Oil Slick Stuff

Is now a good time to buy stock in oil? Do you see oil getting back near or over the $100 range anytime soon? I wouldn't mind jumping in for a quick 10% gain :)
 
Right now there is a possibility that the price Oil and Gas will fall! The Dollar is the main driver of the price of Oil and it has been trending higher. Disregard the man behind the curtain and the make believe shortage of Oil. If the economy overseas rebounds because of a settle with the problems in Greece, demand may increase which will raise the price but if Libya suddenly starts pumping Oil that will bring the price down. RISKY!
If Our current Administration would promote oil exploration and DRILL DRILL DRILL that would be ideal BUT it is being strangled to death by you know who and why!:nuts:
 
Obama's Release of Oil Reserves Just Makes Our Energy Problems Worse, Not Better
By Sen. John Barrasso
Published June 24, 2011
| FoxNews.com


The president has blocked offshore oil and gas production and made it more difficult to produce energy onshore.
After the explosion in the Gulf over a year ago, the administration shut down permitting for nearly a year. While the administration finally began issuing offshore permits again, it’s at a much slower rate. The results are troubling. Oil production in the Gulf of Mexico is estimated to drop 20 percent in 2012 from 2010 levels.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) refuses to issue permits for offshore energy exploration in Alaska. This alone could provide an estimated 27 billion barrels of oil. Companies have invested billions of dollars and spent more than 5 years trying to develop these American energy resources. I have cosponsored legislation to fix the EPA’s flawed process for issuing offshore permits.
The administration has aggressively opposed exploration for oil and natural gas on federal lands in the West. In 2009, one of the administration’s first energy-related actions was to cancel 77 existing oil and gas leases in Utah. It has built on its anti-energy stance by throwing up additional regulatory hurdles to onshore production.
The White House has also stifled energy innovation in America – specifically on oil shale development. According to conservative estimates, the U.S. has 800 billion recoverable barrels of oil from oil shale in portions of Utah, Wyoming and Colorado. The administration undercut this valuable resource by pulling back the commercial leasing rules that are crucial for this valuable resource coming to market.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011...ergy-problems-worse-not-better/#ixzz1Qa1Vu32O
 
It just puts more on the market. It doesn't stop speculation.
AGREE, everyone is trying to make MONEY, but the true speculators (crooks) buy and actually own the oil, store it to drive the price up and then sell.
 
That's what is claimed to be happening but that's not it. Too many court actions against the Obama administration for holding up drilling permits for years. I'll post something as soon as I get time or you can just Google it! Busy Busy!
 
Oil industry is certainly not my specialty but I know a few Geologists working in petroleum and it seemed more than a little convenient that so many Western US operations were shuttered as soon as oil retreated from crisis levels in 2008/2009. Many were fully permitted and ramping up, prices stabilized, then bam!..just sittin'.

Anecdotally, this spring activity in the intermountain region really started to ramping up again. I've traveled rural reaches of the region a few times and the freeways are crawling with convoys of Geo services industry trucks. On one recent trip along I-80 I counted over 30 in a one hour period. Obviously I don't know what they're doing but it sure caught my attention.
 
And where did you get that info? I would like to read up on it.

As I stated, not my specialty...aside from anecdotal evidence regarded lessees sitting on leases rather than drilling mentioned above, I have read a few articles to that effect. I'll see if I can dig a few up. Do note that the comment about them being speculators was prefaced with a "maybe".

Certainly oil execs claim onerous regulation...thereby making the leases uneconomical...which immediately turns into a chicken and egg scenario. As a westerner however, I like to see a little discretion when it comes to for-profit mineral extraction on public lands. It's a matter of how cheaply we want to hand over a public resource.
 
And where did you get that info? I would like to read up on it.

"CODY, Wyo. — More than two-thirds of the drilling leases issued to oil and natural gas companies in the Bighorn Basin are inactive, figures from the Bureau of Land Management show."

Here's one article from a quick google search. As stated, why are they sitting??? Answers up for debate, but the fact is they are leased yet idle.

http://billingsgazette.com/news/sta...cle_7cebf307-42ca-5230-9796-2de5afe0ee94.html
 
From 2008
"Let's say, for discussion sake, that more drilling is the answer. Then why focus on areas that are closed to drilling? Opening them would, in many cases, require acts of Congress, or at the very least, lengthy administrative processes. That would require a lot of time and political hassle."
http://www.rep.org/opinions/weblog/weblog08-6-13.html

Recent report
"A new report by the U.S. Department of Interior shows that approximately 57 percent of onshore acres under lease by the oil and gas industry sit idle, lacking any production or exploration activities."
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705369583/Interior-report-shows-vast-amount-of-idle-gasoil-leases.html

Again, chicken or egg. Companies don't like the cost of safeguards. So, is it "economical"????

In Salt Lake we've had two pipeline breaks, in town, since last June which are still being cleaned up and relatively recent refinery explosion near a residential area. Industry not exactly walking it's squeaky clean talk.

1st spill, at the same time as deepwater horizon so not exactly national news
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/...ed-Butte-Creek-threatens-waters-wildlife.html

http://seekingalpha.com/article/241179-utah-pipeline-s-oil-spill-could-be-the-next-of-many

refinery explosion
http://www.ksl.com/index.php?sid=8551420

Search more and you'll see these events are still being cleaned up and sections of city have been closed. Companies involved are, naturally, backing away from promises to make the community whole.

Note, I'm not using the "liberal rags"...which I certainly could.

 
Coming into work yesterday I saw gas around $3.23. On my way to my second job gas was $3.45. In less than 8 hours gas jumped between 20 and 30 cents a gallon. So much for opening up the reserves.
 
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