Rising oil prices just seem unstoppable.
Even I was amazed to see crude pushing $130 on Tuesday. Not because it had gotten to that price, but because it got there so fast. That's 30% over where it was at the beginning of the year.
The peakers (or, if you like, the "peak freaks") have won the debate about oil supplies, and it was the price shock that ended it. I'd still prefer that the discussion revolved around flow rates—that is, whether we can really get from 85 million barrels per day (mbpd) today to 116 by 2030, as the IEA has predicted—but I'll settle for not having to see some "expert" on TV predicting that oil is going back to $45, or $25, or whatever, anymore.
At least the message that oil prices are never going back to those levels seems to have gotten through.
Last July, the National Petroleum Council joined the chorus predicting that oil supply would reach 115-120 mbpd by 2030. I lambasted them for it, along with many other knowledgeable observers.
One of those observers was Matthew Simmons, the world's top oil investment banker, who remarked, "We don't have any idea where those reserves are going to come from or how we are going to get them out of the ground. The odds of this ever happening are zero."
Simmons had argued for years that oil was far too cheap, and would soon go into triple digits. He saw $150 oil not too far into the future, and eventually perhaps $300 oil, but in mid-2007, he was widely ridiculed for it.
Well, Simmons was right. He wasn't the only one, either.
Legendary oil investor T. Boone Pickens agreed with Simmons, and placed his bets accordingly, which made him a fortune. Pickens' latest bet is that we'll see $150 oil by the end of this year.
Goldman Sachs is another. They were the only investment bank to correctly predict today's oil prices last year. Their latest prediction? $148 a barrel this year.
I think that's about right. It might even be a bit on the conservative side.
But not everyone in the oil and investing business has had the vision to see the future of oil clearly, or the guts to make such bold predictions.
Unfortunately for America—indeed, for the world—our president, with all of his experience and knowledge of the oil business, has been one of the last to come around.
The Jawbone of an Ass
When Dubya was first running for president in 1999, and oil had risen to the shocking price of $30 a barrel, he chastised President Clinton for it, arguing that he "must jawbone OPEC members to lower prices."
Perhaps he intended "jawbone" as a reference to Judges Chapter 15 in the Bible, where Samson picks up the jawbone of an ass and uses it to slay 1000 Philistines. That sort of megalomanic Christianity has been a common theme in his presidency. But some of us might read his metaphor a slightly different way...
As his campaign went on, the "jawbone" solution became a regular part of his stump speech. In June 2000, the New York Times reported:
"I would work with our friends in OPEC to convince them to open up the spigot, to increase the supply," Mr. Bush, the presumptive Republican candidate for president, told reporters here today. "Use the capital that my administration will earn, with the Kuwaitis or the Saudis, and convince them to open up the spigot."
His pitch was essentially unchanged in the spring of 2005, with oil now trading in the $50s: "I'll be talking to our friends about making sure they understand that if they pinch the world economy too much, it'll affect their ability to sell crude oil in the long run," Bush said.
When Gov. Bill Richardson was energy secretary under President Clinton, he did plenty of jawboning—or at least, he tried. In an interview with the Associated Press a few days ago, he remarked that "on several occasions they increased production and the price actually went down."
But Bush, he said, was (as they say in Texas), all hat and no cattle. "He never jawbones."
Until recently, that is.
To be fair, Bush has sent his energy secretary, Samuel Bodman, several times to try to talk OPEC into producing more oil, but he too has been frustrated. "I certainly have made my views known. Whether they respond or choose to respond is up to them and not up to me. I'm doing the best I can within the limited sets of options that we have," Bodman recently remarked.
Neither Bodman's efforts nor Bush's have produced results. Not only has Bush earned no capital with Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, he's been earning their disdain.
Last Sunday, on his second jawboning trip to Saudi Arabia this year, the president had the temerity to lecture the Saudis over their morality, social policies, and energy policy. He warned that "the supply of oil is limited, and nations like mine are aggressively developing alternatives to oil."
"Over time," he cautioned, "as the world becomes less dependent on oil, nations in the Middle East will have to build more diverse and more dynamic economies."
The Saudi leadership was swift to respond, chastising those "who are questioning our oil practices and policies." They were also quick to point out that their decision to increase oil production by 300,000 barrels a day by June was not influenced by Bush's trip. That decision was made a week prior, and was simply calculated to meet anticipated demand.
The markets weren't impressed, and responded to his trip by sending oil a few dollars higher, to over $126 a barrel.
"Bush's credibility is zero anyway," remarked Walid Khadduri, a Beirut-based consultant, on the trip. "I really don't know anyone who follows what he says, especially after what has happened in Iraq and then his Knesset speech the other day," he said, referring to Bush's apparent swipe at Barack Obama at a recent speech to the Israeli legislature, wherein he said that "some seem to believe we should negotiate with terrorists and radicals."
Once again, Bush seems to be living in an alternate universe.
Not only is jawboning the Saudis to increase their oil production a kind of negotiation with our "friends" who don't subscribe to most of our democratic ideals, biting the hand that feeds you at the very same moment is a tactic that even a three-year-old wouldn't try.
OPEC knows the score on oil as well as anyone. They are basically correct in asserting that the markets are well-supplied, and that global refining capacity for the ample supplies of heavy sour crude from sources such as Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela is limited.
They also know that, as I have written about previously, the skyrocketing price of oil in recent times has as much to do with the sinking dollar as anything else. But the Bush administration has done nothing about that, so why should OPEC make extraordinary efforts to increase oil production? They would rather simply limit their exposure to the Fed's failed fiscal policy by trading more oil in euros and other non-dollar denominations.
Finally, OPEC knows that peak oil has arrived, and its members are becoming more focused on stewarding their black gold riches for their own countries' benefit than they are on trying to prop up the U.S. economy. "I think it's a mistake to have your biggest customer's economy to slow down," Bush whined, but OPEC is looking at their biggest customers going forward: not the U.S., where petroleum consumption is slowly declining, but the emerging economies of the world, where demand is red-hot.
But President Bush has continued to pretend that we can drill our way to oil freedom, if only those damn Democrats and environmentalists would get out of the way...even though he knows that's not true.
"W" Is For Wrong Way
It's not like President Bush has been oblivious to peak oil. This wasn't his first statement to the effect that oil won't last forever, although he's been careful to avoid the phrase "peak oil." Dick Cheney himself explained the reality of peak oil to the Institute of Petroleum in November, 1999:
By some estimates there will be an average of two per cent annual growth in global oil demand over the years ahead along with conservatively a three per cent natural decline in production from existing reserves. That means by 2010 we will need on the order of an additional fifty million barrels a day. So where is the oil going to come from? Governments and the national oil companies are obviously controlling about ninety per cent of the assets. Oil remains fundamentally a government business. While many regions of the world offer great oil opportunities, the Middle East with two thirds of the world's oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies, even though companies are anxious for greater access there, progress continues to be slow.
Adding another 50 million barrels par day is like adding another five Saudi Arabias. Even Bush knows that's not possible. The whole time he's been talking about jawboning our friends, he has known what was to come.
And he has done his level best to ensure that America is completely and utterly unprepared to deal with it.
A president who truly cared about his country, knowing what he has known about peak oil, would have taken the galvanizing effect of 9-11 to ask his fellow citizens to drive less, to conserve, to pull together in a campaign of relocalization, and do to all that we could to wean ourselves from our addiction to oil.
Instead, he encouraged us to jump in our SUVs and go shopping.
Instead, he tried to manufacture consent to invade Iraq, and go after its oil militarily on a false pretext, which actually reduced the global supply of oil.
Instead of actually doing something to reduce our dependence on oil, or aggressively pursuing renewable energy technologies that are technically and economically viable today, he has put a big fat thumb on the scale in favor of the oil and gas business, and trumpeted the fairy tale of a "hydrogen economy" and not-ready-for-prime-time switchgrass ethanol.
He has blocked and stalled every meaningful attempt to address the climate change challenge, to the point where America now stands alone in the developed world in opposing the Kyoto Protocol. Worse, the White House has directly intervened to prevent the EPA from granting states the authority to set more stringent air quality standards. This administration has consistently demonstrated a "disregard for the law and science" in its opposition to environmental protection, according to federal judges.
Instead of asking America to reduce its dependence on petroleum, he has argued that we should crawl out even further on that limb by expanding destructive drilling off our coasts, and in our remaining wildlife refuges and natural preserves. This White House has attempted at every turn to gut conservation laws and render their enforcement toothless.
"Until we change our habits, there's going to be more dependency on oil," he admitted, but then has recommended absolutely nothing to change those habits. Instead of doing something effective, like supporting expanded rail service and requiring higher CAFE standards, the administration has sided firmly with the automakers in resisting higher efficiency and emission standards, while leaving Amtrak to struggle along on a life-support budget.
Indeed, he has actually made our problems worse, by killing the Partnership for a New Generation Vehicle program, which promised to deliver 80 mpg cars, and replacing it with a the pie-in-the-sky "Freedom Car" program, which only served to delay any real progress. Oh, and giving tax breaks to SUV drivers.
Not to mention this administration's full-throated support for corn ethanol, which has caused the painful—and entirely predictable—inflation of food prices, but which has not brought oil prices down at all. In fact it has only delayed the inevitable day when we must find ways to reduce our consumption of liquid fuels, a delay that will cost us dearly in the coming years.
"Our problem in America gets solved when we aggressively go for domestic exploration," Bush said after meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai a few days ago. "Our problem in America gets solved if we expand our refining capacity, promote nuclear energy and continue our strategy for the advancing of alternative energies as well as conservation," he said.
If only that were true. The nation's refinery utilization is currently at the bottom end of the normal range. Nuclear energy production cannot grow much beyond the current level (I explain the reasons for this in my book, Profit from the Peak), and it isn't going to do squat about our liquid fuel crisis. For electricity production, wind and solar are safer, and in many cases, cheaper than nuclear energy anyway.
And continuing his "strategy" for advancing alternative energy and conservation would amount to doing far too little, too late.
There is talk, and then there is action. With the Bush administration, they are two totally different things.
When you look at the actions of this administration, they are clearly focused on one purpose only: to increase the wealth, and limit the liability, of the traditional energy business. Period.
The rest of the nation has been hung out to dry.
A recent survey by law firm DLA Piper showed that 54% of its top corporate clients cited energy as the top issue that the next president and Congress should focus on, because energy costs are hurting their businesses from top to bottom. Energy costs have trumped the credit crisis, the recession, and foreign competition as their primary threat.
But you wouldn't know it from listening to Bush.
While oil and gasoline prices have hit record high after record high, and the dollar has posted record low after record low, Bush has said next to nothing, other than that he "understands" that America is hurting.
I have no doubt of that, just as I have no doubt that things are going exactly the way he wants them to. He has successfully pushed the difficult choices that this nation has to face onto the next administration, and delayed the growth of renewable energy, while thickly lining the pockets of his friends in the energy business.
Thanks for nothing, Dubya. Don't let the door hit you on the way out.
Until next time,

Chris
P.S.: Despite the Bush administration's efforts to forestall it, the alternative energy revolution has started without them...and the profits to be made in the sector are nothing short of amazing. A piece of the action can be yours when you sign up for our premium newsletters, such as Green Chip Stocks and the Pure Energy Trader.






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Goodbye.
On a personal basis what are you doing? Do you use mass transit to get to work? Do you carpool? And what is the mileage rating of the car you drive (or perhaps you use a Bicycle)? Doubtful.
The problem with oil started back in 1974 by the Democrats and you better get your green wackos to be more energy friendly.
No go, to you and Obama
The problem with that is, the flows from ANWR, coastal offshore, and all the other possible domestic resources put together can't possibly make much of a difference.
Here are the numbers:
1. The US consumes about 21 million barrels a day (mbpd) of petroleum.
2. Current domestic production: about 6 mbpd.
3. Possible ANWR flow: Nobody knows, but it might reach 1/2 (one half) mbpd.
4. Possible offshore: again, nobody knows until we drill it, but perhaps another one or two mbpd, or perhaps 10% of our requirements.
Meanwhile, exports from major oil producers are set to decline.
So we can neither significantly increase our domestic production--even if we pull out all the stops--nor can we count on increased imports.
The bottom line is simple: WE CANNOT DRILL OUR WAY OUT OF THIS PROBLEM.
I know that's a difficult nut to swallow, but it's the truth.
It has been a crushing failure of our leadership--not just Bush, although he has hardly a leg to stand on, but both the Republican and Democratic Congresses of the last 8 years--that we have not tried to intensively reduce consumption and prepare for this day, because they have surely known that it will happen.
Now, I know that some readers see anti-Bush comments and automatically dismiss all of it, including the data, as mere "Bush bashing."
But that's not what I intended.
The truth is not political. And the truth is, Bush has done this country no favors in setting us up for peak oil. If he and the Republican Congress had managed to increase drilling offshore and in ANWR, it would only have put us farther out on a limb.
In any case, I think it's wise to save some oil for a rainy, post-peak oil day, because God won't put any more oil in the ground no matter how much we're willing to pay for it.
I won't bother to argue with those who want to believe that somehow the U.S. will reverse a solid, 38-year trend of declining domestic oil production.
But I hope that those who have ears to hear and eyes to see will look at the map I've drawn, and see where we really stand.
As the Vietnam War protest song put it, "We were waist deep in the Big Muddy, and the Big Fool said to push on."
I think you are limited in what you know about oil and I do not think your book is worth reading.
You and Obama better get educated on both oil and politics and get more energy friendly.
shows how ignorant he is, of that truth, so,why should I believe anything else he says. An article I read in the last 8 months,said there is global warming on Mars.
So send chris and other believers there and let them help the universe by teaching martians to use less oil.
shows how ignorant he is, of that truth, so,why should I believe anything else he says. An article I read in the last 8 months,said there is global warming on Mars.
So send chris and other believers there and let them help the universe by teaching martians to use less oil.
We can import cars from Europe that are roomy and get 40-48 mpg (I've rented Vauhalls and Renault am 6'5" and got those results!!!)
Yet here we comp[lain about 28mph!!!
I hope the next president regardless of which party can accept the fact that we need alternative energies and better infrastructures. The reason for the suburbs has changed in 6 weeks and there will be more people looking to city life and mass transit.
Washington open your eyes all of you. Thius article said what I feel needed saying and America got what it deserved for it's complaciency: George Bush. Perhaps when it comes time to vote this time they will think about important issues not gay marriage, right to life and other personal social issues.
Think, energy, jobs, respect in the world and making the country cohesive. We've had enough division from a president who promised in his 1st inaugual speech to bring the country together. Oh for Millard Fillmore.
Continuously whining about how bad Bush is provides no benefit to your subscribers. If you want to publish whining political articles, that is obviously your choice... But I don't think that is what people signed up to receive. Perhaps start another newsletter for your rants?
I have tolerated your smarmy political jabs for the last two years, since occasionally you would include actual information. This one, however, was just too much - absolutely no substance and all self-important ranting.
Consider my subscription cancelled, and I would encourage others of like mind to do the same.
I could not see any valuable suggestions about how to improve the oil problem. Do you think Obama's increased tax on the oil companies will lower the price of oil.Do you think increasing domestic supply would hurt?
If the market can't work to conserve oil and generate alternative energy what will?
You ought to stick to patting yourself on the back. You seem do that much better.
Pathetic!
You're indictments of Bush, without mentioning the incompetence of the stupid liberal democrats make you look about as dumb as they are.
Keep telling us how smart you are and don't print crap like this stuff to show just how smart you aren't.
It is a polled fact that BushCo/CheneyCo has tipped the scales in favor of 'big oil', and away from 'big science'. Chris's article only states the obvious.
(This country hates Bush/Cheney, as well as 'Liberals'....as defined by the NeoCons).
For Bush, 9/11 was the 'Pearl Harbor' that PNAC needed to effect 'regime change'. It should have been the impetus to instill a conservation policy, starting with a major CAFE change, government-backed scientific research for alternatives, government-backed nuclear power proliferation, a return to 55 mph speed limits, and a rebuilding of our infrastructures. Instead, we went to a 'pre-emptive war' mentality, coupled with an anti-science attitude, a pro-profits attitude, and a policy of 'blatant arrogance' toward the views of the rest of the world.
Thank every religious entity...that Bush/Cheney will have ALL their power REMOVED on 20Jan09..... FOREVER!!!!!
I hope we make it to that beautiful moment.
And Congress?..... What a joke! The Cons were in control, from 1994-2006. Finally, the voters awakened to the 2004 mistake. Now, the two parties are busy stabbing at each other, in between trying to get re-elected...
Prepare for the pendulum to swing as far to the Left... as it did to the Right....
When the NeoCons stop worrying about who is getting married, and who is taking what 'performance-enhancing' drug..., and start worrying about America's real future, then perhaps we will start moving ahead, instead of standing still, kissing our own ass.....
The American economy will get worse before it gets better, and peak oil is only one symptom of the problem.
For many years, people in the environmental community, including us, have raled against our continuing addiction to fossil fuels. Now, we are in an economic and environmental mess. We need a new, comprehensive energy policy which directs us (and the rest f the world) towards clean, affordable energy. America can become the world leader in develping these technologies, with all the economic benefits that would ensue, if we are willing to dig in, sweat, and stop believing the kind of illusory rhetoric of the Washington "Old Guard."
I'm not afraid to say that Barak Obama is talking exactly the kind of talk we need to hear-if only people's stupid prejudices don't get in te way.
Keep up the good work, and God Bless.
Doug and Jan Parker
There are just too many issues I have with your piece for me to address. But one stands out-- we do have significant resources that would help during this very difficult transition period & they need not be "destructive". What is happening to our economy as a result of extreme energy prices certainly qualifies as "destructive" in the extreme. I greatly fear for our future. I will likely not see the unrest, dislocations & even wars that lie ahead, & I grieve for my children & their offspring.
I hope you will enjoy the Obama administration with its crushing taxes piled on top of the energy costs!
But why did the American public ALLOW this to happen? From Pres. Clinton's record $5trillion surplus, to Dubya's record $9trillion deficit!
What an ungodly mess!! He has wiped out the Am. middle class in 8 years....
You also conveniently forget that Pres. Carter established a National Solar Energy Res Lab in Colorado in the late 1970's and then Pres. Reagan effectively cancelled it in the early 1980's. Is that the conservative way to energy independence? I think not.
Let's face it, post 9-11, this administration has had only one thing in mind - carrying out war. First so they could get re-elected as a "wartime Presidency" (and they barely won by one state's electoral votes) and then for historical vindication thereafter, and it is not working. I only wish I could be around in a few decades to see how history treats this administration. I suspect it will not be kindly.And Iraqi oil hasn't helped global supplies one bit.
We have squandered our 9-11 global support and now a new presidency will have to spend years rebuilding US respect around the world. Gunboat and army of occupation diplomacy no longer work. Our coalition in Iraq is dissolving. The coalition in Afghanistan is not accomplishing anything. And, why don't we hear anything about Mr. Bin Laden anymore. Because W is unwilling to tell Pakistan that we will do the job ourselves, thank you. W's diplomacy simply doesn't get the job done.
If I had a $50 billion stake in an energy company, I would make #$@& sure that it has plenty of opportunities. Hence, I will try to persuade the government to do all it can to preserve my interests as long as possible. Money is power, in case you haven't heard. Get the drift?
The automobile situation in this country is another example. Despite all the talk of Environmental Change, and rising gas prices, the number of SUV's, and various other gas guzzling vehicles on the road is ever increasing. I see a lot of new ones, and would like one myself. I have been to Australia, New Zealand, Europe, and the difference in consumer vehicle purchases is very pronounced. By this I mean small cars, small engines, superior fuel economy.
We, the consumer, are ultimately driving the oil machine, and until people are willing to adopt certain measures, the situation remains. Currently we are being forced to accept change, kicking and screaming along the way. There are many countries where gas is above $8.00/gallon. In Bosnia it is $10.87/gallon.
This major issue we face stems from a lifestyle the consumers in this country chose, starting decades ago.
As for the article and the viewpoint Chris has on the current administration. It is somewhat overblown, however true it may be. The people in this country are the ones who will change its course over time.
So don't blame the republicans, democrats, independents, or anyone else you think is at fault. After all they are only continuing on the path the people have set, and it will take immense effort to change that path.
ALSO WE DON'T HEAR A WORD FROM THE OIL COMPANIES OR CONGRESS ABOUT THE 500 BILLION BARREL OF LIGHT SWEET GRUDE UNDER BAKKEN OIL FIELDS ...... WHY!
I will cancel my subscription as of today.
As for drilling in ANWR, all figures I have seen say that its total oil reserves would supply the total needs of the U. S. for only a few weeks. If this is the case, you need to emphasize it more for the benefit of those who think that the ever increasing supply of oil that is not known to exist and not likely to ever appear, and ANWR oil in particular, is going to solve all of our problems. Given that an endless supply of oil, even if we had it, would be endlessly polluting and its use for the often frivolous uses toward which it is directed is just plain wasteful, conservation in all matters and alternative energies are our only hope.
Unfortunately it is your attitude mirrored by many Americans, that this energy crisis we are in, is the fault of our politiical leaders when it is truly our own faults for our excessive energy consumption. The oil and gas industry has become one of the friendliest environmental industry in the world. Couple opening ANWR and coastal Florida areas for exploration with stringent conservation by individuals and maybe you tree huggers wont be paying $10.00 per gallon in 2010. I vote that everyone that wants to restrict exploration should be required to use a bicycle as their only form transportation.
I think you're a little tough on the Prez, though. Surprisingly, he knows more about baseball than oil as it turns out.
The only good thing about the steep runup in oil prices is that it will bring alternative energy technologies to market much more quickly than anyone conceived previously.
That is, if the D's in Congress, who are much more to blame for this mess than W in the first place, don't find a way to screw this up, too.
P.S. I said energy, NOT economics expert. As regards additional domestic oil and gas exploration in your most recent post, it would make all the difference in the world for lowering oil prices. Economics 101, my friend! (Please, read some Milton Friedman, et al before you embarrass yourself further on this subject.)
It appears that about 90% of the investors who subscribe to your website believe you're wrong on your economic views about domestic oil and gas exploration.
Has it ever occurred to you Greens your arguments about the supply and demand of energy are illogical and fly in the face of all known economics?
Moreover, how can oil from the Bakkens be good (as Byron Dorgan would say) and oil from ANWR and the offshore U.S. be bad? How can gas from Marcellus and Haynesville be desireable, and the same product from offshore FL and CA be prohibited?
The problem with you Greens and your D mouthpieces in the Congress is that you're not consistent. Obviously, you all are just making it up as you go along.
If you want to know why gasoline prices are so high, it's not speculators. It's simply investors watching you idiots and predicting the outcome.
Loved the comments. What can we do about it. Take a look at the little known "new energy freak" aqueous fuel systems. Been around a long time and they work.
One problem up to now was the lack of sufficient heat distilled water to counter scale formation.
We solved that here in Germany with a patent applied for device of mine which produces all the demineralized water one needs at very very low energy input. Crucial in wide scale aqueous fuel systems.
Look forward to all aqueous diesel, all aqueous gasoline, all aqueous driven fuel cell, all aqueous driven steam engine, all qeous driven gas turbines. Coming soon from the country that "thinks greener" than the U.S. by a long shot.
And when we start doing energy autonomous all aqueous silicon and other materials production- wwatch the boom in German produced solar and turbo solar cells.
Wave power - aqueous is bigger.
Wind power - aqueous is bigger.
consider 12 million heating oil furnaces converted to all aqueous systems -with 5 kilowatts of fuel cells added on each unit. How much oil does that save Germany in heating, how much C02 emission, and how much coordinated generation result from installations. Try something like 15 thousand mw - constant during peak winter hours.
We Germans are stodgy engineers, but we indeed are creative. Siemens and Wacker Chemie are great buys at the moment. Go for it boys.
Simple.
What, no comment, Chris?
Stick to business please, and let us decide who in DC to blame for what. Period.
well which is it?