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Autor Tópico: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal  (Lida 299550 vezes)

vbm

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1640 em: 2023-06-08 11:14:04 »
Se já há centrais nucleares
que navegam no Ártico
para quê minerar
o xisto?


I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1641 em: 2023-06-08 16:15:29 »
Se já há centrais nucleares
que navegam no Ártico
para quê minerar
o xisto?




O petróleo continua e continuará a ser necessário.

Quanto às centrais nucleares, sem dúvida q são e serão muitíssimo úteis, embora actualmente não pareçam ser muito populares...   ::)
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1642 em: 2023-06-15 18:33:43 »
Uma notícia interessante:


«OPEC’s Smallest Producer Sees Crude Oil Exports Drop To Zero
By Charles Kennedy - Jun 08, 2023, 10:30 AM CDT

Equatorial Guinea, a small West African country and OPEC’s smallest oil producer, did not export any crude oil in May due to output declines and no new projects to replace lost production, Petro-Logistics said on Thursday.

So last month, Equatorial Guinea’s crude oil exports hit zero, according to the crude flows tracking firm.

EG
Source: Petro-Logistics on Twitter

Equatorial Guinea, like other West African producers, faces the common problem of declining production mingled with a lack of immediate new projects coming on, Petro-Logistics noted.

Equatorial Guinea, which became a member of OPEC in 2017, pumped an average 289,000 barrels per day (bpd) of crude back in 2015.

By April this year, production had shrunk to 59,000 bpd, which was still up by 11,000 bpd compared to March, according to secondary sources in OPEC’s latest Monthly Oil Market Report (MOMR) from May. In the first quarter of 2023, Equatorial Guinea’s crude oil production averaged 54,000 bpd, down from 90,000 in the third quarter of 2022 and an average of 98,000 bpd for the full year 2021.

Back in 2021, the country with around 1.45 million residents received half of all its export revenue from petroleum export revenue, according to OPEC data.

ExxonMobil, currently the largest oil producer in the country, plans to stop pumping crude in Equatorial Guinea and exit the country after its license expires in 2026, Reuters reported at the end of 2022, citing sources close to the plans.

West Africa has been a problematic investment for oil majors, considering the higher costs compared to more lucrative projects elsewhere and the high emissions profile of the projects.

Other West African producers and OPEC members, such as Nigeria and Angola, have also been struggling with falling crude oil output amid high costs and a lack of investment from oil majors in recent years.

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/OPECs-Smallest-Producer-Sees-Crude-Oil-Exports-Drop-To-Zero.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

vbm

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1643 em: 2023-06-15 18:37:56 »
O petróleo polui menos do que o carvão?
Pode obter-se petróleo a partir do carvão?

vbm

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1644 em: 2023-06-15 18:41:41 »
Qual a proporção do petróleo do Mar do Norte
na produção mundial anual?

E qual a taxa de lucro
face à cotação
do barril?

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1645 em: 2023-06-16 14:03:54 »
Será?    ::)


«The Oil Market Has Shifted Into A New Cycle

By Editorial Dept - Jun 09, 2023, 9:08 AM CDT

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Saudi Production Cuts Provide Early Boost to Crude Oil Prices

Monday began with a surge in U.S. WTI crude oil prices, driven by Saudi Arabia's announcement of an additional production cut of 1 million barrels per day starting in July. The world's top oil exporter aimed to counteract the macroeconomic challenges that had been weighing on the market. The Saudi energy ministry revealed that the kingdom's output would decrease to 9 million barrels per day, marking its most significant reduction in years and contributing to recent gains in oil prices. This unexpected decision by Saudi Arabia aligned with the broader agreement made by OPEC+ to limit oil supply until 2024, resulting in a bullish outlook for the short-term oil market.»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Oil-Market-Has-Shifted-Into-A-New-Cycle.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

vbm

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1646 em: 2023-06-16 21:05:26 »
Isso permitirá o fornecimento de petróleo
extraído dos poços menos rentáveis.
Tinha curiosidade em conhecer
qual a proporção de venda
do petróleo da Noruega
e do United Kingdom...

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1647 em: 2023-06-16 22:39:56 »
Isso permitirá o fornecimento de petróleo
extraído dos poços menos rentáveis.
Tinha curiosidade em conhecer
qual a proporção de venda
do petróleo da Noruega
e do United Kingdom...



Vamos ver... mas se agora estivermos no pico ou ponto de inflexão da produção, parece-me q os próximos anos serão interessantes, em matéria de temas petrolíferos...   ;D
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1648 em: 2023-06-17 01:55:33 »
Do excelente blog de Goehring & Rozencwajg, 15.06.2023:


«Hubbert's Peak is Finally Here
06/ 15/ 2023
Topics: Commodities, Natural Resources, Contrarian, Oil

The article below is an excerpt from our Q1 2023 commentary.

Conventional oil production has now unequivocally rolled over. Unconventional production, the only source of growth in global oil supply over the last 12 years, has also significantly slowed. The only growing non-OPEC basin is the Permian in West Texas. Never before has oil supply growth been so geographically concentrated. Six counties in West Texas are now 100% responsible for all global production growth.

 

Conventional non-OPEC oil production peaked in 2007 at 46.2 mm b/d and now stands at 44.2 mm b/d – 4% below its peak. Including OPEC, conventional global output peaked in 2016 at 84.5 mm b/d and now stands at 81.3 m b/d – 5% below its peak. Even if OPEC has its alleged 4 mm b/d of unused production capacity (something we do not believe), conventional production would barely regain its 2016 peak.

In 2009, we tried to predict non-OPEC production growth based on every major project expected to come online over the next ten years. Based on our modeling, non-OPEC supply would begin to contract by about 200-400,000 b/d annually. New fields would not grow enough to offset underlying field depletion that we estimated at 4% in the non-OPEC world. In our 2Q18 letter, we tackled the subject again. In two essays (“Conventional Oil: The Problems No One is Talking About” and “Conventional non-OPEC Oil in Depth: Declines are Set to Rapidly Accelerate”), we discussed how conventional non-OPEC production was in terminal decline. Our research looks to have been correct.

However, the world has enjoyed a great luxury—it could ignore the problems firmly embedded in conventional oil production. Surging production from non-conventional oil sources more than offset these declines.

Non-OPEC oil production between 2006 and 2015 grew by 8.6 mm b/d. Conventional oil supply contracted by 1.4 mm b/d. Unconventional oil supply more than offset these declines, surging by 10 mm b/d and broken down as follows: US shales grew by 6.8 mm b/d (65% of all growth), bio-fuels grew by 1.9 mm b/d (19% of the growth), and Canadian oil sands increased 1.4 mm b/d (14% of the growth). Please note that out of this 10 mm b/d growth figure, the Permian represents only 1.4 mm b/d or 14%.

Between 2016 and 2023, unconventional production surged by another 7.4 mm b/d, representing all non-OPEC supply growth. US shales accounted for 85% of the increase. However, whereas all the major shale basins grew from 2006 to 2015, only the Permian grew afterward. The Bakken and Eagle Ford peaked at 1.5 mm b/d in 2015, and this year are each expected only to be between 900,000 and 1 mm b/d. Significant unconventional growth also came from natural gas liquids production in the liquids-rich Marcellus and Utica, which we estimate each added 1 m b/d. This source of production growth is now set to fade, while the plateauing of the Marcellus will turn into a decline.

Between 2006 and 2015, the Permian represented only 14% of unconventional supply growth. Between 2015 and 2023, the Permian represented almost 75% of this growth.

 

2023.06 G&R Blog #356 - Hubberts Peak is Here

 

Conventional production started declining in the non-OPEC world over a decade ago. Conventional oil production has most likely turned negative in the OPEC world as well. Over the last thirty years, global oil supply growth has come from multiple geographic areas, including the North Sea, Mexico, Brazil, West Africa, and the Former Soviet Union. Over the last decade, however, these areas have had slight growth, and specific basins, such as the North Sea, have experienced considerable declines.

Consensus opinion believed global oil demand would peak in 2019 and gradually decline through this decade. Just the opposite has occurred: demand has come roaring back post-COVID. Global demand in 1Q23 surpassed 102 mm barrels per day -- three million barrels above the 1Q19 (pre-COVID) level and almost 2 mm b/d above the International Energy Agency’s (IEA) 1Q23 estimate. Strong demand and faltering supply led OECD countries to release 250 mm barrels of oil from their strategic petroleum reserves to keep prices from surging. Given the seasonality in demand and China’s ongoing reopening, the 4Q23 demand could surpass 104 mm b/d.

From here on out, just six counties in West Texas must meet all global demand growth. Given the strategic importance of the Permian, it’s imperative to understand its underlying health. Using our neural network, we have updated our basin analysis, and the results are shocking. The Permian is likely less than a year from peaking and starting its decline. The only source of non-OPEC supply growth is now primarily tapped out.

 
After many false starts, Hubbert’s Peak is finally here.»


https://blog.gorozen.com/blog/hubberts-peak-is-finally-here?utm_campaign=Weekly%20Blog%20Notification&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=262617612&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_cEnL8Cz5ugCEHX71rSaPxBWpkeY-egKNpfk4pN2k1CK_MYygTWAKPRq4nHZsJMJBSWb5VZhDBMzk7AYlCRoC7DCiSEA&utm_content=262617612&utm_source=hs_email
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« Última modificação: 2023-06-17 02:05:37 por Kaspov »
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1650 em: 2023-06-17 18:14:16 »
Mais um artigo interessante sobre um tema muito actual:


«The Need For Pragmatism In The Net Zero Journey
By City A.M - Jun 17, 2023, 10:00 AM CDT

    Shell and Exxon Mobil, among other energy companies, express skepticism about the feasibility of achieving net zero by 2050, citing societal resistance to the necessary sacrifices and concerns over the costs.
    The road to net zero could potentially involve significant financial costs to households, as well as the extensive use of raw materials that many argue should remain in the ground.
    A more pragmatic approach, balancing the desire for cheap, reliable energy with the drive towards green energy, should be adopted by governments and advocates.

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Solar roof

There is something in the air: a pushback against the charge to net zero, come hell or highwater.

Yesterday, Shell said it would ‘stabilise’ its production; Exxon Mobil, separately, said they didn’t think society would bear up to the sacrifices necessary to hit net zero by 2050. Others in government have expressed scepticism about the cost of that process, not least when under-developed nations are unlikely to be in any great hurry to close up the cheap energy production which is a) making them rich and b) powering a vast increase in living standards.

We have written many times in City A.M. that the cost of going green is more significant than people realise, even in an environmental sense. Indeed, in many ways – as Ed Conway, whose book Material World comes out today, has made clear – hitting net zero targets will require a sizable plundering of the raw materials that many believe should stay firmly in the ground. The amount of copper required in today’s generation of wind turbines is no joke. On the financial side, the hit to household budgets and living standards could well be dramatic.

Net zero by 2050 is, of course, the product of political grandstanding. It’s a noble and worthy aim but it’s fundamentally arbitrary. Far better would be for governments, diplomats and campaigners to mirror the pragmatism we are starting to see from the big energy majors, who have dumped the hairshirt and are now being honest about the fact that – despite their desires to go green – society wants cheap reliable energy and it wants it now.

In the UK, the road to a greener future goes through the energy companies and the City of London. The capital is already a European hub for green finance and will remain in pole position for some time. Governments would be better to set aside the net zero cheerleading and instead look realistically at what the energy mix might be in a few years’ time.

By CityAM»


https://oilprice.com/Alternative-Energy/Renewable-Energy/The-Need-For-Pragmatism-In-The-Net-Zero-Journey.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1651 em: 2023-06-18 01:23:44 »
Mais uma opinião sobre o futuro do petróleo e do gás:


«Expresso
Expresso

“As pessoas acham que a procura de petróleo e gás vai desaparecer. Não vai”, avisa o gestor português da norte-americana Tellurian
História de Miguel Prado • Ontem às 22:12

O gestor português Octávio Simões, presidente executivo da Tellurian, uma empresa de gás natural de Houston, no Texas, falou ao Expresso sobre o presente e futuro da indústria petrolífera

O gestor português Octávio Simões lidera há quase três anos a norte-americana Tellurian, dedicada à exploração de gás natural e à sua liquefação. A empresa foi criada em 2016 e o seu presidente executivo esteve em maio na Lisbon Energy Summit, onde falou com o Expresso.»


https://www.msn.com/pt-pt/noticias/ultimas/as-pessoas-acham-que-a-procura-de-petr%C3%B3leo-e-g%C3%A1s-vai-desaparecer-n%C3%A3o-vai-avisa-o-gestor-portugu%C3%AAs-da-norte-americana-tellurian/ar-AA1cGJKI?rc=1&ocid=winp1taskbar&cvid=3fb01caad6384d8ffbddc2ad8b8e61f4&ei=12
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

Reg

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1652 em: 2023-06-18 16:11:48 »
axo mesma coisa

porque russia e petrolio e gas.... e nukes


e malta nao quer destruir estado tampao entre ocidenrte e russia
Democracia Socialista Democrata. igualdade de quem berra mais O que é meu é meu o que é teu é nosso

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1653 em: 2023-06-18 18:10:38 »
Sim, o petróleo e o gás serão sempre necessários, pelo menos nos próximos 100 anos...   8)
« Última modificação: 2023-06-18 18:11:05 por Kaspov »
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

Reg

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1654 em: 2023-06-18 20:12:27 »
tem 100 anos fazer pais
Democracia Socialista Democrata. igualdade de quem berra mais O que é meu é meu o que é teu é nosso

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1655 em: 2023-06-20 00:20:26 »
+ 1 artigo interessante relacionado com os combustíveis fósseis:


«How The Pace Of Climate Change Keeps Surprising Us
By Kurt Cobb - May 22, 2023, 1:00 PM CDT

    The pace of climate change seems to have accelerated over the last decade.
    Turning the giant global economy in a new climate-friendly direction has proven harder to do than expected.
    So even as the window for an energy transition shrinks, our ability to speed up that transition remains handicapped by our dependence on fossil fuels.

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Emissions

This seems like the 10th time that I've read a story that says Greenland's glaciers are melting faster than previously thought and thus the consequences of climate change are moving much more quickly than we have estimated in the past. Even the pace of such stories has picked up. I found some in 2015, 2016, 2019, 2021 and 2022.

And, back in 2013 scientists reported that just a little to the north of Greenland, their models were showing that the median estimate for an ice-free arctic in summer was 2060. (Median means half the results were before 2060 and half the results of the model were after.) Those scientists were convinced at the time that their model might be underestimating the pace of climate change in the Arctic, suggesting that an ice-free arctic might come before 2050.

Fast forward to 2020 when a study suggested that an ice-free Arctic in summer might come as soon as 2035. Not surprisingly, the story notes that the finding is "one of the more direct signs that humans are warming the Earth's climate at an even more dramatic pace than expected."

When I wrote about our human tendency to underestimate the pace of human-induced climate change way back in 2006, few people imagined that climate change would progress as quickly as it has between then and now. The idea that we have time to get ready for climate change or that climate change is "slowing down" has turned out to be a grave miscalculation.

In addition, turning the giant global economy in a new climate-friendly direction has proven harder to do than expected. The reasons are well-known to those who understand how energy works in human society.

First, humans seek the cheapest, easiest-to-get energy before going on to more expensive alternatives, no matter how climate-friendly those alternatives are. Fossil fuels remain the cheapest and most reliable source of energy for most applications.

Second, in the past it has taken a generation and sometimes two for human society to move from one dominant fuel, for example, coal, to, in this case, oil. Anyone expecting renewable energy to quickly replace fossil fuels is not paying attention to the numbers and to the practical problems with renewable energy. In the case of wind and solar intermittency is a big problem. The wind doesn't blow all the time, and the sun disappears every night. In addition, the low power density relative to fossil fuels and the vast amount of land needed are also major issues.

It is theoretically possible to run a modern, technical society on renewable energy, just not this one. Our energy requirements would have to be pared down to a fraction of what they are today, and our buildings and energy infrastructure would have to be completely reworked—a task that would require huge amounts of fossil fuel energy since that is primarily the kind that we currently have. Fossil fuels provide more than 80 percent of the world's energy today.

So even as the window for an energy transition shrinks—that is, the time before climate change becomes catastrophic (and fossil fuel depletion become dire)—our ability to speed up that transition remains handicapped by our dependence on fossil fuels, by the power of the fossil fuel interests, and by the practical difficulties of remaking our infrastructure on such a short timeline.

The name of this conundrum is the rate-of-conversion problem. Can we make the transition to a sustainable society before we run low on the fossil fuel energy needed to build the new sustainable infrastructure AND before climate change creates conditions so chaotic that we cannot sustain such a build-out?

The relatively slow pace of the renewable energy build-out compared to the available time window suggests we will not finish the job in time to prevent a serious decline in the fortunes of future generations.»


https://oilprice.com/The-Environment/Global-Warming/How-The-Pace-Of-Climate-Change-Keeps-Surprising-Us.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1656 em: 2023-06-20 00:21:59 »
Uma frase interessante e bem verdadeira do artigo acima citado:

«First, humans seek the cheapest, easiest-to-get energy before going on to more expensive alternatives, no matter how climate-friendly those alternatives are. Fossil fuels remain the cheapest and most reliable source of energy for most applications.»

(Cobb, 2023)
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1657 em: 2023-06-20 00:27:34 »
2 comentários interessantes relativos ao artigo acima citado:

«Bill Snyder on May 22 2023 said:

Yeah Kurt, keep smoking that Climate change pipe, that it is all human induced. Greenland was once all GREEN at one time, hence the name. That big orange ball in the sky controls a lot more of the climate than would could ever dream of controlling. Climat chang is a scamm for the elites to control people and get rich of the suckers fall for it, plain and simple. Dont' see Bill Gates, Prince Charles and the Rest of the WEF giving up their private jets, large mansions and the rest of their carbon spewing toys anytime soon. As soon as they adapt an Amish life style, I might listen to them then. Until then, it's an Climate change is an Elitist Scam


William Mitchell on May 22 2023 said:

Do I understand this right? Cobb is writing about a prediction advancing in time- an event formerly predicted in 2060 is now predicted in 2035? Is that actually news?

These sky-is-falling predictions are so tiresome. I could take them a lot more seriously if the predictions from 10, 20, 30 years ago were coming true. But few have.»


https://oilprice.com/The-Environment/Global-Warming/How-The-Pace-Of-Climate-Change-Keeps-Surprising-Us.html


(Nota: Prince Charles is now King Charles III)
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1658 em: 2023-06-22 02:53:51 »
E a quantidade de crude na SPR continua a reduzir-se + ou - lentamente...


«U.S. Crude Oil Inventories See Bigger Dip Than Expected

By Julianne Geiger - Jun 21, 2023, 3:15 PM CDT

Crude oil inventories in the United States decreased this week by 1.246 million barrels, the American Petroleum Institute (API) data showed on Wednesday.Analysts were expecting a smaller 433,000-barrel draw in U.S. crude-oil inventories. The total number of barrels of crude oil gained so far this year is more than 38 million barrels, although the net draw in crude inventories since April is more than 8 million barrels.

On Monday, the Department of Energy (DoE) reported that it sold another 1.7 million barrels of crude in the week ending June 16 from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR), for the 12th consecutive weekly drop in the stockpile to a 40-year low of 350 million barrels.

The price of WTI and Brent were both trading up on Wednesday in the run-up to the data release—although prices are fairly flat compared to a month ago. At 2:20 pm ET, WTI was trading up $1.33 (+1.87%) on the day at $72.52 per barrel. The Brent crude oil benchmark was trading up $1.19 (1.57%) at $77.09 per barrel.

By 4:33 p.m. EST, WTI was trading up 1.94%, at $72.57 per barrel, while Brent crude was trading up 1.62% at $77.13 shortly after the data release—several dollars over last week's prices.

Gasoline inventories rose 2.935 million barrels, after adding 2.075 million barrels in the week prior. Distillate inventories fell by 301,000 barrels after rising 1.394 million barrels in the week prior.

Crude oil production in the United States stayed the same at 12.4 million bpd for the week ending June 9, according to EIA data.Inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma, rose by 50,000 barrels, after rising 1.502 million barrels in the previous week.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/US-Crude-Oil-Inventories-See-Bigger-Dip-Than-Expected.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1659 em: 2023-06-22 14:42:55 »
Mais um artigo curioso:


«Church Of England Ditches Big Oil Stocks Over Climate Goals Failure

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Jun 22, 2023, 7:30 AM CDT

The Church of England is dumping all remaining oil and gas majors from its portfolio for failing to align with the 1.5 degrees Celsius pathway, the Church Commissioners for England said on Thursday.

The Church of England will now exclude from its portfolio BP, Shell, ExxonMobil, TotalEnergies, Eni, Equinor, Ecopetrol, Occidental Petroleum, Pemex, Repsol, and Sasol, “after concluding that none are aligned with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement, as assessed by the Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI).”

Back in 2021, the Church of England, which manages a $13.2 billion (£10.3 billion) endowment fund, excluded another 20 oil and gas majors from its investment portfolio.

Apart from the Big Oil names announced today, the Commissioners will also exclude “all other companies primarily engaged in the exploration, production and refining of oil or gas, unless they are in genuine alignment with a 1.5°C pathway, by the end of 2023.”

“With the 2021 exclusions and those announced today, the Church Commissioners will have excluded all oil and gas majors. The broader exclusion of all oil and gas exploration, production and refining companies will follow by the end of 2023,” the Church of England said.

“Soberingly, the energy majors have not listened to significant voices in the societies and markets they serve and are not moving quickly enough on the transition,” said Alan Smith, First Church Estates Commissioner.

“If any of these energy companies come into alignment with our criteria in the future, we would reconsider our position. Indeed, that is something we would hope for.”

The church has less than 1% invested in oil and gas from the endowment fund, while the $4.1 billion (£3.2 billion) pension scheme includes around $8.9 million (£7 million) invested in oil and gas firms, according to Financial Times estimates. 

The move to exclude Big Oil from the church’s portfolio follows disappointment among institutional investors at the latest strategies of Shell and BP, which doubled down on oil and gas, although they kept their emission reduction goals.

The Church of England Pensions Board is “reviewing our remaining investments” in Shell, Laura Hillis, director for climate and environment at the Church of England Pensions Board, told Bloomberg last week.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com»


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