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Why Oil Prices Are So High

By Sam Pizzigati, Too Much: A Commentary on Excess and Inequality. Posted June 10, 2008.


Looking for villains around the gas pump? Look at the super-rich making bets with billions while regular people always lose.

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In the late 1990s, we had the stock market bubble. That popped. Then we had the housing market bubble. And that popped. Last week the market for crude oil bubbled to an all-time high, nearly $140 per barrel. We seem today to be forever blowing bubbles. Maybe we should stop and ask why.

After all, back in the middle of the 20th century, our economy didn’t careen from one bubble to another. Why now all the bubbles — and busts? Here’s why. We’ve become too unequal. We have too much wealth concentrated in too few pockets.

Grand concentrations of private wealth, history tells us, have a nasty little habit of nurturing wasteful and witless speculation. Wasteful and witless speculation, news reports last week revealed, just happens to be the economic joker in the deck that's turbocharging our current surge in crude oil prices.

The speculation now doing so much damage at America’s gas pumps comes mostly out of hedge funds, those shadowy mutual funds on steroids open only to the deepest of deep-pocket investors. This special status largely frees hedge funds from any federal financial oversight and regulation.

Hedge funds can essentially do whatever they choose. They typically make their money playing games with money. In the oil market, for instance, they have no interest in ever using the oil they sign “futures” contracts to buy. Instead, they buy and sell the futures contracts — with borrowed money.

That can be risky. But the rewards can be staggeringly huge. A sweet deal for sweet crude can stuff hundreds of millions, even billions of dollars, into hedge fund manager pockets.

Futures contracts have been around, of course, for years, and such contracts can serve a useful purpose. Airlines, for instance, can use futures “to lock in” the price they’ll have to pay for oil in the future. But manic trading in futures has no redeeming social value. Such trading, as billionaire investor George Soros told a June 3 U.S. Senate hearing, only serves to help inflate commodity price bubbles.

Government regulators of commodity markets used to recognize this reality. They placed rules on commodity markets that limited speculative trading. Those rules for energy, by the end of 2000, had almost all been deregulated away.

Since then, commodity trading volume has jumped six-fold. This speculative shot in the arm, Consumer Federation of America research director Mark Cooper believes, is adding at least $40 a barrel to the price of oil, about a third of the recent going price.

Congress has taken notice, and lawmakers have begun discussing reform fixes. But the hedge fund industry is trying to shift that attention, arguing that oil price hikes simply reflect the vagaries of global supply and demand. Any congressional probe into commodity speculation, billionaire hedge fund manager Boone Pickens noted earlier this month, would be a “waste of time.”

Many independent observers couldn't disagree more. Last week, in the Financial Times, widely respected London School of Economics analyst Meghnad Desai noted that nothing happening in the real-world market for oil — like growing demand from China — can explain the current oil market.

Oil prices, Desai adds, are now climbing at a rate that “would mean an unprecedented doubling in price every eight months.” Letting this situation continue will likely force the global economy “into a serious crisis.”

Can anything prevent that crisis?

“The best way to counter speculation,” says Desai, “is to make it less profitable” — and that could be done easily by charging speculators more to do trades on the oil commodity market than those traders who are actually involved in the “making or taking delivery of oil.”

But taking on the hedge funds and their aficionados so directly won’t be easy. In a deeply unequal society, the fabulously rich don’t just have wealth. They have power.

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See more stories tagged with: gas prices, hedge funds, speculation

Sam Pizzigati is the editor of the online weekly Too Much, and an associate fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

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of Course
Posted by: JSquercia on Jun 10, 2008 11:26 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course Pickens doesn't want any action inolving regulation of Futures Markets HE'S doing just fine it's the rest of us that are struggling .

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Commodities Futures Modernization Act (2000) and its Notorious Enron Loophole promoted speculation
Posted by: yellow on Jun 10, 2008 1:03 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The CFMA, which exempted from regulation and federal oversight, energy trading from global electronic platforms such as the Intercontinental Exchange(ICE)in London where, for example, the Amaranth Advisores Hedge Fund lost $6 billion in late 2006 trying to corner the natural gas market which suddenly crashed in the September 2006. Amaranth shifted its trading to ICE after NYMEX exchange officials ordered the hedge fund to reduce their excessively large positions. The Municiple Gas Authority of Georgia, a public utility, accused Amaranth of artificially inflating the cost of their bulk natural gas purchases by $18 million in the winter of 2006/07 through their domination of the natural gas market in the early part of 2006.

The rolling blackouts experienced in the State of California in the first quarter of 2001, were attributed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to speculative trading in energy futures on an unregulated trading platform established by Enron called EnronOnline. Such trading platforms were exempted by Sen. Phil Gramm's amendment to the 2000 CFTA. Gramm continues to defend the measure today as does John McCain who has taken on Gramm as his presidential campaign's main economic advisor.

In September 2007, Sen. Carl Levin, who conducted Senate inquiries into the effects of growing commodities futures trading on the price of crude oil and gasoline, appealled to Bush to close the "Enron Loophole" and bring global oil prices more closely into line with actual conditions of supply and demand. According to Levin's Senate Committee, about 30% of the price of WTI crude over that last couple of years on average is accounted for by speculative activity.

New bipartisan Legislation sponsered by two Democrats and one Republican (Levin, Feinstein and Snowe respectively) has the support of both the energy industry and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The CFTC has already fined several energy firms for illegally corning local energy markets to the detriment of consumers and rate payers through price inflating speculative trading including BP. The Enron Loophole closure amendment was included in the recent Farm Bill sent to Bush for signing. Both he and McCain oppose the farm bill in its entirety including the bipartisan amendment to regulate commodity futures trading in energy markets.

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» nice point! Posted by: Bearzerker
Peak Oil
Posted by: mmckinl on Jun 11, 2008 12:39 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, there is speculation but it doesn't add up to $140 a barrel ... Krugman has noted that the prices we see are the market clearing prices. Every barrel of oil has moved out of inventory and has been shipped.

Just today the IEA declared that supplies were not keeping up with demand and that shortages were imminent.

What happened ? Most countries are producing less. The big hedge to OPEC oil was the North Sea. The North Sea, Mexico and Russia are all now in decline while OPEC countries and China are using considerably more oil.

We are now seeing government subsidies being reduced all around the world and it's causing riots, strikes and shortages.

Get ready folks, it's called Peak Oil.

To get to know about Peak Oil go here :

The Oil Drum

The Oil Drum

click on their suggested links to start ...

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» RE: Peak Oil Posted by: pangea
» RE: Peak Oil Posted by: pangea
» its all about sustainability Posted by: toddcory
» RE: its all about sustainability Posted by: richholland
Josephine Wadlow-Evans
Posted by: wadlow on Jun 12, 2008 1:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know this is like flogging a dead horse, but isn't it interesting that all these 'bubbles' seem be 'bursting, more and more since 'Rupert Murdoch' did that deal with the 'Dow Jones family'?

After all those jaded enough in today's society would even go so far as to say 'outright' this was his intention all along. Any figures yet out there by how much he has increased the 'family coffers' in recent months?

Josephine Wadlow-Evans
Poate Road,
Centennial Park
NSW Australia.

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I WORKED AT NYMEX FOR 10 YEARS
Posted by: kc10ken on Jun 12, 2008 4:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course it's the speculators that are driving the price of oil sky high. I watched this activity for 10 years at the New York Mercantile Exchange where I worked. Speculators have complete control of our energy markets right now. It's not only hedge funds that drive the prices up, it's individual speculators as well. It doesn't matter whether the price is going up or down, they manipulate the energy markets daily and rarely get caught.

Our government can end it tomorrow by taking energy OUT of the trading platform. Why is it traded to begin with? Let them trade apples or potatos or tulip bulbs....but energy? Something we must have every day? Why?

Re-regulate the energy markets. Deregulation has done nothing but drive the price up and the only ones benefitting are the filthy rich assholes who trade energy futures while the majority of we Americans go broke.

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» RE: I WORKED AT NYMEX FOR 10 YEARS Posted by: nochicagoboys
There seems to be an interesting nexus
Posted by: Squarehead on Jun 12, 2008 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There seems to be an interesting nexus between/ among the oil people around Bush- Cheney, the BP Esso ARCO decision to close the Prudhoe 'North Field' in Alaska, the invasion of Iraq and the decision (wildly naive though it is) to remain in Iraq in permanent bases, the money sloshing around the markets without a normal market operation (post sub-prime fiasco, tightened lending policies)

American consumers (and electorate) might also wonder about The Bakken Oil Formation, Montana; to quote from an oil industry journal:

"Most of the Bakken play can be found in the Williston Basin, which stretches across North Dakota, Montana, South Dakota, Manitoba and Saskatchewan. In total, the basin covers roughly 300,000 square miles.

Unlike the heavy oil that's still undiscovered in northern Saskatchewan, the oil from the Bakken is 41 degree light, sweet crude. In other words, it's a lot more desirable by oil producers, particularly as new horizontal drilling technologies allow for more efficient extraction.

In fact, the USGS' own agency--the Energy Information Administration (EIA)--had this to say about the Bakken, in a 2006 report: "A study provides estimates ranging up to 503 billion barrels of potential resources in place."

Even if we take the lower estimates, that's still a huge amount of oil, far more than the 36 billion barrels of oil believed to be in Alaska's North Slope.

Let's just say that North Dakota oil production has been growing significantly. Crude oil production has been strong, up to about 40 million barrels in 2006. That's roughly a 20% increase since 2004.

To America, the Bakken discovery couldn't have come at a better time. You see, when all the wells are finally drilled and pumping, we won't have to import any foreign oil from the Middle East."
[copyright Energy and Capital, published by Angel Publishing MD]

So you Americans might ponder as to why you are paying $4 per gal, why ~ 4,000 young Americans have had to die (along with 1,000,000 + Iraqis?), why the speculators profits are protected while you are SCREWED.

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As the population grows
Posted by: Last Chance on Jun 12, 2008 5:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and sources of oil are used up, the price must inevitably rise. But production of alternative energy cannot keep up with the ever-increasing population, and nobody wants a series of gigantic windmills in their neighborhood, and solar energy is a good-weather technology at best, and nobody wants to pay rising food prices when agribusnesses divert production toward more profitable biofuels.

So, I guess the only real solution is to peacefully reduce the number of human beings on each continent, then there will be plenty of resources for everyone in smaller and wiser populations. If not, what then? Economic collapse, social chaos, war, famine, disease and possible extinction of the human species along with most of life on Earth? -- If Saving the Earth

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» Your neighbors might sue. Posted by: Last Chance
» tidal energy Posted by: ptown
Pain at the pump now may help us later
Posted by: truthteller on Jun 12, 2008 5:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thirty years ago Jimmy Carter warned us about our energy problems, declared it an emergency and proposed a plan to reduce our dependency on foreign oil. Then the Iranian hostage crisis, and hyper-inflation from the Vietnam era torpedo his Presidency and Reagan comes in and says, "Crisis, what crisis, don't worry, be happy", and nothing changes. Alaskan and North Sea oil delay the onset of World peak oil for 20 years, reversing the '70's trend to smaller, more energy efficient cars and improved mass transit, and increase suburban sprawl exponentially.

Now we have gotten ourselves into even more of an unsustainable mess that threatens the survival of the planet on a huge scale. Even if we haven't absolutely arrived at peak oil - and I think we have - the current pain in the wallet for most Americans will hopefully serve as a much-needed wake-up call to change our ways - no matter how the price shock came about. I agree that it's really bad for the economy and democracy for it to be enriching a very few people, instead of our common treasury, so we can pay for the infrastructure investments needed to correct our transportation and other problems. We need a major windfall profits tax to remedy that situation, but neither of the major party candidates for President seem willing to consider such a step - it hurts too many of their major benefactors.

So, the one silver lining of this mess is that it at least has the public once again focusing on consuming less and changing their wasteful ways. Now that we have their attention, let's get them to internalize the issues and make permanent changes in the American way of life, while we still have time for a "soft landing".

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The election of Ronnie Raygun
Posted by: xvictor on Jun 12, 2008 6:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His installation into the White House was a miserable turning point for America. His anti-energy alternatives policies set the stage for numerous problems that has plagued us since. I don't believe we may fully recover.

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This Con Game started Long Ago-The '70's was the first Shot acroos our bow
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jun 12, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is not New!
Lets go back in recent History to tell the real story of How the Oil industry has betrayed this Country and Used it's Citizens as Human shield. Not just as Protection for themselves- but for the Regimes they work for in the M.E.Let's Go Back to the Hostage Crisis, the Oil Shortage and the numerous Highjacking throughout the '70s.Who did Not see 9/11 coming? Who does not See the continued deliberate Con Game they are Playing. Who does not get their latest ploy to deflect Guilt on US as opposed to themselves..."Do You Own an Oil Co?" they are not only legitimizing their Crimes -but all crimes that have been committed Agaisnt US (Those who have been caught in the Cross Fire for decades).Who doesn't remeber the Big 3 refusing to produce fuel effiecinet cars until the japanese Started Kicking their Ass. Who did Not see the marketing of SUV's as a way to get US back on the Oil IV- Really how many of you believed you NEEDED an SUV for Paved Roads? They marketed to Your Egos- A Status Symbol, not a necessity. They intentionally blinded you with your Own Self Centeredness. Easy Deal for Pampered Puss Boomer Genreation. In fact that's who sold this Crap in th efirst place. The Ones who's parents fought and struggled in WW2 and came Home to compensate for the Suffering they witnesss around the World- Not thier Kids, they will have everything I can afford them, They will never experience what I did (War to End all Wars) and will Never answer to any higher authority. Unfortunatley they ingrained Priviledge without Responsiblity, Self Righteousnes without community committment. Their efforts to provide a better life became a Mandate for Entitlement.Granted the Elite of industry had already paved much of the road,cliams to such as Birth rights ( Morgans, Rockefellars, kennedy's...) But the Boomers were told these were not their only enemies to over come- but to over come asny remnenet of affiliation with the Working class.Their was no Honor is Effort- Only in Achievement, no matter by which means used.
The Symptom that express it self in th eOil industry mentality is found throughout All Industries- so there is a Sociological and Philosophical Underlying Doctrine and motivation.Funny we have not been able to progress on issues facing th eelderly until recently- as the Boomer grow closer to that age. Watch Long term care will become Spa's instead of warehouses. Something their parents and Grandparents were Never afforded.
Heckova Job Boomers!
Hugs & Kisses from You Lil' Sis who will have to foot the Bill for Your Luxuries (along with Your Kids & Grandkids!)

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» The PurpleGirl SUV Gestapo Posted by: JibreelRiley
End times in two camps
Posted by: Timberbee on Jun 12, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Honesty.

Why do we seek higher Oil prices on the Left? We know why the Right does, yes? Straight forward, clear, direct. It is greed. Power, Money. Control. But why do we?

All the way across this country, I say the left behind series, in one, out of the way place after another. Sitting there, drinking coffee while the wind shook the windows, the other patrons never batting an eye, never breaking their conversation. I look up. Dog eared, lazy copies, lying in loose stacks. The left behind stared back at me. Radio station, after Christian radio station. Selling an end to Democracy. The failure of man, the rise of Evil in liberal packages. The call for God's kingdom. God's law.

The rich, the powerful, Republicans, pulling in billion after billion, building Enormous mansions, fuel this, but don't believe it.

We know why they back this belief. Their supporters. It keeps them occupied, gives them an enemy other than themselves. Look to the middle east, where the World's richest live hip to shoulder with some of the World's poorest, and... the enemy of the poor is the West, not their brother fat cats. Why? Why in the name of God...? And that is Our belief. Isn't it? We on the left. Fear is the Core. Fear is the binder. Fear fuels the hate and the anger.

And the left has called for high Oil prices for years. Have been angry, and upset, that food, that fuel, have been so cheap. It is sold to the young, to the impassioned. And, at its heart, just as it is at the heart of the radical right... lies fear.

High fuel prices are a smokescreen, for us. We hear phrases such as "High Oil prices will fuel a drive for alternative energy sources". "Solar and Wind will become viable". But its just a cover. The Fat Cats in power in the Republican camp fuel the fear, but don't believe it. Their supporters call for an end to Democracy, and, the Republican Fat Cats rejoice, for, an end to Democracy seems, to them, the rise of a Republican dictatorship. And they are well versed to "absolute" power in other arenas. They operate in dictatorships the World over. And do so very well. It is wealth, it is power.

And we clamor for what makes them so rich, but, we do it for other reasons.

Town after town. Small groups of well meaning, men and women gather, make environmental impact rules that say you cannot build here, cannot drain this, or fill that, or burn this, or that, and, peel away reason after reason, and... it all boils down to Man being inherently evil. Man's presence being inherently destructive. The rules seek to go to a place where No One, could build anywhere. But they never say it. They strive, but they aren't open. Why?

Because we desire our own end times.

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It's the illegal immigrants' fault!!!
Posted by: sausage on Jun 12, 2008 7:03 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If this country didn't have all these ILLEGAL immigrants driving around in their big, old gas-guzzlers, there'd be more gas for the rest of us!!!

My ancestors came here LEGALLY. They waited their time on Ellis Island. They weren't insane or have tuberculosis! They learned ENGLISH, gawd's language, to be AMERICANS so they could buy cheap Ford Model-Ts, run on cheap gasoline from Standard Oil!

Presidente Bush, please, order ICE to round-up and deport every Pancho and Maria in the country. Then just watch our gas prices go down!!!
(Eat yer heart out, Lou Dobbs)

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End times in two camps (part II)
Posted by: Timberbee on Jun 12, 2008 7:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We say that the high price of Oil will be a good thing. But we know, all the time, that our Civilization will collapse, long before gas hits $10 a gallon at the pump. We know that, long before this is reached, that the poorest amoung us will have stopped driving long ago. and will have stopped heating their homes in the dead of winter, cooling their houses in the blistering heat of the new summers. That food prices will force starvation as an option.

Under those circumstances... who will be buying solar. Who will be clamoring for Wind turbines? Who will be staffing the stores, picking up the trash, doing all the low pay, but enormously important work that fuels this economy. Keeps America on its feet.

Yes. The Earth is dying. Yes. We are culable. Yes. We are. We know it. The greedy Fat Cats, in their fancy mansions, their gas guzzling fleets, polluting factories, power plants. And, We know that we, the consumers, the spreaders of plastic waste, are just as guilty. But we don't know what else to do, other than to strive for that tipping point.

Microwaves are to hard to give up. The internet. Blacktop. Automobiles. Supermarkets. Pre-packaged meat, where we never have to see the suffering of those others who support us. Never have to kill with our own hands.

But vegetarians kill too.

Our lifestyle drives Wars in Africa, in the Middle East. We push poverty on Billions of human souls. We ravage natural environments here at home, and the World over, in support of our lifestyle, and, we fear. We are the fat cats biggest supporters, just as the rapid Christian Right is. Only more so. For we call them our enemies, and, fatten their pockets at the same time. Don't say we don't understand this. We see the way others live, and... we don't want to go there. Not by choice. So, we see this as a viable alternative.

And it allows us to put some of the blame elsewhere, at the same time. though, we are good at blaming ourselves. Look at the last two National elections. So much evidence of corruption, of abuse, and, We blamed ourselves! Unbelievable. We are our own worst enemies.

All around us. The World's population clamors for an end to poverty, disease, hunger, Death, War. Violence. Daily realities for so very, very many. We see Chavez, not as hope, but as someone who will create new Americas. New exploiters, new polluters. Millions, Billions, around the World threaten to consume as we have, to rise up, out of the stone age, and enter the age of the fossil fuel users. The microwave popcorn age. The soccer Mom age. Where life is good. Where your children outlive you, and don't grow up with a weapon in their hand, and die with a bullet in their head, or an empty belly.

We already have to much of that in this country as it is, but its nothing compared to what so many have enmasse.

And we want an end to it all. Just as much as the Radical Christians, who see the same suffering we do, and can't help but take it as a sign.

We are both right, aren't we. But why do both our visions end in massive human misery. A violent, apocalyptic struggle. More Death, More suffering, Endless, endless suffering.

And, you thought all we were talking about was high fuel prices.
Look into your own heart, what do you see? Now look around. The woman, bent over double, what is she clutching, what radio station is she tuned to? Why is she so afraid? What is it she calls for?

Life is so easy for us. Even when your belly is empty, in America, life isn't bad. Comparatively.

We have to make another Choice. And it will be hard. But there has to be a place for ALL people, and that means for everyone. Everywhere. And that means everything that walks and crawls, and flies and swims. And there we diverge again. But we shouldn't.

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End times in two camps (Final)
Posted by: Timberbee on Jun 12, 2008 7:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we cannot live in balance, then... we should go. But our going should not mean the death and destruction of all life on Earth.

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» RE: nd times in two camps (Final) Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: nd times in two camps (Final) Posted by: Last Chance
Simple. The market has been RIGGED for 71 years. Here's a hint.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jun 12, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the so-called "free" market were truly free, then why was Big Oil allowed to cooperate with the religious fundies back in the 1920s and 1930s to overtax Cannabis and finally outlaw it? Why was Big Oil allowed to kill alternative solutions such as electic cars and solar powered technological discoveries back in the 1970s and 1980s? The Left needs to work with the rest of us who are trying to TEAR DOWN THE RIGGED MARKET FALSELY LABELLED "free". Stay a sheeple or join us. It's your choice.

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Lots of oil
Posted by: uncleeddie on Jun 12, 2008 8:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no scarcity of oil but a concentrated plan to restrict supply. This is one of the goals of invading Iraq. What is ignored however is the fact that the U.S. dollar has been severely devalued over the past few years. With oil principally traded in U.S. dollars guess what happens when this currency is devalued. That's right the price of oil goes up. Amazing!

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Speculation vs. Infrastructure
Posted by: Casey Burns on Jun 12, 2008 8:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only thing for certain is that it is all going to get worse.

Peak Oil, Peak Rust, Peak Profits. A spineless Congress that is bought. A populace that is still asleep at the wheel or talking on their cell phones while they drive.

Am reading a great book right now: Oil on the Brain by Lisa Margonelli (see www.oilonthebrain.com ) and she starts with a novel approach of starting at the gas pump and how gas stations work and working backwards all the way to the oil fields. Every single paragraph is a jaw dropping OMG! Given how she describes it it is amazing this system still works and it is clear that it won't for much longer.

For instance, as we get into sour crude, the acids just put that much more stress on rusting pipes literally. Instead of Big Oil rolling their record profits back into making sure this stuff works way into the future, they run it at full tilt until something breaks and then they usually patch it with baling wire and Duct tape, at as little cost as possible. More important that the stock holders make a bit more than they did last week.

How can they complain about environmentalists prohibiting refineries from being built when its clear they have little interest in maintaining the ones they run, much less building any more? Only the marketing departments claim this desire so they can continue to make the environmentalists look bad!

The system is stressed. All it will take will be a badly aimed hurricane, an inevitable refinery fire, or Cheney's Wet Dream of War with Iran to send prices really high.

That speculation drives prices a little higher is secondary. Our "god given right" to cheap fuel so we can continue driving SUVs has been repealed by reality. Yet one still sees the bizarre: Newly bought Hummers being driven around with paper plates. Wake up people!

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The truth
Posted by: chaoslegs on Jun 12, 2008 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jim Cramer, of Mad Money, has admitted to market manipulation as a Hedge Fund manager, that link is in video.

But this isn't the only cause of the high gas prices, that is also tied to the collusion to reduce the refining capacity in the US which occurred in the 90s when gas was cheap. See when you create a bottleneck in the system, which is the refining capacity, then any problems with the system is magnified and causes prices to spike. It is what happened with the California electricity crisis.

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Because they have our government's sanction
Posted by: ray burchard on Jun 12, 2008 9:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
America’s two party systems where one party represents the public’s interest, and another party is then dedicated to advancement of corporate interest, an ever escalating “PROFIT”,

Why is America orchestrating a war with Iraq?

1.) To advance corporate America’s prosperity by usurping the antiquated Muslim system of belief and thereby install corporate America’s deity, “PROFIT”, in its stead.

2.) To demonstrate corporate America’s warring product line and deplete their overstock of equipment and technology

3.) To promote corporate America’s prosperity through Iraq’s aftermath reconstruction and therein develop an allegiance to corporate America’s aftermarket.

And just how does this Bush/Cheney led corporate consortium pay for this corporate prosperity? In today’s Iraqi and American lives and tomorrows dollars (tax revenue). When the presiding American government allows (encourages) higher and higher gasoline prices, the ripple effect increases prices across the board, with wages being the last rung on the ladder of prosperity, if at all.

The only way to retard this systematic greed, is to stop allowing corporate America’s principles the ability to purchase a louder voice (double dipping) then that of the public’s, one each, individual vote.
The American public must STOP corporate lobbyists from buying America’s governance. We have to have publicly paid elections and remove the “SPECIAL INTEREST” aspect of influencing tomorrow’s politicians.

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The easy answer....
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Jun 12, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's GREED that runs the country. You know the eliteists. The guys so rich that you don't know their names. The real 'New World Order'.
France handled their Greedy rich folks by revolt. I think we can do better than that. We can treat GREED like a social disease and remedy it. The remedy is THE 91% TAX BRACKET!!
Pre 1963 it worked great. We had no deficit,we had no National Debt and a 'Good Income' was $12,000 a year.
Sure the rich will bitch but it's still better than the 'French Soultion'.
Draft Jeffrey7 for Prez '08, P.O.T. Party

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Its Your falt and also my falt
Posted by: JibreelRiley on Jun 12, 2008 9:32 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We can cry for all the hybrids however my 1989 Chevy Camaro will going to still run on gasoline. My buddy's 1991 Silverado that will still run on gasoline. Guess what: we are not wall street big wigs, we are just average people who like to get to work, shopping, the beach and so on however we haven't screamed loud enough to tell the public, we have oil domestically that sits in the ground. I can go on about the Environmental Cartel however I would just be jealous because they are organized, the average joe (like myself) we are not organized.
I will here hear the argument about alt-fuels, big oil, SUV's and so on however like I said, the car I will be driving will be fueled by gasoline however I adjusted because I know there will be no relief. I learn how to use the bus again and I'm buying a bike this weekend and I'm willing to just bend over and live with the fact of high gas prices.

Today's supreme courts ruling has already made me extremely angry more than current gas prices. This is a lose for America more than gas prices.

jibreelkriley@gmail.com
I declare war

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Oil shortage my azz!
Posted by: andrewells134 on Jun 12, 2008 9:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It should be painfully obvious to everyone? who's really calling the shots in Washington, and its not your congressman or Senator. They are sitting on their butts allowing the oil companies to hold Americans Hostage. They should declare a state of emergency, then nationalize all domestic oil making all contracts null and void. When Chavez said he would sell oil for $27 a barrel they were openly talking about killing the man the very next day. If we bought oil for at the lowest market price and created a national gas company what do you think would happen? The oil boys in Texas who contoll the House of Saud and OPEC along with its a rigged game they fix the price of oil at $130 per barrel they split the money with them, thats $65 per barrel for Exxon mobil and the ruling Families. The good ole boys take the money and all the blaim goes to OPEC. This is why they get oil from abroad and not from the cheapest source. Its the same oil boys who discredit overwhelmingly powerful alternative fuel sources like Hellium 3. We could have built a plant on the moon to fuel all of america for what we spent on the war in Iraq for 1 year. There is enough Hellium 3 in the top 3 inchs on soil on the light side of the moon to fuel earth for 10,000 years but you wont hear the this on the corporate mind control propaganda machine aka Fox News. If congress openly talked about nationalizing oil the oil the prices would fall over freaking night, the oil companies would try to run someone new agains any congressman or senator who does not dance to their music, you know it and anyone with a brain larger than an ameoba knows this as well. Our government does not have a mechanism to prevent our congressmen and senator from working as spys for corporations, they can leave office and go directly for these large corporations it should be treason, and they should loose all benifits and imprisoned.

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line of sight
Posted by: cbishopp on Jun 12, 2008 9:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
An article like this brings out the real doubters of market forces, as it should.
I, too, feel this is all so predictable. I have had countless arguments with MANY people who cannot/will not swallow the concept that what we are experiencing in this country in terms of security and economy is no accident.
The people behind the Enron scandal are still in power and making huge fortunes today. One of the youngest billionaires in the world is a former energy exec from Enron.
But Enron is just a small speck in terms of the deceit and graft that has occured since the Bush administration took over.
And it will not stop there.
War is a reallocation of wealth, nothing else.
Peak Oil is happening but it is not as severe as they would like you to believe and we certainly have enough to keep world economies stabil while new technologies (which are ready but lacking government support) can be instituted.
We are being manipulated, we are being robbed in broad daylight without remorse.
World affairs are not always random acts created by god, often they are highly controlled manipulations made by those who stand to profit to a HUGE degree.
Please wake up America.

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Supply limitation is real. Get off fossil fuels and onto renewables.
Posted by: non-person on Jun 12, 2008 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Period.

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Gas prices are less than people are willing to pay
Posted by: billwald on Jun 12, 2008 11:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When retail prices are raised 25% and sales only decrease by 8% why should prices be lowered?

What other retail product is sold for less than people are willing to pay?

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» Illuminating! Just like water Posted by: westomoon
Drill in this country
Posted by: Romans1 on Jun 12, 2008 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need to explore for and drill for new oil surces in this country. We need to do it now. There is oil in ANWR, off the coasts and in other places but we're not going after it for fear of damaging the environment.

However, Norway is drilling and pumping from environmentally sensitive areas without damaging the environment. Why can't we? The Democratic controlled Congress has asked the oil producers from whom we import our oil to find and produce more oil. How is it more environmentally friendly to ask Venezuela to produce more but keep our domestic sources locked away? Is it OK for venezuaela to ruin their environment for us. The Democrats in Congress apparently think so.

If your only response is that I'm a troll, fine I'm a troll. But do you have an answer? An intelligent answer? An answer beyond calling Bush and Cheyney fascists and profiteers?

Renmewables alone will not cut it. The technology is too expensive and inefficient and besides, we have environmental groups suing to stop windfarms from being built because the blades might kill birds. And solar cells and electric cars require massive batteries. So what do you do with all that acid? And I know you guys hate nuclear. So you've painted this country into a corner. And the wierd thing is you're happy about it. That's just pathological.

Do you have the ability to respond to this without calling me a derogetory name? I'll wait and see.

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The Real Reason For the High Price of Oil is Based on the Theory That its a Fossil Fuel
Posted by: opmoc on Jun 12, 2008 11:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and therefore of limited supply.

That theory is daft for a multitude of reasons

1. If oil was formed by dead crushed animal or plant matter what the hell is it doing being found miles underground? Oil is lighter than water. Water is abundant on the planet 2/3rds of it is covered with the stuff. The oil would float to the surface. The oceans would be covered with thick oil.

2. The fact that it is found miles underground is a little hint as towards its origins

3. Why is there such an enormous volumes of the stuff in certain parts of the World like the Middle East - but not other parts? Plant and animal life has always been much more widespread - and therefore so should oil - if oil came from plant and animal life

4. Spend a few days reading http://www.gasresources.net/ preferably after you have cpmpleted your PhD in maths and physics

5. Its in the interests of virtually all rich ruling elites all to maintain the myth of oil being a fossil fuel - limited resource - hence a shortage and high price. You can't sell sea water at $140 a barrel - but you could if it wasn't obvious there is so much of the stuff about.

6. If oil is a fossil fuel - then where did all the carbon come from? Plants take Carbon Dioxide out of the atmosphere - and stick it in the ground. Is someone trying to seriously make out - that all that carbon in the ground was once in the atmosphere - and life was quite happy with it? Its nonsense

Of course if you try and seriously argue that oil is formed from deep within the ground and is effectively unlimited then you will get rubbished remorselessly by those who make loads of money by maintaining their ridiculous religious like theories.

Its like trying to argue that the story of Jesus Christ is considerably older than 2000 years and has been recycled numerous times to a Christian who actually believes that Jesus Christ existed as a real live human being.

But who wants to know the truth?

The entire human race has always been controlled by arseholes spinning a pack of lies - to put the Fear of God into the sheep

Nothing much ever changes - and here comes the big cull

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Romans1 and opmoc are corporate fossil fuel lobby monkeys.
Posted by: non-person on Jun 12, 2008 12:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Aren't they funny?

Why respond rationally to an irrational PR monkey? Just throw them some bananas, in the hope they'll shut up.

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Why isn't anyone talking about the real reason gas is so expensive
Posted by: joetag on Jun 12, 2008 1:34 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The dollar has massively been devalued. 70% of the increase we are seeing is directly due to the devaluation of the dollar.

Everything that's not produced in the US costs more due to the falling dollar.

Why is no one discussing the fall of the dollar? Surely that is the key reason for the booming US oil prices.

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US government keeps oil supply off market
Posted by: securacom-wtc on Jun 12, 2008 4:15 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is plenty of oil, but the US government and oil companies are reducing supply to keep prices and profits maximized. See video.google.com: 1) Rex Tillerson - CEO Exxon Mobil Denying Peak Oil 2) Greg Palast, 'Armed Madhouse'3)Lindsay Williams, Energy Non-crisis 4)Webster Tarpley, Peak Oil Fraud

'More on the real reason behind high oil prices'
by F. William Engdahl
Excerpt: "The hoax of Peak Oil—namely the argument that the oil production has hit the point where more than half all reserves have been used and the world is on the downslope of oil at cheap price and abundant quantity—has enabled this costly fraud to continue since the invasion of Iraq in 2003 with the help of key banks, oil traders and big oil majors. Washington is trying to shift blame, as always, to Arab OPEC producers. The problem is not a lack of crude oil supply. In fact the world is in over-supply now. Yet the price climbs relentlessly higher. Why? The answer lies in what are clearly deliberate US government policies that permit the unbridled oil price manipulations"
"As I noted in my earlier article, (‘Perhaps 60% of today’s oil price is pure speculation’), ICE was focus of a recent congressional investigation. It was named both in the Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations' June 27, 2006, Staff Report and in the House Committee on Energy %26 Commerce's hearing in December 2007 which looked into unregulated trading in energy futures. Both studies concluded that energy prices' climb to $128 and perhaps beyond is driven by billions of dollars' worth of oil and natural gas futures contracts being placed on the ICE. Through a convenient regulation exception granted by the Bush Administration in January 2006, the ICE Futures trading of US energy futures is not regulated by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, even though the ICE Futures US oil contracts are traded in ICE affiliates in the USA. And at Enron’s request, the CFTC exempted the Over-the-Counter oil futures trades in 2000."
whole story here: http://www.globalresearch.ca/

USA’s Constitution and currency are being destroyed from within. How? Videos free on www.video.google.com 1) America: Freedom to Fascism, 2 hrs; 2)911 Justice, 18min; 3) The Clinton Chronicles, 1.7 hrs; 4) Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement, 2 hrs, 5) Terrorstorm: A History of False Flag Terror, 2 hrs 6) 911 Mysteries, 2 hrs; 7)The Creature from Jekyll Island, 1hr; 8)Orwell Rolls in His Grave, 2hrs; 9) The War on Democracy, 1.5 hrs; 10) The Energy Non-Crisis, 1 hr; 11)Iraq for Sale 1.2 hr; 12) Zeitgeist, 2 hrs; 13)Ring of Power, 2.5 hrs; 14)Bush link to JFK, 1.5 hrs; 15) The Century of the Self, 4 hrs; 16) Loose Change (2nd ed & Final cut) 2hrs each; 17)John Pilger: The New Rulers of the World; 18) The Money Masters: How International Bankers Gained Control of America, 3.5 hrs 19) Barack Obama CFR info 20) Global Warming or Global Governance 21) The Great Global Warming Swindle 22) Mercury, Autism and The Global Vaccine Agenda 23) The CIA, Mind Control and Satanism 24)George Hunt: UN UNCED Earth Summit 1992 (Population Reduction) 25) End of NAtions - EU Takeover 26) Washington, You're Fired 27) Blackwater: America's Private Army 28) Esoteric Agenda 29) Fiat Empire: Why the Federal Reserve Violates the U.S. COnstitution 30) The Revolution Will not be Televised [USA overthrow of Hugo Chavez] 31) One Nation Under Siege 32)Breaking The Silence - Truth and Lies in the War on Terror, by John Pilger(and all his documentaries) 33)Beyond Treason 1.5hrs

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I've said it before
Posted by: willymack on Jun 12, 2008 4:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And I'll say it again. If enough of us get our heads out of our asses and pressure our leaders to nationalize the "energy" companies, impound their vast wealth, and use it to do the research leading to the production of energy that DOESN'T REQUIRE BURNING ANYTHING, we can accomplish the seemingly impossible. Old-fashinoed greed and obsolete thinking are what's holding us up.

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Deregulation...
Posted by: VickyinSD on Jun 12, 2008 4:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Government regulators of commodity markets used to recognize this reality. They placed rules on commodity markets that limited speculative trading. Those rules for energy, by the end of 2000, had almost all been deregulated away."

ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING that our government has "deregulated" has totally screwed the average person in the long run! That's why we now have media monopolies... telecom monopolies... energy monopolies... leaving you and me with no options, and the corporate big wig bastards with lots and lots of our hard earned cash. It's TOTAL BULLSHIT!!!

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» RE: Deregulation...Exactly right...! Posted by: TJ-stars4peace
no, I will not answer your "question"
Posted by: lexicon on Jun 12, 2008 6:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As we both well know, your "question" is really of the form "when did you stop beating your wife?".

to answer it in any form, allows the premise of the question, and I disagree that the premise of the question is in the slightest bit valid.

The premise of your question is that environmental regulations are to blame, and that is simply incorrect. You're a shill.

lexicon

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Daddy WarBux
Posted by: PaulK on Jun 12, 2008 7:10 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a couple of years, lots of diesel fuel can be made from coal (just don't look at the global warming problems), from tar sands in Canada, or from the earth's limited forests and food supply. The price of oil is artificially high right now.

The short-term reason for intense oil speculation is that Cheney and Bushey have been doing everything in their pathetic power to merge their two wars into one big war, by attacking Iran in the middle. They've talked tough, moved ships into place, clumsily fabricated act-of-war incidents, threatened bombing waves and invasion of the country, and threatened to use Israel as America's surrogate for the attack.

The hedge fund operators and their rich clients are taking trillion dollar bets on the next war. Think of Bob Dylan's song "Black Diamond Bay". "You can take your money but I don't know how you can spend it in the tomb."

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You're Spouting Government Propaganda
Posted by: dayahka on Jun 12, 2008 8:19 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, but I think you're way off the mark. All you've done here is spout the official propaganda that it's speculators who are causing the price of oil to rise--and that just does not square with the facts. The facts are that Bernanke (and before him, Greenspan) has been bailing out his friends in the financial districts by printing money and inflating the currency. OPEC is losing money every time Bernanke does his thing and the price of oil is going up to keep pace with inflation. This has nothing to do with speculators. This is rising demand and falling supply meeting a product supplier determined not to give away an essential resource for nothing.

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Oil prices are due to corporatism, NOT free-market capitalism.
Posted by: NolanLawson on Jun 12, 2008 10:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sure, malinvestments contribute to bubbles, which invariably burst. But it's the intervention of the Federal Reserve that contributes to the malinvestments in the first place! It's simple: when the Fed artificially lowers interest rates to help out their banker buddies, the banks borrow more money (which the Fed can print out of thin air, since they're unaccountable to the people). And when the banks borrow more money, they need to lower their standards for loans (more than they would have otherwise) so they can unload the money. Because of the lower standards (think subprime mortgages), people then make malinvestments, which causes these bubbles to build. And when the economy crashes, the Fed's solution is (surprise!) to lower interest rates. Thus, we get these periodic bubbles, which get bigger and more frequent as the Fed continues to inflate the dollar and bail out the big banks.

Read Ron Paul's new book for more info, or read this guy's article for more on oil prices: http://www.hawaiireporter.com/ story.aspx?fe84c075-0bac-4d92-96fd-aed3cecdc45f . This guy points out that oil companies have lower profit margins than water utilities, so they're not the ones to blame, despite the media's howling for their blood.

Also, check out this article, which points out that the price of oil has only risen relative to the value of the dollar, but it has remained the same relative to the value of gold: http://www.thedailygreen.com/ environmental-news/latest/oil-gold-commodities-47041507. More evidence for inflation as the cause.

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There is a great deal of nonsense being talked, to the effect that 'The End is Nigh!"
Posted by: Squarehead on Jun 13, 2008 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a great deal of nonsense being talked, to the effect that 'The End is Nigh!" and 'Peak Oil could mean $250 per barrel" and "the regular Joe/Joanne is being betrayed by both right and left"

1. The oil price is being manipulated, by the super-rich who own (most of) USA. See Greg Palast story below:
http://www.gregpalast.com/british-petroleums-smart-pig/
Also the news items on fields available but not being developed. (Bakken, North Shore)

2. Oil can not, logically, pass approx $160- $170 per barrel, because you can make diesel oil and other fractions from cellulose, within approx that pricing. This does not mean it won't, have temporary blips, as the speculators convince markets to go with the bubble; so rein them in. (Prison?)

3. The 'Green left', of which I would count myself a member, do not desire or implement or engage in activity to destroy Americans, as suggested in the statement 'the great cull is coming'. Bollocks.
The left is aware of the difficulties that unrestrained US commerce gives the rest of the world; WE try to find viable solutions, viable for all of humanity. That includes the American 'working and middle classes'.
If we offer common-sense analyses of energy problems, pointing out the need to reduce usage, this is not an assault on the 'American way of life'; it is trying to show viable responses to a damaged eco-system.

4. The belief from some posters, that there is a desire to reduce population on the part of all powerful elites, is illusion.

5. The belief on the part of many that 'Solar power won't work, that these energy alternatives are untested or insufficiently workable', or whatever, is not a statement of FACT. It is a statement of PREJUDICE, supported and inserted into the public discourse by the same energy interests- speculators mentioned above.

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some very very approximate numbers...are these reasonable?
Posted by: lexicon on Jun 13, 2008 9:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Looking around, and doing a very unscientific short study, it seems to me that:

a) the devaluation of the US dollar is adding about 20-30% to the price of a barrel of oil.

b) the speculative activities in the oil commodities markets are adding about 25-35% to the price of a barrel of oil.

c) (a component of b) the war risk, both the current war and the bellicosity of the bush regime, is pricing in something approaching 35% to the price of a barrel of oil.

d) increased consumption by a fully-mobilized war effort, add something like 5% to the cost of a barrel of oil.

e) weather risk due to an uncertain but discernable change in the nature of typhoons and hurricanes in the major shipping lanes and ports for oil, seem to be adding about 10% overall to the price of a barrel of oil.

f) demand seems to be a few percentage points above the 40 year trendline for demand...and supply seems to be just a whisker below the 40 year trend line, which seems to account for something approaching 5% of the cost of a barrel of oil.

that all adds up to about a 120 percent change (taking the high side numbers), which is approximately right, since I think oil was hovering around $60 a barrel last year, and now it's at about $135 and pushing $140.

So It shouldn't take a chicago-school monetarist to see that, in general terms, we are now paying the "Bush dividend".

I, for one, really ENJOY paying that money, don't you?

lexicon

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Macroheclnomics
Posted by: supplysidebomb on Jun 14, 2008 7:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Speculators and higher cognitive thought regarding our existing economic framework is to blame. Rapid market-led petrol based globalization in a nut shell. Take into consideration our monetary policy, the Federal Reserve, Chamber of Congress, visa worker programs, cheap legal and illegal labor into the country, subsidiaries(tax havens) for multi-nationals, and many other side-effects of our elected congressional millionaire's club 'Free' trade agreements, to include: NAFTA, GATT, WTO, MFN with China, and you've figured it out.

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The "impracitacality" of renewables
Posted by: westomoon on Jun 14, 2008 11:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course I didn't find this in the MSM, but this article seemed like important information:

Alternative energy advocates have been saying for the past couple of years that wind energy — long a niche player in the nation’s energy mix — is going mainstream. Now they have a federal study that proves it.

According to a new report put out by the Department of Energy (Annual Report on U.S. Wind Power Installation, Cost, and Performance Trends: 2007), wind energy contributed 35 percent of all new electrical generating capacity installed in the United States last year, or 5,329 megawatts. That’s roughly the equivalent of four or five new coal-fired power plants.

Moreover, the report also found that U.S. utilities have 225,000 megawatts of new wind-power generating capacity in various phases of planning or development, which is more than their planned expansion of coal, natural gas and nuclear energy combined.

To put these numbers in some context, total U.S. electrical generating capacity is currently about 1 million megawatts. The country adds about 15,000 megawatts of electrical generating capacity a year from all sources to keep up with growing demand and to replace old power plants at the end of their service lives. Many energy analysts think wind could eventually supply up to 20 percent of U.S. electricity. ...

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What a useless article...
Posted by: Charley2u on Jun 15, 2008 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here is your quote:

"Since then, commodity trading volume has jumped six-fold. This speculative shot in the arm, Consumer Federation of America research director Mark Cooper believes, is adding at least $40 a barrel to the price of oil, about a third of the recent going price."

http://www.alternet.org/workplace/87474/

Okay, that explains everything from 97 dollars a barrel to 137 dollars a barrel, but explain this:

"...getting oil to the surface currently costs under $5 a barrel in Saudi Arabia, with the global average cost certainly under $15. And with technology already well in hand, the cost of sucking oil out of the planet we occupy simply will not rise above roughly $30 per barrel for the next 100 years at least."

http://www.manhattan-institute.org/html/_wsj-oil_oil.htm

So, now we have to explain why oil, which costs 15 bucks a barrel to pull from the ground, sells for 97 dollars, after accounting for speculation - and, that, my friend, is an 82 dollar premium on the barrel.

97 dollar a barrel oil means that, absent the price effects of speculation, no less than 85 percent of the price of of oil is unaccounted for in Mr. Cooper's statement. I am not sure there is any other branch science other than economics where 85 percent of what its experts try to explain can remain unaccounted.

You quote, "widely respected London School of Economics analyst Meghnad Desai," saying:

"...nothing happening in the real-world market for oil — like growing demand from China — can explain the current oil market."

Again, how can you call someone as an expert witness on something, when they admit they have no explanation for the thing on which they comment?

You need to start from scratch and come up with a better article!

http://pogoprinciple.wordpress.com/

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community
Posted by: rrrwomyn on Jun 24, 2008 11:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this is a problem i've been examing for awhile;
how urbanites can be sustainable. i think there are a few places that we can look to in order to find answers eg oakland, residents tired of finding only high-fat foods in their local convenience stores (supermarkets are miles away and inaccessable) create their own community gardens. residents in south-central l.a fight to keep their community garden alive even though they were evicted off the site 2 years ago. we need to come together as people and find the solutions in our own neighborhood. Community gardens are great because not only do they provide food but they provide nourishment for the soul, a sense of brotherhood and a connection to our food that driving to the grocery store and buying food that's been produced 1000 of miles away doesn't give you.

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windmills in every community!
Posted by: rrrwomyn on Jun 24, 2008 12:02 PM   
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well thats not true. Many communities, like the country of Denmark have embraced windmills in their backyards. In the '80's the government implemented an offer of a 30% subsidy for the construction of new wind energy projects, now more than 100,000 households own 1 or more shares in a nearby turbine [mother earth news june/july 008] and solar energy is effective even when it's cloudy not too mention there are batteries for storing this energy for days when the output can't keep up with demand. photo-voltaic cells are far more advanced than before and now its possible to shingle a whole roof with them! not too mention we can cut down on oil use by passive solar methods (buy a house with window's facing south for instance) try to work close to where you live, carpool, or ride a bike. form a committee that demands more comprehensive public transportation and busses that run on sustainable fuels. invent a way to make garbage into fuel. the possibilities are only limited by your imagination and will.

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