Gas off nearly 10%.
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Suppliers from outside (read US shale producers) the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries should cut "irresponsible" output, U.A.E. Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei said in Abu Dhabi yesterday. Even if non-OPEC producers were to offer cuts, OPEC probably wouldn't follow suit, Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi said
The highest U.S. crude output in at least three decades is contributing to a glut that Qatar estimates at 2 million barrels a day. Saudi Arabia is confident prices will rebound as economic growth boosts demand and "inefficient producers" trim output, Al-Naimi said.
"Irresponsible production from outside OPEC is behind the fall in prices," Mazrouei said. "We call on all other producers to stop the increase."
OPEC doesn't intend to cut its output "whatever the price is," Al-Naimi said in an interview with the Middle East Economic Survey. "Whether it goes down to $20/b, $40/b, $50/b, $60/b, it is irrelevant." Saudi Arabia has 265 billion barrels of oil reserves, and will increase refining capacity to 3.3 million barrels a day by 2017 from 2.1 million barrels in 2014, Al-Naimi said.
quote:That would be taking a stand against Saudi. I think he probably likes his job so I doubt that happens.
CEO of Saudi aramco is an Aggie, wish he would take a stand against opec.
quote:quote:That would be taking a stand against Saudi. I think he probably likes his job so I doubt that happens.
CEO of Saudi aramco is an Aggie, wish he would take a stand against opec.
quote:quote:That would be taking a stand against Saudi. I think he probably likes his LIFE so I doubt that happens.
CEO of Saudi aramco is an Aggie, wish he would take a stand against opec.
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Quote:CEO of Saudi aramco is an Aggie, wish he would take a stand against opec.
quote:Aramco effectively IS OPEC.
That would be taking a stand against Saudi. I think he probably likes his job so I doubt that happens.
quote:Me too..
Well, I picked a great time to get a job at an oil company.
quote:Bwahahahaha. BS, nobody in the US is willing to pay a premium for anything "Made in the USA", or at least not a significant enough number. Trust me, I have spent 23 years in the Textile and Apparel industries and watched them wither away to nothing so folks could pay $0.60 less on a pair of jeans. The American consumer wants the cheapest, the fastest and if that means getting it on Mars, by God build the rocket ship.
If you're scared get a dog. Why is it we are willing to pay a premium for everything that's American made but oil? We are producing 9 million bbls a day and using 24.
Lets pay $75 a bbl for our own and buy the rest from whoever's cheapest.
Seems like a nice happy medium that will keep this whole state working.
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People say they want "made in America", but in reality it's all BS and they aren't willing to pay for it (in aggregate, there are a handful of people who are).
It's the same ridiculous argument in the illegal immigration debate. People who are so opposed to illegals would throw a fit if they realized they would have to pay 10% more to buy their homes if all construction workers had to be legit. Things like "made in America" are a nice bumper sticker slogan but it's all talk.
quote:Agree and absolutely right. I have seen different varieties and episodes of the resurgence of "made in America" stuff several times in my career, it seems to pop up every few years and then it will wither away. As mentioned, the majority of American consumers want the cheapest thing the fastest they can get it.
"Made in America" (by foreign workers).
Feel better? The whole "Made in America" push is a joke.
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Please don't derail this fantastic thread with politics. Thanks and merry Christmas.
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Oil is a fungible commodity. It goes into a worldwide "pool" and th eprice is set by that unbreakable law of supply and demand. EVERY attempt to interfere ( see the idiot Jimmy Cater's destruction of the domestic gasoline supply) causes supply interruptions and higher prices. Just leave the market alone and all will be OK.