Bad news from the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline – an installation that may not normally draw much of your attention, but which is a throbbing artery of global energy supply, carrying vital oil supplies from Central Asia towards a tanker terminal on the Turkish coast. On some remote, sun-baked plain of Anatolia, an explosion sparked a fire earlier this week, temporarily cutting the flow through the pipeline. But guess what? Here’s the good news: the oil price did not zoom upwards in response, not a blip, barely a flicker. Actually the price of a barrel of crude has been falling: from a peak of $145 in early July, it came down to $117 and was trading yesterday at $120. That’s almost a 20 per cent drop in little more than three weeks. Oil barrels A return to relatively normal oil prices would take the sting out of inflation If the trend continues into September at anything like the same rate of descent, most of the inflationary spike of the past 12 months will miraculously have been sliced away. This is a dramatic reversal, and it is worth trying to work out why it is happening and what […]
Sunday, August 10th, 2008
The Great Oil Bubble Has Burst
Author: MARTIN VANDER WEYER
Source: Telegraph (U.K.)
Publication Date: 12:01am BST 08/08/2008
Link: The Great Oil Bubble Has Burst
Source: Telegraph (U.K.)
Publication Date: 12:01am BST 08/08/2008
Link: The Great Oil Bubble Has Burst
Stephan: SR readers know I have been saying for months that speculation is a big part of the violent spike in oil prices, since demand, while increasing, to be sure, did not suddenly increase in a comparable way. This oil crisis has always seemed to me to have more than a whiff of Enron about it. Yet another manifestation of what happens when regulatory agencies are sold to the industries they are supposed to regulate - the hallmark of the Republican Party under the Bush Administration.
I just hope this does not tempt us out of rehab and put us back on a jag of renewed petroleum addiction.
Martin Vander Weyer is editor of Spectator Business