross domestic product (GDP) has declined by approximately one-third.

In the United States, between 1945 and 1973, consumption of petroleum products rose at a startling average annual rate of 4-1/2 percent, well in excess of growth of our real GDP. However, between 1973 and 2004, oil consumption grew in the United States, on average, at only 1/2 percent per year, far short of the rise in real GDP. In consequence, the ratio of U.S. oil consumption to GDP fell by half.

Much of the decline in the ratio of oil use to real GDP in the United States has resulted from growth in the proportion of GDP composed of services, high-tech goods, and other presumably less oil-intensive industries. Additionally, part of the decline in this ratio is due to improved energy conservation for a given set of economic activities, including greater home insulation, better gasoline mileage, more efficient machinery, and streamlined production processes. These trends have been ongoing but have likely intensified of late with the sharp, recent increases in oil prices.

In Japan, which until recently was the world's second largest oil consumer, the growth of demand was also strong before the developments of the 1970s. Subsequently, shocked by the increase in prices and without indigenous production to cushion the effects on incomes, Japan sharply curtailed the growth of its oil use, reducing the ratio of oil consumption to GDP by about half as well.

Although the production quotas of OPEC have been a significant factor in price determination for a third of a century, the story since 1973 has been as much about the power of markets as it has been about power over markets. The incentives to alter oil consumption provided by market prices eventually resolved even the most seemingly insurmountable difficulties posed by inadequate supply outside the OPEC cartel.

Many observers feared that the gap projected between supply and demand in the immediate post-1973 period would be so large that rationing would be the only practical solution. But the resolution did not occur that way. In the United States, to be sure, mandated fuel-efficiency standards for cars and light trucks induced the slower growth of gasoline demand. Some observers argue, however, that, even without government-enforced standards, market forces would have led to increased fuel efficiency. Indeed, the number of small, fuel-efficient Japanese cars that were imported into U.S. markets rose throughout the 1970s as the price of oil moved higher.

Moreover, at that time, prices were expected to go still higher. For example, the U.S. Department of Energy in 1979 had projections showing real oil prices reaching nearly $60 per barrel by 1995--the equivalent of more than $120 in today's prices. The failure of oil prices to rise as projected in the late 1970s is a testament to the power of markets and the technologies they foster.

Today, the average price of crude oil, despite its recent surge, is still in real terms below the price peak of February 1981. Moreover, since oil use, as I noted, is only two-thirds as important an input into world GDP as it was three decades ago, the effect of the current surge in oil prices, though noticeable, is likely to prove significantly less consequential to economic growth and inflation than the surge in the 1970s.

The petroleum industry's early years of hit-or-miss exploration and development of oil and gas has given way to a more systematic, high-tech approach. The dramatic changes in technology in recent years have made existing oil and natural gas reserves stretch further while keeping energy costs lower than they otherwise would have been. Seismic imaging and advanced drilling techniques are facilitating the discovery of promising new reservoirs and are enabling the continued development of mature fields. Accordingly, one might expect that the cost of developing new fields and, hence, the long-term price of new oil and gas would have declined. And, indeed, these costs have declined, though less than they might otherwise have done. Much of the innovation in oil development outside OPEC, for example, has been directed at overcoming an increasingly inhospitable and costly exploratory environment, the consequence of more than a century of draining the more immediately accessible sources of crude oil.

Still, consistent with declining long-term marginal costs of extraction, distant futures prices for crude oil moved lower, on net, during the 1990s. The most-distant futures prices fell from a bit more than $20 per barrel before the first Gulf War to less than $18 a barrel on average in 1999.

Such long-term price stability has eroded noticeably over the past five years. Between 1991 and 2000, although spot prices ranged between $11 and $35 per barrel, distant futures exhibited little variation. Since then, distant futures prices have risen sharply. In early August, prices for delivery in 2011 of light sweet crude breached $60 per barrel, in line with recent increases in spot prices. This surge arguably reflects the growing presumption that increases in crude oil capacity outside OPEC will no longer be adequate to serve rising world demand going forward, especially from emerging Asia. Additionally, the longer-term crude price has presumably been driven up by renewed fears of supply disruptions in the Middle East and elsewhere.

But the opportunities for profitable exploration and development in the industrial economies are dwindling, and the international oil companies are currently largely prohibited, restricted, or face considerable political risk in investing in OPEC and other developing countries. In such a highly profitable market environment for oil producers, one would have expected a far greater surge of oil investments. Indeed, some producers have significantly ratcheted up their investment plans.

But because of the geographic concentration of proved reserves, much of the investment in crude oil productive capacity required to meet demand, without prices rising unduly, will need to be undertaken by national oil companies in OPEC and other developing economies. Although investment is rising, the significant proportion of oil revenues invested in financial assets suggests that many governments perceive that the benefits of investing in additional capacity to meet rising world oil demand are limited. Moreover, much oil revenue has been diverted to meet the perceived high-priority needs of rapidly growing populations. Unless those policies, political institutions, and attitudes change, it is difficult to envision adequate reinvestment into the oil facilities of these economies.

Besides feared shortfalls in crude oil capacity, the status of world refining has become worrisome as well. Crude oil production has been rising faster than refining capacity over the past decade. A continuation of this trend would soon make lack of refining capacity the binding constraint on growth in oil use. This may already be happening in certain grades, given the growing mismatch between the heavier and more sour content of world crude oil production and the rising world demand for lighter, sweeter petroleum products.

There is thus an especial need to add adequate coking and desulphurization capacity to convert the average gravity and sulphur content of much of the world's crude oil to the lighter and sweeter needs of product markets, which are increasingly dominated by transportation fuels that must meet ever more stringent environmental requirements. Yet the expansion and the modernization of world refineries are lagging. For example, no new refinery has been built in the United States since 1976. The consequence of lagging modernization is reflected in a significant widening of the price spread between the higher priced light sweet crudes such as Brent and the heavier crudes such as Maya.

To be sure, refining capacity continues to expand, albeit gradually, and exploration and development activities are ongoing, even in developed industrial countries. Conversion of the vast Athabasca oil sands reserves in Alberta to productive capacity, while slow, has made this unconventional source of oil highly competitive at current market prices. However, despite improved technology and high prices, proved reserves in the developed countries are being depleted because additions to these reserves have not kept pace with production.

* * *

The production, demand, and price outlook for oil beyond the current market turbulence will doubtless continue to reflect longer-term concerns. Much will depend on the response of demand to price over the longer run. If history is any guide, should higher prices persist, energy use over time will continue to decline relative to GDP. In the wake of sharply higher prices, the oil intensity of the U.S. economy, as I pointed out earlier, has been reduced by about half since the early 1970s. Much of that displacement was achieved by 1985. Progress in reducing oil intensity has continued since then, but at a lessened pace. For example, after the initial surge in the fuel efficiencies of our light motor vehicles during the 1980s, reflecting the earlier run-up in oil prices, improvements have since slowed to a trickle.

The more-modest rate of decline in the energy intensity of the U.S. economy after 1985 should not be surprising, given the generally lower level of real oil prices that have prevailed since then. With real energy prices again on the rise, more-rapid decreases in the intensity of energy use in the years ahead seem virtually inevitable. Long-term demand elasticities over the past three decades have proved noticeably higher than those evident in the short term. Indeed, gasoline consumption has declined markedly in the United States in recent weeks, presumably partly as a consequence of higher prices.

* * *

Altering the magnitude and manner of energy consumption will significantly affect the path of the global economy over the long term. For years, long-term prospects for oil and natural gas prices appeared benign. When choosing capital projects, businesses in the past could mostly look through short-run fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices, with an anticipation that moderate prices would prevail over the longer haul. The recent shift in expectations, however, has been substantial enough and persistent enough to direct business-investment decisions in favor of energy-cost reduction. Over the past decade, energy consumed, measured in British thermal units, per real dollar of gross nonfinancial, non-energy corporate product in the United States has declined substantially, and this trend may be expected to accelerate in coming years. In Japan, as well, energy use has declined as a fraction of GDP, but these savings were largely achieved in previous decades, and energy intensity has been flat more recently.

We can expect similar increases in oil efficiency in the rapidly growing economies of East Asia as they respond to the same set of market incentives. But at present, China consumes roughly twice as much oil per dollar of GDP as the United States, and if, as projected, its share of world GDP continues to increase, the average improvements in world oil-intensity will be less pronounced than the improvements in individual countries, viewed separately, would suggest.

* * *

We cannot judge with certainty how technological possibilities will play out in the future, but we can say with some assurance that developments in energy markets will remain central in determining the longer-run health of our nations' economies. The experience of the past fifty years--and indeed much longer than that--affirms that market forces play a key role in conserving scarce energy resources, directing those resources to their most highly valued uses. However, the availability of adequate productive capacity will also be driven by nonmarket influences and by other policy considerations.

To be sure, energy issues present policymakers with difficult tradeoffs to consider. The concentration of oil reserves in politically volatile areas of the world is an ongoing concern. But that concern and others, one hopes, will be addressed in a manner that, to the greatest extent possible, does not distort or stifle the meaningful functioning of our markets. Barring political impediments to the operation of markets, the same price signals that are so critical for balancing energy supply and demand in the short run also signal profit opportunities for long-term supply expansion. Moreover, they stimulate the research and development that will unlock new approaches to energy production and use that we can now only barely envision.

Improving technology and ongoing shifts in the structure of economic activity are reducing the energy intensity of industrial countries, and presumably recent oil price increases will accelerate the pace of displacement of energy-intensive production facilities. If history is any guide, oil will eventually be overtaken by less-costly alternatives well before conventional oil reserves run out. Indeed, oil displaced coal despite still vast untapped reserves of coal, and coal displaced wood without denuding our forest lands.

New technologies to more fully exploit existing conventional oil reserves will emerge in the years ahead. Moreover, innovation is already altering the power source of motor vehicles, and much research is directed at reducing gasoline requirements. We will begin the transition to the next major sources of energy, perhaps before midcentury, as production from conventional oil reservoirs, according to central-tendency scenarios of the U.S. Department of Energy, is projected to peak. In fact, the development and application of new sources of energy, especially nonconventional sources of oil, is already in train. Nonetheless, the transition will take time. We, and the rest of the world, doubtless will have to live with the geopolitical and other uncertainties of the oil markets for some time to come.



halicat
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Posts: 2723
From: Denver, Colorado, USA
Registered: DEC 2000

posted 10-28-2005 06:33 PM           


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