Olá, Visitante. Por favor entre ou registe-se se ainda não for membro.

Entrar com nome de utilizador, password e duração da sessão
 

Autor Tópico: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal  (Lida 299544 vezes)

vbm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13838
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1740 em: 2023-08-28 08:37:34 »
Citar
Só tinha uma imprecisa reminiscência do que era:

A windfall tax is a tax levied by governments
against certain industries when economic
conditions allow those industries
to experience significantly
above-average profits.

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1741 em: 2023-08-29 18:07:59 »
A Rússia aumenta a sua exportação de crude:


«Russian Crude Oil Shipments Jump To 8-Week High

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Aug 29, 2023, 7:00 AM CDT


    Russia’s crude oil exports by sea jumped to 3.4 million barrels per day in the week to August 27, a week-over-week increase of 880,000 bpd.
    The surge in oil exports comes ahead of an expected drop in refined product exports due to strong domestic demand for some fuels.
    Despite the recent spike in crude oil exports, Russia does appear to be following through on its pledge to cut oil output by 500,000 bpd.

Join Our Community
oil

Russia’s crude oil exports by sea jumped by 880,000 barrels per day (bpd) week-over-week to 3.4 million bpd in the week to August 27, tanker-tracking data monitored by Bloomberg showed on Tuesday.

The surge in crude shipments comes ahead of an expected plunge in refined product exports due to strong domestic demand and high refinery throughput as the government subsidies for refineries are set to be slashed as of September 1, according to the data reported by Bloomberg’s Julian Lee.

The surge in Russia’s crude exports may not be sustainable as week-on-week shipments show high volatility, according to Lee’s observations.

The four-week average crude shipments were only 40,000 bpd higher in the four weeks to August 27, compared to the previous four weeks.

Vessel-monitoring data have also shown that in recent weeks Russia has more or less followed through on its pledge to cut crude oil exports in August by 500,000 bpd. Shipments from Russia’s western ports have declined by around 420,000 bpd compared to February 2023, when Moscow said it would reduce output by 500,000 bpd.

For months after Russia had said it would cut output, observed crude shipments from the country hadn’t shown a decline. They actually hit recent highs in April and May.

At the end of July and in August, tanker-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg started to show that Russia’s seaborne crude oil exports were declining from the highs seen in April and May.

In the four weeks to July 30, Russian crude oil exports by sea continued to decline and averaged below 3 million bpd, the lowest four-week average since the start of the EU embargo, the data monitored by Bloomberg showed. This was the lowest four-week average of Russian crude shipments since the four weeks to January 8, a month after the EU imposed the crude oil import embargo on December 5.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Russian-Crude-Oil-Shipments-Jump-To-8-Week-High.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1742 em: 2023-08-30 02:51:19 »
Os inventários continuam a cair a grande ritmo:


«Surprise Crash In Crude Inventories Sends Oil Prices Higher
By Julianne Geiger - Aug 29, 2023, 3:53 PM CDT

The American Petroleum Institute (API) has reported a massive 11.486-million-barrel draw in U.S. crude inventories, compared with the previous week's 2.418-million-barrel draw as the markets weigh China's economic activity against U.S. crude inventories.

Analysts were expecting an inventory draw of 2.9 million barrels for the week. The total number of barrels of crude oil gained so far this year is just shy of 4 million barrels, according to API data, although there is a net draw in crude inventories since April of almost 44 million barrels.

On Monday, the Department of Energy (DoE) reported that crude oil inventories in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) rose by another 600,000 barrels in the week ending August 21, with the SPR inventory still sitting at a near 40-year low of 349.5 million barrels. At the current replenishment rate, the SPR should return to 2021 levels in a little under a decade.

Oil prices were rising on Tuesday ahead of API data, with Brent trading up 1.28% at $85.50 at 4:16 p.m. ET—a $1.50 gain week over week, while WTI was trading up 1.44%, at $81.25  per barrel—a gain of $1 per barrel from this time last week.

Gasoline inventories saw a build this week, rising by 1.40 million barrels, compared to last week's 1.898 million barrels dip in the week prior. Gasoline inventories are roughly 5% less than the five-year average for this time of year. Distillate inventories rose by 2.46 million barrels, after the 153,000 barrel draw in the week prior, and are already sitting somewhere around 16% below the five-year average for this time of year.

Cushing inventories fell by 2.23 million barrels.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Surprise-Crash-In-Crude-Inventories-Sends-Oil-Prices-Higher.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1743 em: 2023-08-30 02:53:27 »
As shales já não parecem estar na sua melhor forma:


"well productivity is declining more sharply than before"


«Spending Surge In U.S. Shale Won’t Last
By Irina Slav - Aug 29, 2023, 7:00 PM CDT

    Rystad: Reinvestment rates in U.S. shale rose this year, to hit a three-year high.
    Inflation has forced shale companies to increase their capital spending, contributing to the growth in reinvestment rates.
    Some producers are reporting surprise productivity gains this year, boasting higher output with lower capex.

Join Our Community
Wolfcamp rig

Concern about a seismic change in the U.S. shale industry with shareholder returns prioritized over spending on production has plagued analyst and banker circles for over a year.

Indeed, shale producers have become much more careful with their money, preferring to focus on shareholders over production even when prices rebounded after the pandemic lockdowns and the industry enjoyed windfall profits.

Yet despite this reprioritization, companies in the shale patch did increase their spending on production, Rystad Energy said in a new report this week. Reinvestment rates, or the ratio between capital expenditure and cash flow from operations, rose this year, to hit a three-year high, the firm said.

While in the first quarter of the year, the reinvestment rate in the industry stood at 58%, in the second quarter, it rose to 72%, Rystad said, based on analysis of a sample of 18 shale producers, excluding the supermajors.

Now, to be sure, this is still much lower than reinvestment rates during the shale boom years, when they regularly exceeded 100%. Yet it is a clear increase – and the highest since the second quarter of 2020 when the reinvestment rate reached 150%.

Having said that, Rystad points out that this is only part of the story. The other part is inflation, which has forced shale companies to increase their capital spending, contributing to the growth in reinvestment rates.
Related: Chevron Evacuates Gulf Of Mexico Oil Platforms As Hurricane Idalia Approaches

Basically, the perception that the shale industry might be returning to a grow-at-will approach would be wrong. Capital discipline is here to stay, Rystad says, even though capex among the companies in the firm’s research sample had been on the rise for ten quarters in a row.

“At first glance, a rising reinvestment rate might point to a return to the old days of aggressive capital expenditure and rapid production growth,” Rystad senior upstream analyst Matthew Bernstein said.

“However, discipline is the name of the game for public shale companies now, which ensures this trend will not last. As inflationary pressures ease in the coming quarters and oil prices rebound, this spike will be a short-term anomaly instead of a shift of strategy.”

Indeed, the analytics firm said that the trend of rising capex will reverse by the end of the year, primarily thanks to the easing of inflationary pressures. The fact that most companies in the sample have already gone through more than 50% of their 2023 capex will also contribute to a slowdown.

Rystad Energy’s report is the latest addition to a growing body of research suggesting the boom years for U.S. shale are over. However, that does not mean U.S. shale is over. Quite the contrary, in fact, as detailed by Energy Intelligence’s Casey Merriman in a recent article.

In it, Merriman noted that although U.S. shale is unlikely to ever again deliver annual production growth of 1 million bpd, it is very much a thriving industry, which this year reached an all-time high daily average production rate of 12.8 million bpd, according to the Energy Information Administration.

The rig count is falling, and well productivity is declining more sharply than before. At the same time, however, some producers are reporting surprise productivity gains this year, boasting higher output with lower capex. The sweetest spots may be gone, but there is a consolidation drive going on in the shale patch once again, and that will help optimize drilling as it has done before.

The shale revolution may be over, but after revolutions come calmer times, and U.S. shale seems to be living in these calmer times when there is no rush to see just how much more you can pump from a well. Rather, it’s a marathon of doing more with less, and for longer.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Spending-Surge-In-US-Shale-Wont-Last.html
« Última modificação: 2023-08-30 02:54:43 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!

vbm

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13838
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1744 em: 2023-08-30 04:40:24 »
And even less is more.

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1745 em: 2023-09-04 18:42:40 »
«Guyana's Oil Boom Is Changing The Global Energy Landscape

By Felicity Bradstock - Aug 31, 2023, 9:00 AM CDT


    Guyana is estimated to produce around 1.2 million barrels of crude oil a day by 2028, making it a significant player in the global oil supply.
    ExxonMobil Corp leads a consortium with US company Hess and China's National Offshore Oil Corporation, approved to drill 35 new offshore wells.
    Guyana has become an attractive alternative for European refiners due to sanctions on Russian oil, capturing a larger share of the European market.

Join Our Community
Offshore Oil

Since the discovery of 11 billion barrels of proven oil reserves offshore in 2015, Guyana’s oil industry has gone from strength to strength. The tiny Caribbean country has attracted billions in international investment in its energy sector, with billions more expected to follow thanks to several successes. And recent legislation passed by Guyana’s parliament is expected to encourage new production and ensure that the small country earns a significant share of its oil revenues in the coming decades.

Guyana, with a population of around 800,000 people is thought to be sitting on top of oil reserves with a value of more than half a trillion dollars. Following significant investment in exploration and production activities over the last decade, it can expect to produce around 1.2 million barrels of crude a day by 2028, according to current estimations. This is a significant increase from the current production rate of 400,000 bpd from two vessels. That’s equivalent to around 1.1 percent of the global supply, a contribution that was recently unthinkable in this previously untapped region. This figure means Guyana would be producing more oil per person than any country in the world.

So far, ExxonMobil Corp. has been the biggest investor in Guyana’s oil industry, dominating the exploration and drilling activities. In July, Guyana’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved an Exxon Mobil-led consortium to drill 35 new offshore exploration and appraisal wells. The consortium consists of Exxon, US oil company Hess, and China’s China National Offshore Oil Corporation. This allowed the consortium to drill wells within its 6.6-million-acre Stabroek offshore block. The EPA deemed that the drilling could be “conducted in accordance with good environmental practices, and in a manner that avoids, prevents and minimises any adverse effects which could result from the activity”.

In June, the consortium entered into discussions with Guyana about the return of 20 percent of unexplored or undeveloped areas in the blocks, as per the 2016 production agreement. This includes parts of the Stabroek block and the Kaieteur and Canje blocks. However, Exxon stated that it plans to continue oil and gas drilling even in a reduced area. It expects to begin this drilling in the third quarter of this year and continue through to 2028. This follows several successful drilling operations in recent years. Exxon stated, “The project is being developed to discover new and re-evaluate existing recoverable hydrocarbons from reservoirs in the Stabroek Block, thereby enabling potential future development projects.”

In August, the consortium announced plans to spend a further spend $12.93 billion to develop their sixth offshore oil project in the South American country, with the hope of starting production operations at the Whiptail project in 2027. To date, the consortium’s production activities have provided $2.8 billion in direct revenue to Guyana, as well as supported the creation of 4,400 jobs. The sixth project is much like the group’s $12.7-billion fifth project, Uaru, and is expected to provide an output of between 250,000 and 263,000 bpd. It expects to drill up to 72 wells commencing in 2024, continuing exploration through to 2030. The project could provide up to 540 jobs in the drilling and installation stages and between 100 and 180 during production activities, according to Exxon.

In terms of core markets, this year, Guyana has had success in capturing a larger share of the European market. Vessel monitoring data showed that Guyana’s crude exports to Europe in the first semester of the year increased to 215,000 bpd, equivalent to around 63 percent of the country’s total exports. Last year, Europe accounted for around 50 percent of Guyana’s crude exports. This rise in exports reflects the changing geopolitical structure of the global oil industry, with many European refiners looking for new crude suppliers following the sanctions introduced on Russian oil in 2022.

The ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine has meant that many refiners have had to establish new partnerships in alternative oil markets, with Guyana’s strong oil potential over the coming decades looking highly attractive for companies looking to change suppliers in the longer term. Much of Guyana’s crude has been traded in Rotterdam, according to the data. Apart from Europe, Guyana is also exporting to Asia, around 90,000 bpd and Brazil, 22,000 bpd. Meanwhile, there have been no exports to U.S. Gulf Coast's refiners so far in 2023.

Guyana is seeing a major influx of money into its economy following the development of its oil and gas sector, with reported earnings from royalties and profits of $439 million in the second quarter of this year. By the end of June, the country’s national oil fund reached a reported $1.72 billion. And Guyana hopes to raise this figure even further thanks to the passing of new oil legislation aimed at encouraging new production and increasing the country’s share of oil revenues.

By Felicity Bradstock for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Guyanas-Oil-Boom-Is-Changing-The-Global-Energy-Landscape.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1746 em: 2023-09-05 16:03:27 »
A situação actual parece bastante prometedora (bullish) para o preço do crude:


«Oil Prices Jump As Russia And Saudi Arabia Extend Cuts

By Michael Kern - Sep 05, 2023, 10:00 AM CDT


Join Our Community
oil prices

Oil prices jumped dramatically on Tuesday morning as Saudi Arabia announced it would extend its production cuts until the end of the year and Russia announced it would extend its export cuts of 300,000 bpd for the same period.

oil prices

Rigs

Production

Chart of the Week

Russia

- Russia extended its voluntary decision to curb crude exports by 300,000 b/d until December 2023, acting in concert with Saudi Arabia, with the alleged aim of maintaining stability and balance in the oil markets.

- In the meantime, Russian seaborne crude and product exports fell to their lowest since September 2022 as strong domestic demand in the summer kept volumes available for external markets capped.

- Delivering on their promise to cut exports by 500,000 b/d in July-August, Russian flows to India decreased by 30% to 1.5 million b/d, just as Urals has been trading above the oil price cap threshold of $60 per barrel since early July.

- Lower Russian crude exports will ease the task of the country’s exporters as they are set to rely more on their shadow fleet, the utilization of which rose to 40-45% of all oil exports in July-August, avoiding G7 shipping and insurance.

Market Movers

- Chinese oil major Sinopec (SHA:600028) has created a new business unit to invest in refining and petrochemical assets outside of China, rekindling rumors that it might buy Shell’s Singapore refinery.

- US lithium major Albemarle (NYSE:ALB) upped its takeover bid for Australian producer Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) to $4.3 billion, with the latter’s board unanimously recommending shareholders to accept.

- Following several multi-billion-barrel discoveries in Namibia, the latest exploration well by energy major Shell (LON:SHEL) in the country, Cullinan-1X, failed to discover any hydrocarbons, dampening optimism.

Tuesday, September 05, 2023

ICE Brent prices jumped above $90 per barrel after Saudi Arabia and Russia extended their supply curbs until December 2023, with the former maintaining production cuts of 1 million b/d whilst the latter keeping oil exports lower by 300,000 b/d. With Chinese manufacturing data finally bouncing back to growth in August, the bearish sentiment is gaining the upper hand in oil markets right now.

Saudi Arabia Extends Productions Cut. Publishing its press release in unison with Russia’s export cut pledge, Saudi Arabia decided to extend its voluntary production cut of 1 million b/d for three months until December 2023, with any prospective supply changes to be reviewed on a monthly basis.

Low Diesel Inventories Stoke Shortage Fears. Low US distillate inventories could make heating oil prices be susceptible to sudden shocks this winter as stocks of diesel and heating oil remain 15% below five-year average rates, at 118 million barrels or 31 days of supply.

Brazil Calls Off Petrobras Divestment Drive. Brazil’s national oil company Petrobras (NYSE:PBR) stated it would no longer seek to sell some of its key assets, including the Urucu and Bahia-Terra onshore fields and Petrobras Operaciones, its subsidiary in Argentina, following a broad strategy revision.

US Backs Chevron in Cyprus Strategy Row. The US government supported Chevron’s (NYSE:CVX) plans to connect its Cyprus gas finds to Egypt’s existing LNG terminals, a move the Cypriot government opposes, saying the linkage would bring stability to the region and allow for more exports.

No Plans to Change Russian Price Caps. The G7 coalition is not planning to change the current crude and product price caps on Russian exports, said US Treasury official Eric van Nostrand, saying the existing sanctions were effective in limiting Russian revenues while ensuring a well-supplied market.

Venezuelan Exports Plummet Amidst Upgraded Outages. Venezuela’s exports fell 38% month-on-month to 544,000 b/d after a three-year high in July as PDVSA struggled to keep crude upgraders in service, with a quarter of those volumes coming from US major Chevron (NYSE:CVX).

Saudi Aramco Eyes SPO to Boost Revenue. Saudi Arabia’s national oil company Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) is considering selling as much as $50 billion in a secondary share offering on the Riyadh stock exchange, potentially looking to carry the SPO out before year-end.

Panama Canal Gets Out of Control. The average waiting time for non-booked tankers at the Panama Canal jumped by 50% in August to roughly 9 days as a prolonged drought led to transit restrictions, with canal authorities now only allowing 32 vessels to pass, also limiting their draft to 44 feet.

German Government Sees Nuclear as ’Dead Horse’. German chancellor Olaf Scholz stated the European country will not reopen its nuclear debate, calling nuclear a ’dead horse’ in Germany, just as its government is striving to cap electricity prices for industry by means of state subsidies.

Taliban Bags Multi-Billion Mining Deals. The Taliban claims it has signed seven mining contracts that would bring $6.5 billion in investment as Afghanistan seeks to tap into its iron ore, lead, zinc, gold, and copper deposits, with local companies teaming up with partners from China, Iran, and Turkey.

Majors Quit Nigerian Onshore Projects. Following in the footsteps of ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM) and Shell (LON:SHEL), Italian oil major ENI sold its Nigerian onshore subsidiary to local upstream firm Oando for an assumed sum of approximately $500 million, focusing exclusively on offshore projects.

Typhoon Triggers China’s Offshore Shutdown. Supertyphoon Saola disrupted China’s offshore crude output as the country’s key deepwater producer CNOOC (HKG:0883) evacuated more than 10,000 workers from offshore production platforms.

Chevron Turns on Emergency Mode in Australia. With the first phase of strikes at Chevron’s (NYSE:CVX) Gorgon and Wheatstone LNG platforms in Australia’s offshore set to start this Thursday and unions planning a total strike from September 14, the US major started expedited mediation talks.

By Michael Kern for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Oil-Prices-Jump-As-Russia-And-Saudi-Arabia-Extend-Cuts.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1747 em: 2023-09-05 16:06:36 »
E, também interessante:


«Saudi Arabia's Oil Exports Plunge To March 2021 Lows

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Sep 01, 2023, 7:20 AM CDT


    Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports fell in August to the lowest level since March 2021, dropping to around 5.6 million barrels per day.
    In July, before Saudi Arabia implemented its unilateral production cut, the Kingdom exported some 6.3 million barrels per day.
    Saudi Arabia is currently pumping around 9 million bpd and will continue to do so until at least the end of September.


Join Our Community
Saudi Arabia


Saudi crude oil exports plummeted in August to the lowest in two and a half years as the Kingdom continued to slash production by 1 million barrels per day (bpd) to keep markets tight and push oil prices higher.

Shipments out of the world’s top crude exporter fell in August to the lowest levels since March 2021—to around 5.6 million bpd, with exports to China and the U.S. slumping to multiyear lows, preliminary data compiled by Bloomberg showed on Friday.     

The export volume estimated in August compares with crude oil exports of some 6.3 million bpd in July.

According to the shipments observed by Bloomberg, Saudi crude oil exports to China fell to the lowest since June 2020, those to Japan and South Korea fell to the lowest level since Bloomberg began monitoring them in 2017, and Saudi exports to the United States were the lowest in at least six years at just 81,000 bpd.

Since July, Saudi Arabia has been cutting an additional 1 million bpd off its oil production, on top of its share in the cuts by several major OPEC+ members including top Middle Eastern exporters.

The Saudi cut means that the Kingdom is now pumping around 9 million bpd and will continue to do so until at least the end of September.

The Saudi cuts have tightened the market and started to draw down inventories, analysts say, with many expecting the Saudis to announce next week another extension of the cuts into October.

“OPEC+ cuts, and in particular additional voluntary cuts from Saudi Arabia, mean that the market is drawing down inventories,” Warren Patterson, Head of Commodities Strategy at ING, said on Thursday. 

“We expect this trend will continue until the end of the year, which suggests that oil prices still have room to move higher from current levels.”

As of Friday morning ET, Brent prices were up at $87.70 and WTI Crude had risen to $84.50 as oil prices were on track for a weekly gain.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Saudi-Arabias-Oil-Exports-Plunge-To-March-2021-Lows.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1748 em: 2023-09-05 16:08:32 »
«Will We See $90 WTI Soon?

By Editorial Dept - Sep 01, 2023, 9:00 AM CDT»

(https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Will-We-See-90-WTI-Soon.html)


We're not far...    :)
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

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13531
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1749 em: 2023-09-06 00:01:01 »
A Europa e Portugal encontram-se num processo de transição energética, sabendo que a produção e consumo de electricidade são o primordial pilar de intervenção, e no qual as mudanças tecnológicas se assumem como um factor decisivo, designadamente com a geração e incorporação de fontes de energia renovável.

Em 2020 o então Ministro do Ambiente anunciou com grande ênfase o facto de Portugal se preparar para encerrar as duas centrais térmicas (a carvão), afirmando que “é sem dúvida uma boa notícia” e que “a antecipação do encerramento era esperada e desejada”. Tal facto veio a concretizar-se em 2021 coincidindo precisamente com a actual situação deficitária de electricidade em Portugal.

SO LEMBRAR   BURACO JA DAVA PAGAR MEIA TAP


Ao somar-se todos os valores do saldo importador de electricidade desde Setembro de 2021 até ao final de Agosto de 2023, verifica-se que a economia portuguesa perdeu o incrível valor de 2,8 mil de euros apenas pela via do consumo de electricidade. É um desastre anónimo e ao qual falta um “nome” e adjectivos capazes de o classificar. São valores record e nunca registados no sistema eléctrico nacional.


Neste mesmo período, desde Setembro de 2021 até Agosto de 2023, apenas em dois meses o saldo importador foi favorável a Portugal, neste caso, Dezembro de 2022 e Janeiro de 2023. As causas para esta aparente “anomalia” são particularmente claras e relacionam-se com o ciclo hidrológico e as abundantes chuvas registadas, o que permitiu que o país fosse exportador de electricidade nestes dois meses.

Do lado de Espanha verifica-se uma situação completamente inversa ao caso português, verificando-se um excedente de produção de electricidade, designadamente de energia solar, o qual permite o abastecimento do sistema eléctrico português.


estes marmelos queriam exportar para franca....


A situação desastrosa em que se encontra o sistema eléctrico nacional tem assim, como “donos” e proprietários os decisores políticos nacionais, caracterizados pela total ausência de visão estratégica à qual se associa um profundo desconhecimento técnico e económico dos sistemas energéticos.



Espanha, que, no entanto, construiu e colocou em funcionamento mais 8 000 MW entre 2020 e 2022, tendo atingido 20 000 MW de potência solar instalada. Igualmente o encerramento de centros electroprodutores térmicos foi bastante reduzida e efectuada de uma forma controlada, reduzindo ao mínimo o impacto na geração eléctrica em Espanha.
« Última modificação: 2023-09-06 00:11:19 por Reg »
Democracia Socialista Democrata. igualdade de quem berra mais O que é meu é meu o que é teu é nosso

Reg

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13531
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1750 em: 2023-09-06 00:15:54 »
 malta perdeu a Fe na cruz

mas agora fezada..e pior e no socialismo milagreiro

cada vez mais espanhol isto esta ficar

Entretanto, em Agosto de 2023, a Iberdrola, Empresa concessionária do Sistema Electroprodutor do Tâmega (vulgarmente designada por cascata do Tâmega e composta por um conjunto de três barragens), anunciou que a “central hidroeléctrica deverá entrar em funcionamento em Março de 2024”, cuja produção deverá colmatar parcialmente o fim da geração a carvão.
« Última modificação: 2023-09-06 00:21:28 por Reg »
Democracia Socialista Democrata. igualdade de quem berra mais O que é meu é meu o que é teu é nosso

Reg

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 13531
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1751 em: 2023-09-06 00:28:16 »
o portugal ecologico e um portugal espanhol
Democracia Socialista Democrata. igualdade de quem berra mais O que é meu é meu o que é teu é nosso

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1752 em: 2023-09-06 18:25:43 »
o portugal ecologico e um portugal espanhol

É verdade...   :(
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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1753 em: 2023-09-07 17:06:13 »
Os stocks de crude continuam a reduzir-se a bom ritmo:


«Crude inventory decreased by 6.3M barrels for week ended Sept. 1- EIA

Sep. 07, 2023 11:03 AM ETCrude Oil Futures (CL1:COM)UCO, USO, DBO, USL, SCO, BNOBy: Ahmed Farhath, SA News Editor8 Comments

Oil stock market concept image

sankai

    Crude inventories: -6.3M barrels vs. -10.6M barrels last week. Consensus estimate -2.064M.
    Gasoline inventories: -2.7M barrels vs. -0.2M barrels last week. Consensus estimate -0.950M.
    Distillates inventories: 0.7M barrels vs. 1.2M barrels last week. Consensus estimate 0.239M.
    SPR: 0.8M barrels vs. 0.6M barrels last week.
    Futures (CL1:COM -0.08%)
    ETFs: USO, UCO, SCO, BNO, DBO, USL.

Click here to read the full EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Report.

Image Source: EIA»


https://seekingalpha.com/news/4009961-crude-inventory-decreased-by-63m-barrels-for-week-ended-sept-1-eia?mailingid=32634312&messageid=2900&serial=32634312.3692&utm_campaign=rta-stock-news&utm_content=link-1&utm_medium=email&utm_source=seeking_alpha&utm_term=32634312.3692
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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1754 em: 2023-09-07 17:11:57 »
E, também, acerca dos mesmos tópicos (incluindo Au, o metal dourado & U, o metal radioactivo*), dos sempre excelentes Goehring & Rozencwajg (IX.2023):


«Natural Resource Market Commentary: Q2 2023

09/ 07/ 2023

Topics: Gold, Commodities, Natural Resources, Contrarian, Uranium

The article below is an excerpt from our Q2 2023 commentary.

Commodities and related natural resource markets were broadly weak in the second quarter. Investors remained concerned about a global recession driven by rising interest rates and persistent central bank hawkishness. Adding to the overall gloom was a perceived disappointment in Chinese economic activity. Caused by problems in the real estate sector, disappointing exports, and weaker-than-expected aggregate economic data, investors were decidedly “risk-off” when it came to China, and commodity markets were not spared.

With its heavy energy focus, the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index fell almost 6%, while the Rogers International Commodity Index, emphasizing metals and agricultural commodities, fell by 2.5%.

 

Natural resource-related equities were weak as well. The S&P North American Natural Resource Stock Index (heavily energy weighted) fell 1% during the quarter, while the S&P Global Natural Resources Index (more metal and agricultural exposure) fell almost 6%. By comparison, global equity markets were strong during the second quarter: the S&P 500 rose 8% while the MSCI All Country World index advanced almost 6%.

 

Metals were among the weakest performers in the second quarter, reflecting concerns about China. Copper prices pulled back 9%, despite easily mobilized copper inventories approaching all-time lows during the quarter. Nickel fared even worse, falling by 14%. Aluminum, meanwhile, fell by 11%, while zinc plummeted by 21%. Cold-rolled steel fell almost 25% in the ferrous metal sector, while iron ore fell 10%. Mining equities were also weak. The COPX ETF (which tracks copper equities) fell by almost 3%, while the S&P Global Base Metals Index fell by 4%.

 

Weak LNG and Chinese worries drove coal prices lower. Australian and South African thermal coal pulled back 30% and 22%, respectively. In the US, coal with access to seaborne markets (notably Central Appalachian and Illinois Basin) fell 28% and 32%, respectively, after surging last year.

 

The oil market was also weak during the second quarter. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) fell almost 7% during the quarter, while Brent fell 5%. Energy-related equities were mixed. The XLE ETF (mega-cap international energy weighted) fell 2%. However, the S&P Oil & Gas E&P index and the OIH oil service stock ETF were strong, rising by 1% and 4%, respectively.

 

Global energy demand continues to surprise to the upside, and even the IEA has raised its estimates. For example, at the end of 2022, the IEA estimated global oil demand would average 101.6 mm barrels per day -- a significant 1.7 mm increase over 2022. In their June “Oil Market Report,” the IEA raised their 2023 demand estimate by an additional 700,000 b/d, with the bulk of their underestimation again coming from China. Since the end of 2022, the IEA has raised its Chinese oil demand estimates by 400,000 b/d.

 

Responding to global recession worries, the IEA reduced global oil demand by 200,000 b/d in its July 2023 OMR. However, we believe the IEA is still radically underestimating global oil demand and that further upward revisions must be made. For example, the IEA has 1.3 mm b/d of missing barrels in its first quarter 2023 balances. Our readers know that missing barrels represent the excess of supply less demand that are missing—literally-- they can’t be found in global inventories. Historically the IEA has made missing barrels disappear by revising global demand upwards, and we believe this time will be no different. We believe the weakness in oil prices in the second quarter can’t be explained by faltering demand.

 
We believe the primary weakness in global oil prices in the second quarter is unexpected supply issues.

 

In the final week of March, the US government began selling an additional 26 mm barrels of Strategic Petroleum Reserve oil under previously legislated Congressional mandates. All 26 mm barrels had been sold by the last week of June. Over the next four years, the DOE, under Congressional mandate, was scheduled to sell an additional 155 mm barrels of oil out of the SPR—42.5 mm barrels in 2024 and 2025 and 35 mm barrels in 2026 and 2027, and these sales would represent almost 50% of the remaining SPR reserve.

 

In July, however, the DOE announced the cancellation of these sales as part of the attempt to begin “refilling” the SPR. Over the last 18 months, 330 mm barrels have been released by US, European, and Japanese SPR and have been 100% responsible for the slight build we’ve seen in commercial inventories. Given July’s DOE announcement, SPR sales will be zero over the next four years, which we believe has already begun impacting oil prices. We think it’s no coincidence that oil prices rebounded almost 18% since the last week in June—just as US SPR releases wound down.

 

SPR sale cancellations, combined with rapidly slowing production growth from the Permian basin and unexpected production cuts from Saudi Arabia, mean that commercial inventories will experience rapid drawdowns in the second half of 2023.

 

Natural gas staged a massive rebound in the second quarter, advancing 26%. European gas, still influenced by swollen inventories related to last winter’s record warmth, fell by 26%. Asian gas also continued its retreat—falling 5%.

 

With the restart of the Freeport LNG export facility, US inventories have begun to decline versus historical averages, even in the face of highly cool weather at the beginning of the 2023 air conditioning season. Adjusted for population, cooling degree days were 33% below average for May and June. US natural gas inventories peaked relative to ten-year averages in mid-March, just before the Freeport facility returned to service, and now sit only 6% above ten-year averages. We remain incredibly bullish on natural gas prices. The Natural Gas section of the letter discusses the rollover in Marcellus natural gas production and how the 40% plunge in the Haynesville rig count over the last six months will severely impact its output in the next six months. In the next eighteen months, we will add close to 6 bcf per day in LNG export capacity, and our modeling continues to suggest that US natural gas supply will begin a prolonged contraction starting now. Convergence of US natural gas prices-presently at $2.50 per MMBtu with international prices—presently at $12mmbtu—is practically unavoidable given our modeling of both US natural gas demand and supply. Much of the turmoil in global gas markets, weather-related over the last twelve months, has given investors another extremely opportunistic chance to invest in North American natural gas markets.

 

Uranium rose 10% from $50 to $55 per pound in the second quarter. In the Uranium section of the letter, we discuss our updated supply and demand models for uranium and their implications. Since 2011—post-Fukushima—the global uranium market has been in massive surplus as Japan’s 50 reactors came offline and global uranium supply surged—primarily from Kazakhstan. Between 2011 and 2018, we calculate global uranium inventories built by over 265 m lbs, resulting in substantial downward price pressure—uranium prices bottomed in the fourth quarter of 2018 at $18 per lb. However, as our models suggest, the uranium market has now slipped firmly back into deficit. Also, the Yellow Cake and Sprott Uranium Trust closed-end physical uranium investment vehicles have removed over 80 mm lbs of uranium over the last five years. Since 2020 we calculate that uranium has shifted back to deficit and that commercial inventories have been drawn down by 180 mm tonnes. We calculate excess commercial uranium inventories related to the Fukushima-related shut-downs have now been 50% worked downand stand at approximately 250 mm lbs, covering reactor demand by less than 18 months. Depending on how much physical uranium the two closed-end vehicle buyin 2023 and 2024, we calculate that 100% of the excess Fukushima-related inventory will have been consumed by the end of 2024. Given the deficit between power generation demand and mine supply, and given that almost all easily mobilized Fukishima- related inventory has been removed from the market, we believe uranium prices could move chaotically to the upside.

 
Global agricultural markets fell in the second quarter. Corn fell 16%, wheat fell 8%, and soybeans rose 3.5%.

 

Fertilizers also sold off. Urea (the solid form of nitrogen) fell 10%, phosphate fell 27%, and potash fell 3%. We believe the correction has run its course, and markets have now set up for another crisis. Dry weather continues to plague the corn belt. In their latest World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimate report (WASDE), the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) significantly reduced their US corn yield estimate from 181.5 to 177.5 bushels per acre.

 

Food nationalism has also reemerged. Once again, India banned rice exports as adverse growing conditions lowered the expected harvest. India is the largest rice exporter, representing almost 50% of the seaborne trade. Finally, Russia suspended its agreement allowing Ukrainian grain shipments via the Black Sea. Also, the Russian military has now started to systematically target Ukrainian grain infrastructure over the last month, including Ukraine’s grain export facilities on the Danube River.

 

Ukrainian wheat and corn exports were already halved compared with their peak two years ago. After the recent destruction, a further reduction in export volumes is a distinct possibility. In 2021, we predicted a coming agricultural crisis. Our same models now call for a new crisis to develop as we progress through the rest of the year and into 2024. The recent pullback presents an attractive entry point for long-term investors.

 

Precious metals were weak in the second quarter. Gold fell 2.5%, while silver fell 5%. Platinum and palladium fell 10% and 17%, respectively.

 

Gold and silver equities were also weak. The GDX and SIL ETFs (which track gold and silver equities) fell by 7% and 15%, respectively.

 

Earlier in this letter, we outlined the fundamental underpinnings of the upcoming gold bull market and provided a framework for how high gold prices might go.

 

Since the summer of 2020, precious metals have been in a corrective phase. We believe things are about to turn much more bullish.

 

On a short-term basis, one headwind remains. Western investors have again started to liquidate their precious metals holdings.

 

We track the behavior of 18 gold ETFs. For the twelve months ending March 2023, the ETFs liquidated 450 tonnes of gold. Beginning in April, the ETFs stopped shedding. For a moment, it appeared they were starting a period of accumulation. The same ETFs added 60 tonnes of gold holdings from March to May. Unfortunately, western investors returned to shedding over the last two months, this time by 100 tonnes.

 

The ETFs indicate Western interest in gold remains bearish. Western investors, we believe, will drive the upcoming bull market. Thus far, they remain uninterested.

 
On a more positive note, central banks continue to buy gold.

 

In the first six months of 2023, central banks purchased 387 tonnes of gold – a record first-half result, according to the World Gold Council. China accumulated 103 tonnes in the first six months of 2023 and has continuously purchased gold over the last nine months.

 

Since the start of the corrective phase in mid-2020, the ETFs have shed over 600 tonnes of gold.

 

Over the same period, open interest in the COMEX gold futures contract contracted by over 300,000 contracts – or 900 tonnes of “paper gold,” the majority of which were likely matched with physical gold. In total, we estimated western speculators have shed 1,500 tonnes. Central banks, meanwhile, have more than offset this liquidation. Between 2020 and mid-2023, central banks accumulated 2,200 tonnes of physical gold. It stands to reason that prices are now re-testing the mid-2020 highs. Even though Western investors have been gold sellers, all selling has been met with central bank buying. We believe Western investors will turn into aggressive buyers once central banks turn dovish. When that happens, western demand will collide with central bank buying and gold prices will move dramatically higher.

 

As outlined in our introductory essay, we believe gold prices are heading much higher than many envision today. Given our projected increase in gold prices, we believe significant exposure to physical precious metals and related equities should be considered.

 

Intrigued? We invite you to download or revisit our entire Q2 2023 research letter, available below.»


https://blog.gorozen.com/blog/natural-resources-commentary?utm_campaign=Weekly%20Blog%20Notification&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=273334514&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_FwcsjktF5g25Vv56l4myDLfqrsMD7J-4xZGNIfr90mKxy5MlLWHK3bCW93RCr9wGfJ-qmjfr9ce7L3aWXnfC_LXAhRQ&utm_content=273334514&utm_source=hs_email



* "Uranium [...] est elementum chemicum radioactivum systematis periodici. Partes bombarum atomicarum de uranio factae sunt. Nucleus Uranii noniginti et duo protones habet"  (https://la.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium)
« Última modificação: 2023-09-07 17:15:10 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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1755 em: 2023-09-07 19:23:30 »
Os preços poderão continuar a subir:


«Goldman Claims Oil Prices Could Hit $107 If OPEC+ Extends Cuts Next Year

By Tsvetana Paraskova - Sep 07, 2023, 4:55 AM CDT


    Goldman Sachs believes oil prices could hit $107 next year if Russia and Saudi Arabia maintain their production cuts.
    The bank does emphasize that $107 is not their base-case scenario as they don’t see OPEC+ pursuing prices well above $100.
    Persistent economic uncertainty and demand concerns continue to weigh on oil prices, but Brent crude remains around the $90 mark.

Join Our Community
oil prices

Oil prices could hit $107 per barrel next year if OPEC+ producers do not reverse their production cuts in 2024, Goldman Sachs said, noting that a triple-digit price is not the bank’s base-case scenario.

On Tuesday, Saudi Arabia extended its 1 million barrels per day (bpd) cut through December 2023 in a move it says reinforces “the precautionary efforts made by OPEC Plus countries with the aim of supporting the stability and balance of oil markets.” The cuts, which mean the Saudis will pump 9 million bpd until the end of the year, will be reviewed monthly to consider deepening the cut or increasing production, depending on the state of the market.

Russia also extended its 300,000 bpd export cut into December, with the option to review every month and potentially deepen the cuts or increase supply, according to market conditions.

The moves by Saudi Arabia sent oil prices soaring, with Brent breaking $90 and WTI nearing the $88 mark.

Following the announcements, Goldman Sachs Commodities Research wrote in a note that the extended cuts increase the upside risks for oil prices.

“Consider a bullish scenario where OPEC+ keeps the 2023 cuts…fully in place through end-2024 and where Saudi Arabia only gradually raises production,” Goldman’s analysts wrote, as carried by CNN.

This bullish scenario may push oil prices up to $107 per barrel in December 2024, the Wall Street bank said, but cautioned that this is not its base-case scenario.

“This is not our baseline view because we think the producer group is unlikely to pursue prices well above $100/bbl given the strong supply and investment response to the 2022 energy crisis, our high-frequency tracking of U.S. shale, and the political importance of U.S. gasoline prices,” per Goldman’s note carried by Reuters.

Other analysts say that the extended supply cuts from the two OPEC+ leaders, Saudi Arabia and Russia, do not warrant a $100 a barrel oil price, especially in light of persistent economic and oil demand concerns.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Goldman-Claims-Oil-Prices-Could-Hit-107-If-OPEC-Extends-Cuts-Next-Year.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1756 em: 2023-09-07 19:26:40 »
O Peak Oil parece estar claramente de volta:


«A World Running On Empty: The Decline Of Fossil Fuel Supply

By Gail Tverberg - Sep 01, 2023, 6:00 PM CDT


    Analysis of 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy data shows constrained global supplies of fossil fuels like oil, coal, and natural gas, particularly in interregional trading.
    Constraints in supply are affecting energy prices, making them highly variable and less affordable for consumers, thereby affecting the global economy, including industries like manufacturing.
    The cost-intensive infrastructure needed for long-distance natural gas exports is becoming increasingly unsustainable, posing risks to both investors and consumers.

Join Our Community
Oil Barrels

For many years, there has been a theory that imports of oil would become a problem before there was an overall shortage of fossil fuels. In fact, when I look at the data, it seems to be clear that oil imports are already constrained.
Figure 1. Interregional trade of fossil fuels based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

As I look at the data, it appears to me that coal and natural gas imports are becoming constrained, as well. There was evidence of this constrained supply in the spiking prices for these fuels in Europe in late 2021 and early 2022, starting well before the Ukraine conflict began.

Oil, coal, and natural gas are different enough from each other that we should expect somewhat different patterns. Oil is inexpensive to transport. It is especially important for the production of food and for transportation. Prices tend to be worldwide prices.

Coal and natural gas are both more expensive to transport than oil. They tend to be used in industry, in the heating and cooling of buildings, and in electricity production. Their prices tend to be local prices, rather than the worldwide price we expect for oil. Prices for importers of these fuels can jump very high if there are shortages.

In this post, I first look at the trends in the overall supply of these fuels, since a big part of the import problem is fossil fuel supply not growing quickly enough to keep pace with world population growth. I also give more background how the three fossil fuels differ.

After this introductory material, I provide charts and some analysis of fossil fuel imports and exports by region, based on data from the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy. Theoretically, the total of regional imports should be very close to the total of regional exports. This analysis gives a little more insight into what is going wrong and where.
[1] On a worldwide basis, total supplies of both oil and coal seem to be constrained.
Figure 2. World consumption of oil, coal, and natural gas based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

Figure 2 shows that world supplies of all three fossil fuels follow the same general pattern: They tend to rise in close to parallel lines, with oil supply on top, coal next, and natural gas providing the least supply.

The total supply of fossil fuels needs to be shared by the world’s population. It therefore makes sense to look at supply on a per capita basis.
Figure 3. World per capita consumption of oil, coal, and natural gas, based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

On Figure 3, the top line, oil supply per capita, is almost perfectly level, suggesting that having a greater supply of oil enables having a larger world population. This relationship makes sense because oil is used to a significant extent in growing today’s food, and shipping it to market. Oil products also make herbicides, insecticides, and drugs for animals that enable the growing supply of food needed to feed today’s population. Oil products are also helpful in road making, and in providing lubrication for machinery of all kinds.

We might conclude that oil supply is essential to the growth of human population. It is only by way of a huge change in the economy, such as the one that took place in 2020, that there is a big dip in oil usage. Even now, some of the changes are “sticking.” Some people are continuing to work from home. Business travel is still low. People are still not buying fancy clothing as much as before 2020. All these things help reduce fossil fuel usage, particularly oil usage.

Figure 3 also shows that on a per capita basis, coal supply has fallen by 9% since its peak in 2011. This fact, plus the fact that coal prices have been spiking around the world in recent years, leads me to believe that coal supply is already constrained, even apart from the export issue.
[2] The share of oil traded interregionally is more than double the share of coal or natural gas traded interregionally.

The reason why oil is disproportionately high in Figure 1 compared to Figure 2 is because a little over 40% of oil is shipped between regions. In comparison, only about 18% of coal production is traded with other regions, and about 17% of natural gas production is shipped interregionally. Oil is much easier (and cheaper) to transport between regions than either coal or natural gas. Shipping costs tend to escalate rapidly, the farther either natural gas or coal is shipped.

Natural gas has a second problem over and above the high cost of shipping: It requires storage (which may be high cost) if it is not used immediately. Storage is needed for both natural gas and coal because both fuels are often used for heat in winter, either by direct burning or by creating electricity that can be used to heat buildings. Storage for coal is close to free because it can be stored in piles outside.

Besides heat in winter, coal is also used to provide electricity for air conditioning in summer, so its demand curve has peaks in both summer and winter. Natural gas is much more of a winter-heat fuel in the US, so it has a large peak corresponding to winter usage (Figure 4).
Figure 4. Coal and natural gas consumption by month based on data of the US Energy Information Administration.

Storage for natural gas needs to be available in every area where users expect to use it for winter heat. The cost of this storage will be low if there are depleted natural gas caverns that can be used for storage. It is likely to be high if above ground storage is required. Natural gas importing areas often do not have suitable caverns for storage. The easy approach is to try to get by with a bare minimum of storage, and hope that imports can somehow make up the difference.

The big question for any fuel is, “Can consumers afford to pay a high enough price to cover all the costs involved in getting the fuel from endpoint to endpoint, at the time it is needed?“

Citizens become very unhappy if the cost of winter heat becomes extremely expensive. They demand subsidies and rebates from the government, in order to keep costs down. This is a sign that prices are too high for the consumer.

Both coal and natural gas are also heavily used in manufacturing. Their prices vary greatly from location to location and from time to time. If coal or natural gas prices rise in a particular location, the cost of manufactured goods from that location will also tend to rise. These higher prices will particularly hurt a manufacturing country, such as Germany, because its manufactured goods will become less competitive in the world marketplace. GDP growth will be reduced, and the profitably of manufacturers will tend to fall.

Because of these issues, long-distance trade in both coal and natural gas tend to hit barriers that may be difficult to see simply by looking at the trend in world production.
[3] Natural gas exports may already be becoming constrained, even though the total amount extracted still seems to be rising.

A huge amount of investment is needed to make long-distance sale of natural gas possible. Such investment includes:

    The cost of developing a natural gas field for export use, usually over many years.
    Pipelines covering every inch traveled by the natural gas, other than any portion of the trip for which transfer as liquefied natural gas (LNG) is planned.
    Special ships to transport the LNG.
    Facilities to chill natural gas, so it can be shipped overseas as LNG.
    Regasification plants, to make the natural gas ready to ship by pipeline after it has been transferred as LNG.
    Storage facilities, so that sufficient natural gas is available for winter.

Not all of these investments are made by the same organizations. They all need to provide an adequate return. Even if “only” very long-distance pipelines are used, the cost can be high.

Pipelines work best when there is no conflict among countries. They can be blown up by another country that seeks to raise natural gas prices, or that wants to retaliate for some perceived misdeed. For this reason, most growth in natural gas exports/imports in recent years has been as LNG.

Organizations investing in high-cost infrastructure for extracting and shipping natural gas would like long-term contracts at high prices in order to cover their costs. Without a stable long-term supply contract, natural gas purchase prices can be extremely variable. Japan has tended to buy LNG under such long-term contracts, but many other countries have taken a wait-and-see attitude toward prices, hoping that “spot” prices will be lower. They don’t want to lock themselves into a long-term high-priced contract.

There are two different things that tend to go wrong:

    Spot prices bounce up above even what the long-term contract price would have been, creating a huge high-price problem for consumers.
    Spot prices, on average, turn out to be too low for natural gas exporters. As a result, they cut back on investment, so that the amount of future exports can be expected to fall.

I believe that there is a significant chance that natural gas exports are now reaching a situation where prices cannot please all users simultaneously. Not all investors can get an adequate return on the huge investments that they have made in advance. Some investments that should have been made will be omitted. For example, there might be enough natural gas storage for a warm winter, but not for a very cold winter in Europe.

A prime characteristic of a fossil fuel (or any resource) that is not economic to extract is that the industry has difficulty paying its workers an adequate wage. Recently, there has been news about a union strike against Chevron at an Australian natural gas extraction site used to provide gas for liquefied natural gas (LNG) export. This suggests that natural gas may already be hitting long-distance export limits. Prices can’t stay high enough for producers to pay their workers an adequate wage.
[4] Oil imports by area suggest that the rapidly growing manufacturing parts of the world are squeezing out the imports desired by high-wage, service-oriented countries.

Because oil is so important in international trade, I looked at the amounts two ways. The first is based on trade flows, as reported by the Energy Institute:
Figure 5. Oil imports by area based on the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

The second is based upon a comparison of reported production and consumption for the same year, using the assumption that if consumption is higher than production, the difference must be attributable to imported oil. The problem with this later approach is that it can easily be distorted by changes in inventory levels. There may also be difficulties with my approach of netting out flows in two different directions, especially if the flows are partly of crude oil and partly of “oil products” of various types.
Figure 6. Oil imports based on production and consumption data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute. Amounts adjusted to include “Refinery Gain,” as reported by the US Energy Information Administration.

In both charts, imports for China, India, and Other Asia Pacific are clearly much higher in recent years, while imports for the US, Japan, and Europe are down. The peak year for imports (in total) was about 2016 or 2017. Imports were about 3.5 million barrels a day lower in 2022, compared to peak, with both approaches.
[5] Oil imports by area indicate that nearly all oil exporters around the globe are having difficulty maintaining export levels.

Here, again I show two indications, using the same methods as for oil imports. Since trade is two sided, I would expect total import indications to more or less equal the total of all amounts exported.
Figure 7. Oil exports by area using trade flows based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

On Figure 7, peak oil exports (in total) occur in 2016, with the runner up year being 2017. US oil exports are shown to be nearly zero, even in recent years, because US imports and US oil exports more or less cancel out.
Figure 8. Oil exports based on production and consumption data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute. Amounts adjusted to include “Refinery Gain,” as reported by the US Energy Information Administration.

The indications of Figure 8 show that apart from Canada, the amount of oil exported for all the other export groupings shown is lower in recent years than it was a few years ago. This is also evident in Figure 7, but not as clearly.

To some extent, the lower production in recent years is related to the cutbacks announced by OPEC+ (including what I call Russia+). While these cutbacks are “voluntary,” they reflect the fact that based on current oil prices, and based on investments made in recent years, these countries have made the decision to cut back production. No oil exporter would dare mention that it is running short of oil that can be extracted without considerably more investment.

On Figures 7 and 8, “Mexico+South” refers to all the oil being produced from Mexico southward. Besides Mexico, this includes Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Columbia, Ecuador, and a number of other small producers. Most of them are experiencing falling production. Brazil is doing a bit better, but it does not seem to be experiencing much growth in exports.

Africa’s peak year for oil exports seems to have been in 2007 (both approaches), with recent exports at a much lower level.

With respect to Russia+, its exports seem to be down from their peak in 2017 or 2018, but not any more than for oil producers from the Middle East. The European Union oil embargo doesn’t seem to have had much of an impact.

The star performer seems to be Canada, with its rising production and exports from the Canadian Oil Sands.

In this analysis, I have “netted out” imports and exports. On this basis, the US hasn’t moved into significant oil exporter status yet. I am sure that there are some people hoping that the oil production of the US will continue to increase, but whether this will happen is unclear. The growth of US oil production in recent years has helped offset (and thus hide from view) the falling exports of many countries around the world.
[6] Coal exports appear to have peaked about 2016. Europe has reduced its imports of coal, leaving more for other importers.
Figure 9. Coal imports by area using trade flows based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

The peak in coal imports seems to have occurred about 2016. In particular, Europe’s imports of coal have fallen significantly since 2006. At the same time, coal imports have risen for many Asian countries, including China, India, South Korea, and Other Asia Pacific. Even Japan seems to have been able to obtain a fairly consistent level of coal imports for the 22-year period shown on Figure 9.
Figure 10. Coal exports by area based on trade flow data from the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

One thing that is striking about coal exports is that they are disproportionately from countries in the Far East. Even the coal exports of the US and Canada are from North America’s West Coast, across the Pacific. Russia’s coal exports tend to be from Siberia.

The coal exports of South Africa have declined significantly since 2018, and other African countries are eager for their imports. Today’s largest source of coal exports is Indonesia. Coal exports from Russia+, at least until 2021, have been been a source of coal export growth.

A major share of the delivered price of coal is transportation cost, which tends to be fueled by oil, particularly diesel. Overland transit is particularly expensive. The real reason for Europe’s decline in coal imports since 2006 (shown in Figure 9) may be that there are practically no affordable coal exports available to it because it is too geographically remote from major exporters. Of course, this is not a story politicians care to tell voters. They prefer to spin the story as Europe’s choice, to prevent climate change.
[7] Natural gas imports and exports have only recently started to become constrained.
Figure 11. Natural gas exports by area based primarily upon production and consumption data from the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

Figure 11 shows that natural gas exports from Russia+ (really Russia, with a little extra production from other countries in the Commonwealth of Independent States) have stayed fairly level, except for a big drop-off in 2009 (probably recession related) and in 2022.

The overall level of natural gas exports has been rising because of contributions from several parts of the world. Africa was an early producer of natural gas exports, but its exports have been dropping off somewhat recently as local gas consumption rises.

More importantly, exports have increased in recent years from the Middle East, Australia, and North America. With this growing supply of exports, it has been possible for importers to increase their imports.
Figure 12. Natural gas imports by area based upon production and consumption data from the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

Europe was able to maintain a fairly stable level of natural gas imports between 1990 and 2018, and even to increase them by 2021. China was able to ramp up its natural gas imports. Even Japan was able to ramp up its natural gas imports until about 2014. It has tapered them back since then. India and Other Asia Pacific both have been able to add a small layer of imports, too.
[8] What lies ahead?

The countries that have the greatest advantage in using fossil fuel imports are the countries that don’t heat or cool their homes, and that don’t have large numbers of private citizens with private passenger automobiles. Because of their sparing use of fossil fuel imports, their economies can afford to pay higher prices to import these fossil fuel imports than other countries. Thus, they are likely to be winners in the competition for fossil fuel imports.

Europe stands out to be an early loser of imports. It is already losing oil and coal imports, and it also seems to be an early loser of natural gas imports. However, for all its talk about preventing climate change, the reduction in European imports of fossil fuels hasn’t made much of a dent in global carbon dioxide emissions (Figure 13).
Figure 13. CO2 emissions for Europe and the Rest of the World, based on data of the 2023 Statistical Review of World Energy by the Energy Institute.

I am afraid that no country will really come out ahead. In some sense, the United States is better off than many countries because it is producing slightly more fossil fuels than it consumes. But it still depends on China and other countries for many imported goods, including computers. Given this situation, the United States likely cannot continue business as usual for very long, either.

By Gail Tverbarg»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/A-World-Running-On-Empty-The-Decline-Of-Fossil-Fuel-Supply.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1757 em: 2023-09-08 23:52:02 »
Parece ser uma notícia positiva:


«SLB to add $5 billion in revenue this year, sees similar growth in 2024

1

New SLB logo seen in Houston, Texas

Wed, September 6, 2023 at 3:36 PM GMT+1

In this article:

SLB

HOUSTON (Reuters) - SLB is on track to add about $5 billion in revenue this year, and sees similar potential for growth in 2024, mainly helped by increased drilling in international markets, CEO Olivier Le Peuch said at a conference on Wednesday.

SLB, the world's largest oilfield service company and former Schlumberger, is betting on a recent resurgence in offshore and international drilling in regions like the Middle East to boost revenue as North America drilling has lagged.

SLB said it expects to add about $5 billion in revenue in 2023, compared with its previous estimate to increase revenue by 15%, which worked out to a $4.2 billion growth.

It also expects to grow earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) by $1.5 billion this year. It had previously forecast adjusted EBITDA percentage growth in the mid-20s, which at its midpoint translated to $1.6 billion.

"Directionally, we see the potential to repeat this by adding similar revenue and EBITDA dollar growth in 2024," Le Peuch said at a Barclays energy conference.

International core revenue is projected to exceed $23 billion in 2023, representing growth in the high teens, Le Peuch added.

(Reporting by Arathy Somasekhar in Houston; Editing by Marguerita Choy)»


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/slb-add-5-billion-revenue-143613780.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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1758 em: 2023-09-09 00:19:58 »
Um excerpto do recente comentário dos ilustres Goehring, L. & Rozencwajg, A. (2023):


«In the final week of March, the US government began selling an additional 26 mm barrels of Strategic Petroleum Reserve oil under previously legislated Congressional mandates. All 26 mm barrels had been sold by the last week of June. Over the next four years, the DOE, under Congressional mandate, was scheduled to sell an additional 155 mm barrels of oil out of the SPR—42.5 mm barrels in 2024 and 2025 and 35 mm barrels in 2026 and 2027, and these sales would represent almost 50% of the remaining SPR reserve.

 
In July, however, the DOE announced the cancellation of these sales as part of the attempt to begin “refilling” the SPR. Over the last 18 months, 330 mm barrels have been released by US, European, and Japanese SPR and have been 100% responsible for the slight build we’ve seen in commercial inventories. Given July’s DOE announcement, SPR sales will be zero over the next four years, which we believe has already begun impacting oil prices. We think it’s no coincidence that oil prices rebounded almost 18% since the last week in June—just as US SPR releases wound down.

 
SPR sale cancellations, combined with rapidly slowing production growth from the Permian basin and unexpected production cuts from Saudi Arabia, mean that commercial inventories will experience rapid drawdowns in the second half of 2023.»



From: «Natural Resource Market Commentary: Q2 2023

09/ 07/ 2023

Topics: Gold, Commodities, Natural Resources, Contrarian, Uranium»


(https://blog.gorozen.com/blog/natural-resources-commentary)
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!

I. I. Kaspov

  • Ordem dos Especialistas
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Mensagens: 5975
    • Ver Perfil
Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1759 em: 2023-09-11 00:05:41 »
«Why The Oil Outage In Iraqi Kurdistan Continues

By ZeroHedge - Sep 10, 2023, 4:00 PM CDT

    Oil flows from Iraqi Kurdistan to Turkey remain disrupted.

    The future of Kurdistan's oil exports is extremely nuanced and depends on the interests of all actors, including global and regional major powers.

    Adherence to the interim agreement with Baghdad will likely determine the future of the petroleum sector in Kurdistan.


Join Our Community
Erbil

In the coming weeks, Kurdistan's oil and gas sector faces a pivotal moment that could reshape the region's geopolitical landscape. Since March 25, 2023, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the Iraqi federal government have struggled to resume oil exports from Kurdistan, following a ruling by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) arbitration court. This impasse has significant implications for the KRG's economy and administration, leaving the path forward shrouded in uncertainty.

In 2007, a new chapter began for Kurdistan when its regional parliament approved the production of the region's oil and gas resources. Subsequently, the Ministry of Natural Resources was established to oversee these valuable assets. However, tensions escalated between Baghdad and Erbil due to Kurdistan's independent oil and gas exports via the Kurdistan pipeline, connected to the Turkish pipeline leading to the Ceyhan port on the Mediterranean Sea. This led Baghdad to sever the KRG's share of the federal budget and initiate legal proceedings against Turkey, ultimately culminating in the suspension of oil supplies on March 25, 2023.

Five months after oil shipments from Kurdistan were halted, at the start of September 2023, despite a quick agreement between the KRG and the Iraqi federal government and both sides' hopeful positive remarks on quickly restarting the export process, the trilateral or bilateral meetings between the parties in this dossier not only failed to reach a new agreement to resolve the disputes but also pushed a real trilateral solution further out of reach.

Related: Large Crude Draw Lifts Oil Prices

In light of this, it is evident that the future of Kurdistan's oil exports is extremely nuanced and depends on the interests of all actors, including global and regional major powers.

To be candid, the fate of Kurdistan’s oil is primarily shaped by regional and international interests rather than the local government’s needs. The two major parties leading the Kurdistan regional government are no longer the sole major participants in Kurdistan's oil destiny. As local party battles have intensified over the last several months, a lack of oil revenue has driven them farther apart, diminishing their ability to stand up to foreign interests in decisions about Kurdistan's oil.

Below are a number of key points to consider in Iraqi Kurdistan’s oil exports:

Politicking in the Kurdish Region: The divide among the main Kurdish parties, especially those within the KRG, makes it easier for external factors to undermine the constitutionally granted autonomy of the territory. Uniting the largest Kurdish parties may serve the region's interests in passing the ongoing state's hydrocarbon law.

Compliance with Commitments by Erbil and Baghdad: Adherence to the interim agreement, especially regarding budget legislation and the formation of a federal hydrocarbon law, will likely determine the future of the petroleum sector in Kurdistan. Any deviations from the agreement could force radical choices.

The Presence of Kurdistan Oil in Global Markets: The timing and feasibility of Kurdistan's oil production resumption and access to international buyers now depend on Baghdad and Ankara. Cooperation among Kurdish parties may influence Baghdad's decision to support exports, while domestic usage of Kurdistan's oil could raise financial and administrative challenges.

The KRG's Readiness for Resuming or Maintaining Oil Production: The KRG should be aware that oil-exporting governments with higher export capacities tend to have more influence in international politics. If the KRG's role in global energy security continues to be marginalized, it could impact international partners' willingness to invest in the region, potentially accelerating the decline of the territory's oil industry.

Global Powers’ Interests in Kurdistan’s Oil Flow: The interests of global powers, notably the United States and Russia, in the region's oil and gas industry will be influential. Convincing these nations that Kurdish oil and gas pose no threat to their interests is a key international strategy for Kurdish leaders.

International Market Factors: Future shifts in the international oil market's balance could impact the decision to restart Kurdistan's oil production, potentially driven by significant changes in oil prices or global market dynamics.

Kurdish and Iraqi Opposition Roles: The reactions of Kurdish and Iraqi opposition groups to the Baghdad-Erbil oil accord and potential challenges in the federal supreme court could temporarily halt oil production.

Europe’s Energy Security and Access to Natural Gas Sources: Europe's gas market balance may hold significance for the future of Kurdistan’s oil industry, depending on Europe's natural gas demand in the coming years.

IOCs Interests between Erbil and Baghdad: How oil firms in Kurdistan respond to contracts with the KRG if the Iraqi federal government offers them direct engagement with Baghdad may impact the industry's dynamics and lead to potential conflicts.

Turkish Interests: The possibility of returning to independent oil exports for Turkey may influence the financial attractiveness of different agreements for Ankara.

Possible scenarios for Kurdistan's oil and gas industry vary widely, from a resumption of exports under the Erbil-Baghdad deal to a continued halt in oil flow with increased pressure from Baghdad. The outcome depends on the intricate interplay of these factors, and the future of Kurdistan's oil sector remains deeply uncertain.

By Shahriar Sheikhlar for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Why-The-Oil-Outage-In-Iraqi-Kurdistan-Continues.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!