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=> Re: oil "shortage" but plenty of gas...

Re: oil "shortage" but plenty of gas...
Posted by Maggie (Guest) anngeorgegallery@earthlink.net - Tuesday, August 9 2005, 1:20:25 (CEST)
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Saddam was Bush Sr.'s best friend until he started punishing Kuwait for being a U.S. prostitute and selling a barrel of oil at $8.00. When he questioned Bush Sr. about how he was going to compete with those prices, he became Bush Sr.'s biggest enemy and a hunted man.

They did the same to Noriega. This drug "KINGPIN" was Bush Sr.'s best friend. Until he exposed the Bush family for some of the biggest drug deals in the world. Like Saddam, Noriega become a hunted animal.

Do the Bushes admit global warming will have an impact on global economy? No, the U.S. is the ONLY country who refuses to sign the Kiyoto Treaty, citing it will hurt American business at the corporate level.

HAPPY READING.

(Reuters) - Oil prices hit a record high $64 Monday after warnings of militant attacks in the world's biggest oil exporter Saudi Arabia and on worries about refinery outages in the United States.


U.S. crude settled up $1.63 at $63.94 a barrel after peaking at $64. London Brent crude settled up the same at $62.70 a barrel, after hitting a record $62.76.

As the United States shut its diplomatic missions in Saudi Arabia in response to threats, Britain warned that militants were in the final stages of planning strikes in the kingdom.

"The latest security threats in Saudi Arabia, even though they're not directed at oil installations per se, and the continuing refinery issues are having a supportive role," said Marshall Steeves, an analyst at Refco Group in New York.

Concerns over the Saudi security situation coincided with news that another U.S. refinery had run into output problems, adding to pressure on gasoline supplies in the world's biggest consumer during peak summer demand.

News that OPEC's second largest producer Iran had resumed its nuclear work, despite European Union warnings of possible United Nations sanctions, further strained nerves.

In Albuquerque, New Mexico, President Bush signed an energy bill passed by Congress after a four-year battle, but conceded that it offered no short-term relief from rising gasoline costs.

In real terms, stripping out inflation, oil is still below the $80 a barrel on average for the year after the 1979 Iranian revolution.

But at an average of more than $53 for the year to date for U.S. crude, prices are well above those during the 1974 Arab oil embargo.

Encouraging dealers to push prices higher, energy inflation has yet to have a significant impact on economic growth, particularly in the world's biggest consumers the United States and China.

Naohiro Niimura, vice president at the derivatives division of Mizuho Corporate Bank, said the world's economy was coping with oil prices that have charged almost 50 percent higher since the start of this year.

"The (global) economy is tolerant to these high oil prices," he said.

"After the very strong pick-up in U.S. growth data over the past few weeks, we believe the risk of a sharp slowdown in commodity demand looks negligible in the short term," said Barclays Capital in a report.

U.S. refineries have been hit by more than half a dozen unplanned outages in the past few weeks as plants strain to keep up with two years of strong demand growth after a decade of underinvestment.

A fire at the weekend shut a 200,000 barrel per day crude unit at Sunoco Inc.'s (NYSE:SUN - news) Philadelphia oil refining complex, a company official said.

Further storms in a severe Atlantic hurricane season could knock out more U.S. output, analysts said.

"People dare not price in the surpluses they see," said Deborah White, senior energy analyst at SG Commodities in Paris, of comfortable U.S. crude inventories.

A Reuters survey of analysts forecast that crude stocks in the United States fell by a slight 200,000 barrels last week, while gasoline stocks fell by 1.8 million barrels. The U.S. data will be released on Wednesday.



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