Oil hits a high; some in U.S. see $4 gas by spring

Archdean

Member
This will affect all of us especially farmers who need and use diesel in large amounts!!

Dean

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Oil hits a high; some in U.S. see $4 gas by spring
By Jad Mouawad

Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Gasoline prices, which for months lagged the big run-up in the price of oil, are suddenly rising quickly, with some experts fearing they could hit $4 a gallon by spring. Diesel is hitting new records daily and oil closed at an all-time high on Tuesday of $100.88 a barrel.
The increases could not come at a worse time for the economy. With growth slowing, high energy prices that were once easily absorbed by consumers are now more likely to act as a drag on household budgets, leaving people with less money to spend elsewhere. These costs could exacerbate the nation's economic woes, piling a fresh energy shock on top of the turmoil in credit and housing.
"The effect of high oil prices today could be the difference between having a recession and not having a recession," said Kenneth Rogoff, a Harvard University economist.
The depth of the nation's economic problems became clearer Tuesday with the release of figures showing that prices at the producer level rose 1 percent in January, driven in large measure by energy costs. Compared with a year ago, prices were up 7.4 percent, the worst producer price inflation in the United States since 1981.
Other new figures showed that home prices around the country are falling at an accelerating pace, suggesting no end is in sight for the housing meltdown. As of Tuesday, regular gasoline was selling at a nationwide average of $3.14 a gallon, according to AAA, the automobile club, up from $2.35 a year ago. The price has jumped 19 cents a gallon in two weeks. Energy specialists predict that as demand picks up further this spring and summer, retail prices will surpass the high of $3.23 a gallon set last Memorial Day weekend.
On Tuesday, diesel prices rose to a record $3.60 a gallon, compared with $2.62 a gallon last year.
For a decade, rising oil prices had failed to dent global economic growth. In the United States, consumers absorbed the higher costs thanks to easy credit and rising prosperity, while in developing countries, government subsidies helped ease the pain. The rise in energy prices was a result of growing demand around the world.
The price of oil has quadrupled in six years, and Tuesday's close was not far below the inflation-adjusted all-time high set in April 1980, after the Iranian revolution. That record, $39.50 a barrel, equals $103.76 in today's money.
As oil prices spiked last fall, low wintertime gasoline demand helped keep prices in check. But now, experts say, the price of oil is finally showing up at the pump.
For Americans like Phyllis Berry, a 31-year-old General Motors factory worker in Cleveland, gasoline costs are starting to hurt.
"I used to fill it up pretty regularly, but now I drive it until the tank is almost empty, looking for the cheapest place to buy gas," said Berry, who drives a beat-up Chevrolet Caravan. She said that she used to take her four children to the movies four or five times a month. But with the cost of gas, tickets, popcorn and soda adding up to $70, they now go only once a month.Still, things are not quite as bad as during the 1970s and 1980s oil shocks. In the early 1980s, at the height of the last energy crisis, energy accounted for more than 8 percent of household spending. As prices fell and the economy became less energy intensive, energy costs fell under 4 percent of household spending in the early 1990s.
With the run-up in prices in recent years, economists say energy's share of disposable income is slowly creeping up again. Last December, that figure reached 6.1 percent, the highest level since 1985. The increase of two percentage points — amounting to $200 billion — is a huge sum, a little less than half what Americans spend each year on new cars and automobile parts.
"You're adding an oil shock on top of a crunch on credit and a housing collapse," said Nigel Gault, an economist at Global Insight. "Even the U.S. economy cannot withstand all of that at the same time."
American consumers have responded belatedly by cutting back on their energy use. Oil demand in the United States grew by just 0.4 percent in 2007 and is expected to be flat in 2008.
But global oil demand, the relentless driver behind higher prices, is still expected to increase by 1.4 million barrels a day this year, analysts estimate. That growth, from China and the Middle East, may help keep prices up, whatever happens to the American economy.
According to the Energy Department's latest forecast, gasoline prices should peak near $3.40 a gallon this spring. That figure would match the inflation-adjusted record price for gasoline that was reached in early 1981.
But many outside analysts consider the government's forecast conservative, foreseeing a sharper spike as refiners come out of the seasonal maintenance period and start producing summer-grade gasoline in March and April.
"We've gone this high without the normal summer dynamics," said Tom Kloza, publisher and chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service. "That's when I think we will have the big jump — of 50 cents to 75 cents a gallon."
Kloza said he expects gasoline to peak around $3.50 to $3.75 a gallon nationwide. Geoff Sundstrom, AAA's spokesman, echoed that view and added that $4-a-gallon gasoline is possible this summer. "We've gone from a worrying situation for gasoline to one that is quite alarming," Sundstrom said.
Oil prices are unlikely to drop any time soon, analysts said. Barclays Capital recently raised its long-term prediction, saying prices could reach $137 a barrel in 2015, up from a previous target of $93 a barrel.
"The remorseless move up in long-run prices has not yet fully played out," Barclays analysts said in a note to investors.
While demand keeps growing, producers are struggling to catch up. They are not replacing the oil they are pumping out of the ground fast enough because of various restrictions on access to fields, as well as rising costs. Meanwhile, demand from China, India and the Middle East is expected to push oil consumption up by more than 1 million barrels a day, each year, for the next decade.
"An oil crisis is coming in the next 10 years," John Hess, the chairman of Hess Corporation, said at a recent conference in Houston hosted by Cambridge Energy Research Associates. "It's not a matter of demand. It's not a matter of supplies. It's both."
 
Dean
T. Boone Pickens is predicting a rollback of about $15 a barrel in the short run and then it is going to SHOOT UP and could hit $150 a barrel later this year, if nothing is done to change the US current economic trends...by the way...He is SHORTING OIL...as we speak...:cool:
He said oil prices will continue to rise because we have no control over our destiny there. He is talking up natural gas to replace diesel, which he said natural gas can be 50% to 70% cleaner than diesel. As far as price parity, Pickens said LNG measured gallons comes in today at $3.55 per gallon of diesel versus $3.29 for liquid natural gas and they both take you the same distance.
His point is that oil exporters have seen how high we'll continue to pay, and he even said that this is likely going to become the norm. He thinks that the current maximum global production capacity is 85 million per barrels per day now, and he noted you have to 1,000 wells pumping 1,000 barrels per day to get just 1 million barrels per day.

He sees today's stubbornly high oil price as evidence that daily global production capacity is at — or very near — its peak.
If demand for crude oil rises beyond the current global output of roughly 85 million barrels per day, Pickens has predicted, prices will rise to compensate and alternative sources of energy hopefully will begin to replace petroleum.

And if he's right...then $4.00/gallon will be a memory come fall...THINK HIGHER...:(
 

Archdean

Member
Paul, I agree with you and this will soon reach a point that none of us around our age have ever seen before and most of us have seen a lot!

By extension our lives are going to rapidly change, no doubt faster then we can cope. Several years ago when I was involved with teaching young aviators one of my standard speeches was this:
Our Generation has seen the best it will ever be!

I wish that weren't so but I'm afraid it is beginning to ring true and much faster then we ever imagined!

Dean
 

irwin

Member
He sees today's stubbornly high oil price as evidence that daily global production capacity is at — or very near — its peak.
If demand for crude oil rises beyond the current global output of roughly 85 million barrels per day, Pickens has predicted, prices will rise to compensate and alternative sources of energy hopefully will begin to replace petroleum.

And if he's right...then $4.00/gallon will be a memory come fall...THINK HIGHER...:(

I made a prediction back in 2003 that gas would be over $10.00 a gal within 15 years. Now with the dollar dropping, perhaps I need to alter the number up a few dollars.
With once backward countries using oil at unheard of increasing amounts. America's drivers still buying huge SUV's, it's like we live in a bubble of denial.
For my part I drive a subcompact as does my wife, we do own a 3/4 ton pickup, but only drive it to tow the tractor/boat or use it to pick up hay, never just to drive around. I also heat my home with wood, it's not all about money, but at the price of heating oil last winter and this one, think about next year and the year after that! $1000.00 a month will seems cheap. The cost of chainsaws and the wood splitter have been paid for a few times over.:rolleyes:
 
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