Stories tagged with iea
Oilwatch Monthly - August 2008
Posted by Rembrandt on August 18, 2008 - 11:18am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, non-opec, oilwatch, opec, original, supply, total liquids, world production [list all tags]
The August 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.34 MB, 26 pp). In this edition I have added more demand, oil stock and production revision data.

A summary and latest graphics below the fold.
Oilwatch Monthly - July 2008
Posted by Rembrandt on July 16, 2008 - 9:55am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, non-opec, oilwatch, opec, supply, total liquids, world production [list all tags]
The July 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.34 MB, 22 pp). In this edition I have added biofuels, monthly production revision charts and a barrel to BTU conversion section.

A summary and latest graphics below the fold.
Countdown to $200 oil: International Energy Agency says current prices justified...
Posted by Jerome a Paris on July 2, 2008 - 11:04am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: $100 oil, $200 oil, eia, iea, jeddah, Khursaniyah, mexico, opec, original, saudi arabia [list all tags]
It is oddly fitting that we touched $100 oil on 31 December and got halfway from $100 to $200 oil on 30 June - so we're on track to reach $200 oil by 31 December this year (in case you're wondering: +42% and again +42% from that level = +100% from the initial level). |
It is also fitting that on that same date, the International Energy Agency published one of its gloomiest ever analyses of the oil markets, asserting that oil prices are justified by fundamentals
Opus 9 of the Countdown to $200 oil series.It said: “Like alchemists looking for a way to turn basic elements into gold, everyone wants a simplistic explanation for high prices,” bluntly adding: “Often it is a case of political expediency to find a scapegoat for higher prices rather than undertake serious analysis or perhaps confront difficult decisions.”
Oilwatch Monthly - June 2008
Posted by Rembrandt on June 17, 2008 - 9:55am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, non-opec, oilwatch, opec, russia, supply, total liquids, world production [list all tags]
The June 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.42 MB, 21 pp).

A summary and latest graphics below the fold.
Why oil costs over $120 per barrel
Posted by Euan Mearns on May 30, 2008 - 9:44am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Economics/Finance
Tags: cera, declines, demand, energy density, iea, megaprojects, net energy, oil prices, opec, peak exports, peter jackson, spare capacity, supply [list all tags]
(New readers, click "there's more" below for the whole article...)

Global Total Liquids production and oil price, January 2002 to present. Production data from the IEA, data files supplied by Rembrandt Koppelaar. Monthly average WTI oil prices from Economagic.
With oil reaching $135 / barrel, Oil Drum readership exceeding 30,000 unique visitors per day and many wild stories circulating in the MSM as to why oil prices are so high this post strives to explain why oil prices are rising exponentially:
• Supply and demand
• Decline of older fields
• Declining net energy and energy density
• New mega-projects
• OPEC spare capacity
• Peak exports
Oilwatch Monthly - May 2008
Posted by Rembrandt on May 22, 2008 - 1:00am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, non-opec, oilwatch, opec, russia, supply, total liquids, world production [list all tags]
The May 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.15 MB, 21 pp).

A summary and latest graphics below the fold.
Oilwatch Monthly - April 2008
Posted by Rembrandt on April 21, 2008 - 10:00am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, non-opec, oilwatch, opec, russia, supply, total liquids, world production [list all tags]
The April 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.65 MB, 21 pp).

A summary and latest graphics below the fold.
Whither The Bumpy Plateau?
Posted by Stuart Staniford on February 25, 2008 - 11:00am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: eia, iea, Oil & Gas Journal, opec, peak oil, plateau [list all tags]

Average daily total liquid production, by month, from EIA (green), IEA (plum), and OPEC (indigo) plus daily crude+condensate production from EIA (teal), and Oil and Gas Journal crude oil production estimate (dark red). Each series has the 13 month centered moving averages of each line, recursed once. Click to enlarge. Graphs are not zero-scaled. See below for sources.
President Bush Questions Saudi Ability to Raise Oil Supply
Posted by Gail the Actuary on January 17, 2008 - 10:45am
Topic: Policy/Politics
Tags: eia, george w. bush, iea, oil production, opec, opec reserves, saudi arabia [list all tags]
Last night, on ABC's Nightline, Terry Moran interviewed President Bush in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, during his trip to the Middle East. When discussing what President Bush might say to the King of Saudi Arabia to lower oil prices, George Bush said:
If they don't have a lot of additional oil to put on the market, it is hard to ask somebody to do something they may not be able to do.
If Saudi Arabia doesn't have a much additional oil to put on the market, the veracity of what Saudi Arabia has been saying about extra capacity is brought into question. More importantly, it starts raising questions about Saudi Arabia's true long-term oil production capability. Can Saudi Arabia really ramp up oil production in the future? Are the high reserves posted by Saudi Arabia and other Middle-Eastern countries really indicative of high future production capability?
The interview with George W. Bush can be seen at this link. The above quote is about 1:55 into the interview.
This is a link to a Press Release we did with respect to this story. Feel free to link to it in your Blogs.
Daddy, will the lights be on at Christmas?
Posted by Euan Mearns on December 20, 2007 - 11:30am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: Aleksandr Ananenkov, berr, european gas, gas exports, gas imports, gazprom, iea, norwegian gas, npd, russian gas, Vladimir Milov [list all tags]
... or is Europe running low on natural gas?
OECD Europe gas imports may grow by 295 BCM per annum by 2020. In the same time period, global LNG production is set to grow by 350 BCM per annum. So we Europeans should be OK, so long as the USA, Japan, China, South Korea, India and Taiwan are not planning to expand their LNG imports as well.
Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland, at Christmas. A wondrous site. And none of our politicians or the general public ever wonder where the energy comes from and how we will pay for it. Cutting CO2 emissions is a priority for all parties. Eliminating nuclear power is also high on the agenda. Confused? Our politicians certainly are. Visit Edinburgh while you can, it's one of Europe's finest cities.


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