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New I wasn't expecting it to go this low ever
I wasn't expecting oil to go this low ever again. Declining supply and increasing global demand and all that.

What I didn't account for is that the global oil production and shipping system is actually inflexible, but pricing is flexible. That means when demand goes south, the market can get glutted quickly and prices can collapse.

I don't think it will stay in the sub $50 range for long though. At that price there are oil producers who are loosing money, and once they fill their current contracts they will begin cutting the tap.

Jay
New dont remember $9 a barrel?
when we had 60 major oil companies in the US and now we have 2 because of that. It can happen again, dont believe all of that running out crap, that was pushed by an agenda that has temporarily been bypassed by events.
New Dunno.
Things are very different now compared to the late 1990s. China and India are rapidly growing and the middle classes are going to want cars.

http://news.xinhuane...ntent_7414628.htm

BEIJING, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- Auto production and sales in China both surged more than 20 percent to a record 8.8 million units in 2007, despite slackening sales in global markets, an industry group said Sunday.

China's automakers rolled out 8.88 million motor vehicles last year, up 22.02 percent from a year earlier, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Total vehicle sales jumped 21.84 percent year-on-year to 8.79 million units in the world's second largest car market after the United States, twice the figure in 2003.

[...]

Currently, vehicle ownership in China was 44 for every 1,000 people, he said. This was compared with the world average of 120. The United States has 750 vehicles for every 1,000 people.

Dong said China's car market has huge potential as the economy continues to grow rapidly and the government tries to encourage people to spend money.

China had 57 million motor vehicles by the end of last year. Among them were only 15.2 million privately-owned cars, according to latest government figures.


If China ends up being only half as automobile-ized as the US, and its population doesn't increase beyond 1.3 B, that's still about 500 M cars and they're going to need a lot of oil even if they get 50 mpg.

And, yes, Hubbert's Peak still applies - like it or not.
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3720

There may be other ways to get hydrocarbon fuels, but the traditional way of finding deposits and pumping it out of the ground is slowly playing itself out. There aren't huge, easy to exploit, fields out there any more. I think the price of oil will be volatile, but over the next 10 years I don't see the trend in prices doing much but increasing.

Cheers,
Scott.
New thats what you said last year :-)
New Hey, I admit I'm bad at the timing. ;-)
New I had a boss who was ALWAYS right
about everything.

Except when.
     Well, so much for that prognostication. - (Another Scott) - (9)
         dont worry, you will see it again - (boxley) - (2)
             I think we'll see $200/B before we see $25/B again. - (Another Scott) - (1)
                 I'd take REAL good odds on #4 - (mhuber)
         I wasn't expecting it to go this low ever - (jay) - (5)
             dont remember $9 a barrel? - (boxley) - (4)
                 Dunno. - (Another Scott) - (3)
                     thats what you said last year :-) -NT - (boxley) - (2)
                         Hey, I admit I'm bad at the timing. ;-) -NT - (Another Scott) - (1)
                             I had a boss who was ALWAYS right - (crazy)

Ahh, the good old days when I didn't know how stupid I was.
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