Canada, we need to export our poutine ASAP
Hehe, This is a Quebec thing.... Alberta will win nothing other then pay less tariff equalisation... This is sad news for CAN dollars....
Canada, we need to export our poutine ASAP
So, could someone explain what caused the price to go up before this seemingly new normal of 30ish dollars?
Well at least it makes fracking more non-viable.
RIP Canada
Legit my first thought. That's what you get when you invest so heavily into a single commodity.
#ThanksTrudeau.
Wow way to go Trudeau.
RIP Canada
What i was thinking. Economy hinges too much on commodity prices. Going to hurt and might be a catalyst for a rise in populism...
RIP Alberta :*(
Massive unemployment here ... things were just starting to improve as oil prices edged up.
RIP Alberta :*(
Massive unemployment here ... things were just starting to improve as oil prices edged up.
Sarcasm indeed. Was trying to do a play on the #ThanksObama meme.
That was the joke.
Just in time for that Kevin O'leary fellow to run for PM?
I know nothing of Canadian politics
OPEC declared a production cut and speculators caused the price of a barrel to rise however the Obama administration was extremely adamant about oil self reliance so US drilling and reserves were ramped up and we are self reliant and even export a ton so OPEC cuts turned out to have a minimal affect. The days of OPEC shannanigans are done for now. Let's see what Trump does.
Time to get out the SUV's
Who are these twitter accounts?
US Adding 29 rigs where? I don't see shit. There are still companies sitting around and doing nothing that have rigs just sitting in their yards because there is no work.
That number can be very very misleading.
Fracking plays a role as well. If the price hits 40-45 then fracking ramps up, so that keeps the price low as either OPEC can sell some oil to the US (the US still imports about 25% of its oil, while it exports about 12% of the oil it uses) at prices below that or they risk losing profits. There's not much room to win for OPEC. Cuts that are adhered to mean that it risks losing market share and seeing US production rise even higher. A lack of cuts means that the price drops further.
These talks about eggs in baskets arr always popular with those people trying to feed their families.You can blame the province for putting all their eggs into the oil basket when it was crazy high and never wanting to diversify thinking it was going to stay high forever.
I'm ignorant... How did we go from 120$ per barrel in like 2010 or so (IIRC) to 30 today?
Isn't this whole Oil boom partly an attempt to bury Russia?
Shouldn't Trump be upset about that?
RIP Canadian Dollar
I'm ignorant... How did we go from 120$ per barrel in like 2010 or so (IIRC) to 30 today?
So this isn't meant to be an exhaustive or even authoritative list but as I understand basically US domestic fracking and offshore production was ramped up because they could afford to push new and more expensive forms of exploration and development due to higher oil prices. Once it all went online and then OPEC turned around and opened the floodgates to drive prices down to eliminate US production, we had a glut. On top of this, Chinese demand (which had been driving insane growth in the commodities markets due to speculation) had begun to wane quite a bit.
Also imagine if every month the world is producing 3-5% more oil than it needs. It's not a huge amount in a single month but this went on I believe for a few years. So all that excess supply adds up which just further depresses prices.
Recently, OPEC agreed to a production cut starting Jan 1, 2017. But, oh wait, it turns out that US oil production doesn't need $120+ per barrel anymore to come back online due to R&D in the past few years so the OPEC cut didn't have the effect the market wanted it to and now speculation is driving prices down yet again.
Still, I believe Saudi Arabia is the only nation capable of producing at like $15-20 barrel while making something. But the problem there is that they've built up a generous national budget based on oil prices which they can no longer support and especially not at the current $30 per barrel.
These talks about eggs in baskets arr always popular with those people trying to feed their families.
Very helpful
So this isn't meant to be an exhaustive or even authoritative list but as I understand basically US domestic fracking and offshore production was ramped up because they could afford to push new and more expensive forms of exploration and development due to higher oil prices. Once it all went online and then OPEC turned around and opened the floodgates to drive prices down to eliminate US production, we had a glut. On top of this, Chinese demand (which had been driving insane growth in the commodities markets due to speculation) had begun to wane quite a bit.
Also imagine if every month the world is producing 3-5% more oil than it needs. It's not a huge amount in a single month but this went on I believe for a few years. So all that excess supply adds up which just further depresses prices.
Recently, OPEC agreed to a production cut starting Jan 1, 2017. But, oh wait, it turns out that US oil production doesn't need $120+ per barrel anymore to come back online due to R&D in the past few years so the OPEC cut didn't have the effect the market wanted it to and now speculation is driving prices down yet again.
Still, I believe Saudi Arabia is the only nation capable of producing at like $15-20 barrel while making something. But the problem there is that they've built up a generous national budget based on oil prices which they can no longer support and especially not at the current $30 per barrel.
Wow way to go Trudeau.
I'm ignorant... How did we go from 120$ per barrel in like 2010 or so (IIRC) to 30 today?
Most of the people I know in oil, including myself, has already been laid off. I'm in a new industry, hopefully with news like these they start considering new industries.
So this isn't meant to be an exhaustive or even authoritative list but as I understand basically US domestic fracking and offshore production was ramped up because they could afford to push new and more expensive forms of exploration and development due to higher oil prices. Once it all went online and then OPEC turned around and opened the floodgates to drive prices down to eliminate US production, we had a glut. On top of this, Chinese demand (which had been driving insane growth in the commodities markets due to speculation) had begun to wane quite a bit.
Also imagine if every month the world is producing 3-5% more oil than it needs. It's not a huge amount in a single month but this went on I believe for a few years. So all that excess supply adds up which just further depresses prices.
Recently, OPEC agreed to a production cut starting Jan 1, 2017. But, oh wait, it turns out that US oil production doesn't need $120+ per barrel anymore to come back online due to R&D in the past few years so the OPEC cut didn't have the effect the market wanted it to and now speculation is driving prices down yet again.
Still, I believe Saudi Arabia is the only nation capable of producing at like $15-20 barrel while making something. But the problem there is that they've built up a generous national budget based on oil prices which they can no longer support and especially not at the current $30 per barrel.
In North New Jersey the gas prices dropped about $.30 in a day or so.
Trudeau never campaigned as a Lefy-Left socialist.
This idea that Canada is going to halt oil on a switch is unrealistic.
The Federal NDP are currently out of sink with their most successful Provincial counterpart: Notley's NDP in Alberta. Notley is more on the same page as Trudeau because of reality.
And yet, fuel is still rising in the UK.