The US oil price has fallen below the symbolic threshold of $50 a barrel for the first time since April 2009.

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[h=1]Russia flirts with Saudi Arabia as OPEC pain deepens[/h][h=2]Kremlin energy tsar says OPEC may have to ditch its low-price policy within months. But Russia needs to cut output quietly too[/h]
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Gazprom's revenues are likely to drop by almost a third to $106bn this year


The OPEC oil cartel cannot withstand the pain of low crude prices indefinitely and may be forced to abandon its pugnacious bid for market share within months, Russia's chief energy official has predicted.

Arkady Dvorkovich, the deputy prime minister, said OPEC producers are suffering the ricochet effects of their attempt to flush out rivals by flooding the world with excess output.

"I don't think they really want to live with low oil prices for a long time. At some point it is likely that are going to have to change policy. They can last a few months, to a couple of years," he told The Telegraph.

Saudi Arabia took a fateful decision last November to crank up production to record levels despite a glut of 1-2m barrels a day (b\d) accumulating in global markets, hoping to halt the advance of US shale and kill off high-cost projects in the Arctic and deep off-shore waters.

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Workers adjust a valve of an oil pipe as smoke rises from burning excess gas in Zubair oilfield in Basra Photo: REUTERS


Riyadh has made it clear that it will not cut output to shore up prices unless non-OPEC producers share of the burden. This essentially means Russia, the world's biggest producer.
Mr Dvorkovich, the head of Russia's economic and energy strategy, said his country was in constant talks with OPEC in order to bring about a "more rational policy" but was coy on whether the Kremlin would break the impasse and strike a deal with the Saudis.
"Our consultations do not imply directly that we are going to see any coordinated action. Perhaps 'yes', perhaps 'no', most likely 'no'," he said, speaking at the Ambrosetti forum of world policy-makers on Lake Como. "We are sending signals to each other."
Russia insists that it cannot switch off output as easily as the Saudis, given the harsh weather in the Siberian fields, a claim dismissed by OPEC as a negotiating ploy.
Nor can the Kremlin order Russian drillers to slash production without under-cutting its insistence that these oil groups are genuine companies, answerable to their shareholders. Yet there are subtle ways of achieving the same outcome.
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The Kremlin, Moscow Photo: CORBIS

The head of Russia's oil giant Rosneft, Igor Sechin, has been the right-hand man of president Vladimir Putin for more than twenty years. The company is 70pc state-owned. "If Putin wants to cut, of course he can do it. Everybody knows that, " said one OPEC veteran.
Mr Dvorkovich hinted that output cuts could be on the way. "We are not going to cut supply artificially. Oil companies will act on their own. They will look at market forces and decide whether to invest more or less," he said.
"If prices stay low it is in the nature of oil companies to stabilise production, or even to cut production. The government will not decide on the behalf of oil companies what to do," he said.
Adnan Shihab-Eldin, the former secretary-general of OPEC, said the oil cartel is in "bad shape" and may have to rethink its current strategy. "Can OPEC really afford to the policy started in November of letting the market determine prices," said at the Ambrosetti forum.
Mr Shihab-Eldin said US shale drillers have proved remarkably resilient, slashing costs from $70 a barrel to nearer $50 through new technology and a switch to higher-yielding "sweet spots". The rig-count has halved but production has hardly fallen.
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He said OPEC will make a hard-headed decision over how best to extract maximum revenue, ditching its current policy if it does not pay. "Keeping market share at any price is not an ideology for OPEC," he said.
Russia is in deep crisis. The economy has contracted by 4.6pc over the last year. The rouble has halved against the dollar since mid-2014, falling pari passu with the price of Brent crude. While this provides a shock-absorber of sorts, it makes life much harder for Russian firms struggling to repay $12-15bn a quarter in external dollar debt.

These companies are largely shut out of global capital markets by Western sanctions, forcing them to rely heavily on the Russian state for dollar liquidity. Yet the central bank is trying to conserve its foreign reserves. The treasury itself failed to sell all its bonds at an auction last month.
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Russia's strategic embrace with China has so far failed to produce much beyond warm words. A $400bn gas deal signed in May 2014 has run into trouble as the Chinese haggle hard over prices and stall on $55bn of financing for the construction projects. Hopes for a second pipeline to China from West Siberia have come to little.
An informal 'super-OPEC' with Russia would control roughly 45pc of the global oil market, roughly equal to OPEC's glory days in the 1970s. Industry experts say the Saudis might consider a deal if Russia offered a gentleman's agreement to trim its 10.7m b\d output by 500,000.
Eventually, this may happen by default. The main Russian wells in Western Siberia are Soviet vintage and depleting at a rate of 8-11pc a year. Sanctions have paralyzed new investments in the Arctic and the Bazhenov shale basin.
Saudi Arabia is also in some trouble, and lacks Russia's industrial depth and strategic strengths. Riyadh's foreign reserves have fallen to $661bn from $737bn over the last eleven months.
The Saudis still have an ample cushion but are running a budget deficit of 20pc of GDP to cover their social welfare spending and military expansion. They must either drain reserves at a pace of $12bn a month, or issue debt.
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One foreign policy veteran said it is mystifying what the Saudis really intend to do under the new regime of King Salman. "They have gone from being the most predictable of countries, to the most unpredictable," he said.
The Russians and the Saudis have powerful reasons to co-operate on energy policies. Until now they have been on opposing sides in Syria, poisoning everything. This may be changing. King Salman has been invited to visit Moscow as the thaw in relations deepens.
Mr Putin is building up Russia's troop presence in Syria but he has also sent shockwaves through Damascus by backing some form of "power-sharing" in the country, a sign that Bashar al-Assad's days may be numbered.
The contours of a realpolitik entente between Saudi Arabia and Russia are emerging, with major implications for the global oil markets and the world economy.
Mr Dvorkovich said the Kremlin would stand behind its long-standing ally for now. "There are many people who still support Assad, We're not going to put anyone aside, accept the terrorists," he said.





 

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http://www.etftrends.com/2015/10/oil-etfs-surge-to-one-month-high-is-a-big-rally-ahead/


Fueling the rally in the energy space, a monthly U.S. energy report argues that global oil demand could jump by the most in six years in 2016 while non-OPEC supply stalls, which suggests that the oil supply glut could be easing more quickly than expected,Reuters reports.
“We have reduced the probability of a return to the $37-38 area per nearby WTI,” Jim Ritterbusch of oil consultancy Ritterbusch & Associates, told Reuters. “We will maintain a long standing view that price declines below this support level are virtually off of the table.”
Additionally, Russia’s energy minister revealed that the government and Suadi Arabi are in talks over the low environment, hinting at possible support.
“The market is possibly moving on speculation that OPEC and non-OPEC countries will find an agreement to cooperate,” Carsten Fritsch, senior oil analyst at Commerzbank, told Reuters.
A depreciating U.S. dollar was also adding to oil gains, along with bets that the U.S. rig count could dip again this week after last week’s unexpected 26 rig decline.
Neil Azous of Rareview Macro argues that a rally in energy stocks could be underway, pointing to stabilizing prices, a 40% drop in large-cap energy stocks and a 60% fall in small-cap energy, reports Stephanie Yang for CNBC.
“You have to go back a very far time in history to find any other sector that really came close to that,” Azous told CNBC.




can OIL break back into the 50's?............


:)
 

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EIA just throwing mud against the wall and hoping some of it sticks. They're never right on near-term predictions.

The move higher in the past few days is entirely based on the idea that more QE/ZIRP is coming. It was on it's way down to 40 before Bernanke had a book to promote and did a few interviews.
 

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she breaks through $50......:)


spectacular rise for XLE and especially the small caps; PSCE is up nearly 30% in a week.....





:)
 

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perhaps one of Mr.Putin's missiles could accidently hit a few oil wells...........:)
 

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DNR is up 50% in the last week. Certainly not for the faint at heart.

The story with Shell in the Artic is interesting. They spent 7 billion dollars on that project and finally discontinued it because oil is so cheap (and tons of production nightmares as well) State can not be happy about that at all. TAP pipeline been declining as well, that 2k a year to citizens is going to get a little lighter soon.
 

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Saudis may have to change direction......not going as planned?......:).

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/wi...il-prices-force-saudi-arabias-hand-2015-10-22


Will fiscal pain of low oil prices force Saudi Arabia’s hand



Saudi Arabia is feeling some significant fiscal pain as a result of a collapse in oil prices it helped to engineer. But that doesn’t mean the world’s most important oil producer is likely to change its tune.
Here’s a recent pair of headlines out of the desert kingdom:

  • An International Monetary Fund official told The Wall Street Journal that Saudi Arabia and fellow Middle Eastern oil exporters face a combined $1 trillion budget shortfall over the next five years if crude oil prices remain near present levels and economic reforms aren’t introduced soon.
  • Bloomberg earlier this week reported that Saudi Arabia delayed payments to government contractors as slumping oil prices pushed the country into deficit for the first time since 2009.
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IMF


Those developments have oil bulls salivating. They argue that Saudi Arabia and its fellow members of Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries overestimated the resiliency of U.S. shale producers when they embarked on a price war aimed at taking market share back from the U.S. and other non-OPEC producers.

The fundamentals surrounding oil “may be changing as the Saudis can’t afford this price war and [capex] cuts in energy keep coming,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at Price Futures Group, in a note. “Well over $200 billion of energy projects have been canceled leading to a historic point in energy. The cuts in cap that we see today will lead to tighter supplies and higher prices in the future.”
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Belfer Center


But will fiscal strains lead Saudi Arabia to cry uncle, or to pump even more oil?
The fiscal “break-even” price—the oil price at which the country can balance its budget—sits well above current levels for Saudi Arabia and many of its fellow Gulf producers. The Belfer Center at Harvard University puts Saudi Arabia’s 2015 break-even price at between $95 and $106 a barrel (see table above).
That’s based on the assumption that Saudi Arabia pumps an average of 9.7 million barrels a day in 2015. If the country pumps more, the break-even price falls. Indeed, with the cost of getting oil out of the ground in Saudi Arabia seen in the low $20s or less, there is incentive to keep pumping. And besides, the objective of the enterprise was to grab market share away from North American shale and other non-OPEC producers.
The question, however, is whether the drop in oil prices, which remain more than 50% below mid-2014 levels, has overtaken the ability of Saudi Arabia and other OPEC members to pump their way out of the fiscal hole.
Oil futures CLZ5, -0.15% closed at a three-week low Wednesday on a rise in U.S. oil supplies, as investors ignored a meeting of OPEC and other top oil producers in Vienna. See: Talk of reviving this OPEC oil price plan is blast from the past.
While the country is facing a fiscal squeeze, most analysts believe the country can continue to weather some rough sailing.
So far, there’s little sign the Saudis, who dominate OPEC, are ready to throw in the towel. And it does look like U.S. shale producers are finally beginning to tighten the spigots. On the other hand, questions about global demand could continue to limit the market’s ability to clear a glut even as non-OPEC production ebbs.
Don’t expect the Saudis to reverse course soon, but also remember that Riyadh likes to keep its cards close to its vest, said Gene McGillian, senior analyst at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Conn.
“We get another year down the road and these problems are exacerbated considerably it stands to reason they will look at these things again,” he said






any chance Putin balances a budget anytime soon?..........:)..........keep the vodka flowing......
 

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US to sell oil reserves? wow, a game changer; $100 oil is long gone


US govt clearly lookign for new revenue sources.....:)


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...sell-down-strategic-oil-reserve-to-raise-cash


U.S. Plans to Sell Down Strategic Oil Reserve to Raise Cash











The U.S. plans to sell millions of barrels of crude oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve from 2018 until 2025 under a budget deal reached on Monday night by the White House and top lawmakers from both parties.
The proposed sale, included in a bill posted on the White House website, equates to more than 8 percent of the 695 million barrels of reserves, held in four sites along the Gulf of Mexico coast. Sales are due to start in 2018 at an annual rate of 5 million barrels, rising to 10 million by 2023 and totaling 58 million barrels by the end of the period. The proceeds will be “deposited into the general fund of the Treasury,” according to the bill.
The sale is the second time the U.S. has raised cash from the reserve, created as a counter-balance to the power of Arab producers after the first oil crisis of 1973-74. The U.S. may sell also additional barrels to cover a $2 billion program from 2017 to 2020 to modernize the strategic reserve, including building new pipelines.

The White House on Tuesday urged lawmakers to support the budget deal, including the proposed partial sale of the SPR, saying it was “a responsible agreement that is paid for in a balanced way.”
 

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Italy Seeking Israeli-Egyptian-Italian Natural Gas Export Cooperation - Tal Shalev (i24news)
Representatives of the Italian energy company Eni are expected in Israel this week to discuss joining forces on gas exports to Europe.
Eni is developing Egypt's gas reserves in the newly discovered Zohr field, which is 30% larger than the Israeli Leviathan field.
Eni wants to explore the potential of "an east Mediterranean gas hub" which will receive gas from various countries and send it on to Europe, mainly Italy and Spain.
The company also seeks to be an outlet for Cyprus' Aphrodite field.
 

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[h=1]The collapse in the price of oil is a challenge to the old world order[/h]

[h=2]We’re awash with the black stuff – so we should celebrate the fact that the pessimists got it wrong.[/h]
It is one of life’s mysteries that being wrong about everything has never been much of a barrier to success. Take Thomas Malthus, the British theologian: his big idea was that the number of human beings would necessarily grow faster than the supply of food, leading to calamity. There was little difference, in his mind, between people and rabbits: both were doomed to over-breed, over-consume and starve.





Yet this theory, expounded in 1798 in An Essay on the Principle of Population, one of the most influential books ever written, and now also routinely applied to oil and other resources, is bogus. Unlike rabbits, who are powerless to control their environment, the more we need, the more we eventually find a way of producing: the availability of food and oil are determined by technology and economics, not by some law of nature. Modern techniques (such as fertilisers, genetic selection or fracking) mean that agriculture and the extraction of commodities have become hugely more efficient.



The average British field yielded just over three tons of cereal per hectare per year in 1961; today, it is twice that. Thanks to the spread of free markets and knowledge, the world has never produced so much food, and the number of hungry people worldwide has dropped by 216m since the early Nineties, according to the United Nations.



Ditto oil production: in 2000, the Energy Information Administrationestimated that the world contained just over one trillion barrels of untapped oil; since then, proved reserves have shot up by 60pc, increasing every single year despite booming consumption from energy-thirsty emerging markets.



Malthus wasn’t just far too pessimistic about supply: he was also wrong about demand. Rabbits can’t control their birthrates; we can. As more countries embrace markets and globalisation, thus ensuring that their economies develop, global birth rates keep on falling. As to energy consumption, it is just a matter of time before improved battery technology and ever-cheaper solar power finally lessen our dependence on the internal combustion engine and oil. We will eventually be able to feed and fuel the world’s population using significantly less land and fewer hydrocarbons than we do today.


Jesse H Ausubel, an academic at the Rockefeller University in New York, has calculated that an area the size of the Amazonian forest could be returned to wildlife when the average farmer around the world becomes as productive as their US counterparts. Ausubel calls this the Great Reversal: nature’s chance to restore land and sea to their original use. It is an intriguing and exhilarating prospect, made possible by the wonders of capitalism, innovation and human ingenuity.



The abject failure of Malthusianism was, in fact, one of the defining trends of 2015, especially in the oil market; it will continue to be one of the central forces of 2016, impacting everything from how quickly the Bank of England puts up interest rates, to the stability of the Middle East. The price of Brent crude oil, which briefly reached $147 a barrel in 2008, is now down to around $37. Some analysts even believe it could fall briefly to $20, especially if more Iranian supplies than expected hit the global markets.


There are many reasons for this historic collapse. Thanks to shale, America is poised to becosme a net oil exporter. Opec, the old cartel that wreaked so much havoc in the Seventies, is now all but defunct; its members no longer have the ability to push up oil prices. At the same time, the slowdown in China has reduced demand for energy.


The cost to oil-exporting countries from the lower prices is nearing $2 trillion a year. Drivers, by contrast, have saved a fortune, allowing them to spend the cash on other things and contributing to a strengthening in consumer spending across the Western economies.



Manufacturers’ costs have also slumped, facilitating investment and creating jobs. Europe, China and India have been the great winners. In Britain, lower petrol prices have helped eliminate consumer price inflation. Take-home pay has thus shot up after years of austerity. Cheap oil has also delayed – and delayed again – the prospect of a rate hike from the Bank of England, helping borrowers but hurting savers, some of whom had already lost out from their holdings in commodity and oil firms.


Perhaps the biggest impact will be geopolitical. In oil-exporting Venezuela, the public has booted out the Corbynite government whose demented Left-wing policies had led to a shortage of toilet paper. In Russia, the budget deficit is likely to reach alarming levels this year, forcing the country to dip into its reserves and putting pressure on President Putin, especially given his military commitments in Syria.


The Gulf states face the greatest challenge to their viability. Some, such as the UAE, a close ally of the West’s fight against terror, have such large cash reserves that they ought to be able to cope with low oil prices for decades. Others, including Iraq and Bahrain, will find it much tougher; Saudi Arabia has just been forced to pass an emergency budget. All will slash their purchases of Western assets and luxury goods, hitting the London economy.






The West will be hoping that the existing Gulf regimes aren’t replaced by something worse, while also hoping that the collapse in the price of oil will reduce flows of cash to extremist Wahhabi and Salafist groups around the world. If radical Islamist terror groups end up being the biggest losers, the collapse in the oil price could yet end up achieving more than sanctions or Western military intervention ever could; but a successful uprising in somewhere like Saudi could also risk turning a bad situation into a catastrophe.
As for Scotland, the nationalist electorate will eventually have to wake up to the new reality of a world awash with oil. The SNP’s plans for independence didn’t even come close to adding up even when the price of Brent crude was over $100 last year.


At current prices and with output sliding, an independent Scotland that sought to retain the NHS and the welfare state would face immediate bankruptcy.


Forget about politics and slick campaigns: if anything keeps the UK together over the next few years, it will be cheap oil and the latest, abject failure of Malthusianism, one of the most wrong-headed ideologies of the past 200 years.




 

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[h=1]No end to oil rout as Saudi Arabia plays tough[/h][h=2]Kingdom's oil chief says Saudis can withstand the price collapse, vowing to keep production at record levels[/h]

Saudi Arabia has vowed to continue flooding the global market with oil despite the collapse in Brent prices to a 12-year low, insisting that it will not cut output until Russia and other non-Opec countries agree to share the burden.

"We're not going to withdraw our production to make way for others," said Khalid Al-Falih, the president of the giant Saudi oil producer Aramco.

"If other producers are willing to collaborate, Saudi Arabia is willing to collaborate. But Saudi Arabia will not accept the role, by itself, of balancing a structural imbalance," he told the World Economic Forum in Davos


"We can take whatever the market serves us. If prices stay low, we will be able to withstand it for a long time. We have the lowest cost of production on the planet by a big margin, and Saudi Aramco has zero debt on its balance sheet," he said.


The tough words came as Brent crude hovered at the once unthinkable level of $28 a barrel, with a plethora of warnings that prices could fall even further as Iran elbows its way back into the market after the lifting of sanctions.
Fatih Birol, the head of the International Energy Agency, said the Iranians are likely to dump an extra 300,000 barrels a day (b/d) on an already saturated by the end of March, rising to 500,000 by the end of the year. "There will be further downward pressure on prices," he told The Telegraph.


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Khalid Al-Falih, chief executive officer of Saudi Arabian Oil




Yet Mr Birol said the collapse of investment is setting the stage for a powerful spike in prices later. "There was a 20pc fall in investment in upstream oil last year and that is the largest drop we ever seen in one year," he said.
"We expect a further 16pc fall next year. This is unprecedented: we have never seen two years in a row of falling investment. Don't be misled, anybody who thinks low oil prices are the 'new normal' is going to be surprised," he said.





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Brent crude prices fell to as low as $27.78 on Thursday morning

For now, all attention is on how far the price can fall. Aramco's Mr Al-Falih said the market has "overshot on the low side" and will prices will inevitably recover soon as the high-cost drillers are forced out of the market.
Ibe Kachikwu, Nigeria's oil minister and outgoing Opec president, said the cartel cannot sit back and let market forces "dictate" wild gyrations without storing up huge problems for the future. "Non-Opec and Opec members need to talk. We need to put more effort into talking to the Russians," he said.
Mr Kachikwu said there ought to be an emergency meeting of the cartel before the next scheduled gathering in June to sort out what Opec's purpose still is at this point.
"That conversation is going to take place soon. There are a lot of concerns about this," he said, speaking at a panel hosted by CNN in Davos.

One by one, the non-Opec states are quietly edging towards a deal with the Saudis.
"We're ready to do it. We need to co-ordinate large non-Opec producers and Opec ," said Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliyev. His country produces 800,000 b/d.
Mr Aliyev revealed that Azerbaijan has been preparing for a "post-oil era" within twenty years but was caught off guard by the sudden crash last year.
"Every day we think this is the bottom, and then we see lower prices. Frankly it is a little bit exhausting, from a psychological point of view, not to mention that countries need to balance their budgets," he said. Azerbaijan's currency collapsed by 30pc last month after its fixed peg broke.
Kirill Dmitriev, head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund, said it is still too early for a deal with Opec. "Agreement is possible, but at the right time," he said.
Mr Dmitriev said there are too many conflicting agendas at the moment. "Some players believe that in 15 to 20 years, there won't be much need for oil because of electric cars. 70pc of oil is consumed in transport, and 42pc of that is in cars," he said.
"I don't think renewables or pressures from climate change are going to significantly reduce the long-term demand for oil.
Khalid Al Falih, Aramco



He said others want to "punish" US shale, or aim to block the entry of newcomers. "When all this has played out in a year, it will be much easier to sit down and reach an agreement," he said.
Aramco's Mr Al-Falih brushed aside the threat from renewable energy and the COP21 deal to cut carbon emissions.
"I don't think renewables or pressures from climate change are going to significantly reduce the long-term demand for oil. If electric vehicles take over, where does the electricity come from?"
Mr Al-Falih said the current circumstances are entirely different from past episodes when the Saudis stepped in as the world's "reserve bank" for the oil markets, traditionally cutting output to smooth over short-term shocks such as the Lehman crisis. The problem of oversupply is now structural, he said.
An additional 4.5m barrels a day (b/d) of US shale and rising production in Brazil and other parts of the world change the global balance.
Mr Al-Falih said Saudi output - currently 10.3m b/d - would be down to zero by now if the country had continuously trimmed to make way for others.
Most experts agree that cheap oil is a net stimulus for the global economy and should lift growth, even if the initial shock for energy companies and oil exporters is so intense that it is negative at first.
The much greater danger is that global spare capacity has dropped to wafer-thin levels as Russia and Opec fight for market share, as projects are shelved across the world, and as old wells are depleted.
It is not the price collapse that worries the IEA: it is the prospect of a global shock when the Saudis have flushed out rivals and the market springs back violently.








 

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Is this the graveyard of the world's economy? As shares crash along with price of crude oil, the ranks of massive drilling rigs rusting in the Scottish estuary where they've been dumped since demand tumbled





  • Dramatic images show retired rigs parked off the coast of Aberdeen and Inverness as oil exploration numbers drop



  • The Cromarty Firth is currently packed with more unused rigs than it has been at any point in the last decade



  • Crude oil prices have collapsed of late - falling from more than $115 a barrel in summer 2014 to less than $30 now



  • Experts have warned the state of the global financial system is ‘worse than it was in 2007’, before the last crash


PUBLISHED: 16:54, 21 January 2016 | UPDATED: 00:34, 22 January 2016




These dramatic images show more than a dozen retired oil rigs parked off the coast of Scotland - hauled into the harbour as stock markets across the world crash and barrel prices tumble, forcing firms to cancel off-shore explorations




The Cromarty Firth, north of Inverness, is currently packed with more unused rigs than it has been at any point in the last decade.


Crude oil prices have collapsed of late - falling from more than $115 a barrel in summer 2014 to less than $28 now - which has had a crippling effect on jobs, housing and revenue in Aberdeen and wider Aberdeenshire.



Because of this - and a number of other worrying factors - more than £50billion was wiped off the value of Britain’s leading companies yesterday as fresh worries about the global economy set off panic on financial markets around the world.



The FTSE, which lost £52.4billion of its value yesterday, is down 9.1 per cent, or £146.7billion, so far this year. It has lost £369billion since its peak of 7104 in April 2015.


The losses in London were mirrored across Asia, Europe and the US, and came as oil prices crashed to a 12-year low.


William White, chairman of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s review committee, warned the state of the global financial system is ‘worse than it was in 2007’, before the last crash.





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Graveyard: These dramatic images show more than a dozen retired oil rigs parked off the coast of Scotland - hauled into the harbour as the continuing drop in barrel prices forces firms to cancel off-shore explorations

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Massive effect: Crude oil prices have collapsed of late - falling from more than $115 a barrel in summer 2014 to less than $30 now

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Out of service: The Cromarty Firth, north of Inverness, is currently packed with more unused rigs than it has been at any point in the last decade

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Money gone: That huge drop has seen most of the world's biggest production and exploration companies make swingeing cuts to their budgets, releasing thousands of staff and vastly reducing their off-shore efforts

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Nearing their end: From the Cromarty Firth - which acts as a gateway to the North Sea - two rigs have already been towed to be dismantled and scrapped in Turkey

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Lights out: Despite being one of the busiest oil hubs in Europe a mere year ago, the change on the Firth has been huge as oil prices have fallen




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Incoming: An helicopter approaches an oil rig supply vessel off the coast of Aberdeen. The city and surrounding region has been greatly affected by both the oil boom and bust

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Time is running out: A remote harbour near Inverness might seem an unlikely gauge for the oil price crash but the freezing waters of the Cromarty Firth have become a worrying barometer for energy veterans

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Queen of the sea: An oil rig supply vessel dwarves a smaller boat whilst docked in Aberdeen harbour, a gateway for offshore workers

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Wealthy waters: Aberdeen is the oil capital of the UK and is home to the majority of the oil companies in the UK. However, a collapse in prices has had a catastrophic effect

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Left behind: Rig operators park their structures off the coast when drilling contracts end and are either hot-stacked or cold-stacked

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Transport: Hot-stacked rigs keep a skeleton crew on board and cost a customer half the daily rate. There are six cold-stacked rigs in the firth, which have had the workforce removed and the power turned off

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Lying empty: Two oil rig supply vessels are seen docked in the harbour. The port itself, normally filled with cruise ships from spring to autumn, is considering a move into oil and gas decommissioning


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According to trade body Oil and Gas UK, industry contraction resulted in 65,000 job losses for offshore workers throughout Britain across 2014 and 2015.
The slashing of jobs has had catastrophic effects for Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire, known for decades as Europe's oil capital.
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Heading in: A Bond offshore helicopter arrives at the Aberdeen Heliport, carrying a crew of oil workers coming back to dry land

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Strapped in: Oil workers peer out the windowns after touching down in Aberdeen after being flown in from a CHC rig in the Forth

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Returning home: According to trade body Oil and Gas UK, industry contraction resulted in 65,000 job losses for offshore workers throughout Britain across 2014 and 2015

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Still at large: Despite many lying empty and without any jobs to do, oil supply vessels remain in the city's harbour, towering over passing cars

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Left behind: The Cromarty Firth has been used for the parking up of rigs since the start of the North Sea oil and gas industry. Some have been towed in for the winter while others are being refurbished

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Close to home: Old tiled roofs on the coast look out onto the firth from Aberdeen harbour, where many vessels are currently housed


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Modernising: Oil reserves are still flowing in the North Sea, but it has been estimated it is nearing or has even surpassed its peak production rate. As a result, Aberdeen is expected to have to redevelop itself as a research and development hub, rather than a base for offshore drilling

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Slowing down: The slashing of jobs has had catastrophic effects for Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire, known for decades as the British oil capital

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Dole: The northern regions were the only two in Scotland to experience a rise in the number of people claiming Job Seeker's Allowance in 2014/15 - a year-on-year increase of 1,000

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Collapse: House prices have also plummeted. The period July to September was down 13.5 per cent on the year, with the value of properties dropping by 16.6 per cent



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FROM BOOM TO BUST: A HISTORY OF THE NORTH SEA OIL AND GAS INDUSTRY

Long dismissed by many as a potential source of oil or gas, the North Sea has, over the last four decades, become the centre of one of the world's most productive energy industries.

The first discovery of British gas was in the West Sole field, off the coast of East Anglia, by the BP jack-up drilling rig Sea Gem, late in 1965.

However, the excitement was overshadowed almost immediately when, only days later, the Sea Gem capsized with the loss of thirteen lives. This was an early reminder of the danger of the North Sea as an environment to work in.
The British industry in the Southern North Sea grew rapidly in the early years. The deepening economic crisis in the UK meant that there was enormous pressure on the industry to get gas, and later, oil flowing. For the oil and gas producers, there were great profits to be made. British self-sufficiency in oil and gas, hitherto an impossible dream, was becoming a possibility.

Indeed, as exploration and investment moved further north, it became clear that there was oil to be found in great quantities. However, it was not until 1975 that a small entrepreneurial American company, Hamilton Brothers working in the Argyle field, brought the first British oil ashore, to followed very soon after by BP in the massive Forties field.

Discoveries of oil grew in number as more companies, British, European and American, took out leases on sectors of the North Sea. By the mid-1980s there were over one hundred installations. Through extraordinary technological innovation and human effort – and sacrifice – millions of barrels were being produced every day. An oil and gas bonanza had occurred.

While the early years of the industry were set in the political context of a Labour government, some of whose members wanted the maximum possible control of the new resource determined to have direct control of the new resource, it was the market-led Thatcher government that oversaw the growth years of the 1980s.

By the early 1980s Britain had become a net exporter of oil, and by the mid-1990s of gas.

Two of the key centres of the industry were Great Yarmouth/Lowestoft area, centre of operations for the Southern North Sea gas industry, and subsequently, Aberdeen, which came to be regarded as the oil capital of Europe.
Among other centres to have been central to the success of the industry have been the northern isles of Orkney and Shetland. The development of the Flotta and Sullom Voe terminals was critical to the success of the northern fields.

Concerns that safety was not a high enough priority in the race for oil and gas, was apparently confirmed by the Piper Alpha disaster of 1988. In this, the worst disaster in the North Sea, 167 men died.

The destruction of the largest and most prolific platform on the North Sea led to a major public enquiry under Lord Cullen and to a major review of safety procedures and standards.

During the 1990s, like the rest of the world, the North Sea was vulnerable to the fluctuation of world oil prices. Nevertheless production grew and peaked around 2001.

Today, reserves are still flowing, but it has been estimated that the North Sea is nearing or has even surpassed its peak production rate. As a result, Aberdeen is expected to have to redevelop itself as a research and development hub, rather than a base for offshore drilling, in order to remain home to the multi-national companies that drive its economy.



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