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2004-11-22 Arabia
US Dependence on Saudi Oil: Political Rhetoric and Hard Facts
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Posted by tipper 2004-11-22 10:13:39 AM|| || Front Page|| [11 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 I have some ideas on the reassessment / redefinition of the American - Saudi "relationship", rather permanent and definitely advantageous - to one party, at least. There's this strip of land that lies on coast of the the Persian Gulf running from Kuwait to the Arabian Sea...
Posted by .com 2004-11-22 10:26:07 AM||   2004-11-22 10:26:07 AM|| Front Page Top

#2 the inside of the earth is heated temperature-wise by the hot magma and pressure. It is not radioactive. We are not living on the sun where the heat energy comes from splitting atoms.
Posted by Anon1 2004-11-22 10:33:46 AM||   2004-11-22 10:33:46 AM|| Front Page Top

#3 Now, .com, you know that we're not supposed to talk about that while Aris and Murat and Gentle and Mike S. may be listening! You're going to ruin our whole Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy! [pssst - the coordinates are programmed]
Posted by Tom 2004-11-22 10:36:44 AM||   2004-11-22 10:36:44 AM|| Front Page Top

#4 Anon1 - Well... See the "Interior" section...
Posted by .com 2004-11-22 10:43:37 AM||   2004-11-22 10:43:37 AM|| Front Page Top

#5 One factor that must be part of any oil debate is the difference between countries that produce the highly desireable "light, sweet" crude, and those that produce "heavy, sour" crude. The oil that everybody wants, and the market price you always hear about, is the LS market. "Light" means that it has a high percentage of component that can be refined into gasoline and fuel oil. "Sweet" means that it is low-sulfur, and easy to refine. The Middle East is full of "heavy, sour" oil, that is worth half as much as "light, sweet", *and* there aren't that many refineries that are designed to use it. This is why disruptions in the otherwise marginal production from countries like Nigeria and Venezuela have such a strong impact on the LS market, *and* why so much of the "oil production curve" argument is hooey.
Posted by Anonymoose 2004-11-22 11:12:30 AM||   2004-11-22 11:12:30 AM|| Front Page Top

#6 And why Russia's vast reserves are not of great consequence to anyone. Their oil is heavy/sour and many of their reserves are extraordinarily difficult to extract. Also, their infrastructure is antiquated.

The obvious solution to our dilemma is nuclear power-- the sooner the better.
Posted by lex 2004-11-22 11:20:36 AM||   2004-11-22 11:20:36 AM|| Front Page Top

#7 â€œthe inside of the earth is heated temperature-wise by the hot magma and pressure. It is not radioactive. We are not living on the sun where the heat energy comes from splitting atoms.”

Lord Kelvin used thermodynamics to calculate the cooling rate of the earth. By his calculations the interior of the earth should have cooled eons ago. The discrepancy between Lord Kelvin’s calculations and the measured temperatures remained a mystery until the discovery of radioactive elements. The natural decay of radioactive elements is now believed to be the energy source driving the core temperatures. (Note fission of elements such as Uranium, not fusion as occurs in the sun.)
Posted by Anonymous5032 2004-11-22 1:00:15 PM||   2004-11-22 1:00:15 PM|| Front Page Top

#8 not fusion ?
Posted by Shipman 2004-11-22 1:28:40 PM||   2004-11-22 1:28:40 PM|| Front Page Top

#9 never mind, I cant seem read.
Posted by Shipman 2004-11-22 1:29:50 PM||   2004-11-22 1:29:50 PM|| Front Page Top

#10 Could be some gravitational stress heating from the tides of such a large (relatively) moon, too.
Posted by mojo  2004-11-22 2:04:38 PM||   2004-11-22 2:04:38 PM|| Front Page Top

#11 I was always under the impression that Saudi Arabia had vast pools of LC just sitting under the surface waiting to be tapped.
Posted by gromky 2004-11-22 2:19:56 PM||   2004-11-22 2:19:56 PM|| Front Page Top

#12 Anonymoose 2004,

You have it backwards. Venezuelan oil is, in his majority, less desirable than ME oil. That is why the former is sold for less.
Posted by Anonymous4724 2004-11-22 2:52:21 PM||   2004-11-22 2:52:21 PM|| Front Page Top

#13 Kerry was right re dependence on ME oil and whether the USA imports 2.5M or zero Barrels from the ME is an irrelevant objection becuase for all practical purposes there is a single market and the actual source of a particular barrel is immaterial.

And Saudi Arabia and OPEC are no longer calling the shots for the price of oil. This is nonsense and likely the statement of SA funded lobbyist.

Otherwise, part of the reason the price of oil is so volatile becuase demand is more variable than supply. The USA has only to reduce its oil demand by a few percentage points to bring the price down sharply (say half a dozen nuclear power stations and assuming demand from the rest of the world remains static).
Posted by phil_b 2004-11-22 4:00:43 PM||   2004-11-22 4:00:43 PM|| Front Page Top

#14 Article: According to Hassan Al Husseini, a Saudi oil consultant, 25percent of the world’s oil is in Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia extracts about 12 percent of the world’s daily oil usage.

Let's see - they have 25% of the world's reserves, and are supplying 12% of the world's daily usage. And supplying oil is not messy as with tar sands - for the Saudis, it's simply a matter of turning on the spigot and the oil just flows into tankers. And this article is saying the Saudis don't control the price of oil? He must assume we're stupid.
Posted by Zhang Fei  2004-11-22 7:50:34 PM|| [http://timurileng.blogspot.com]  2004-11-22 7:50:34 PM|| Front Page Top

#15 Actually Saudi Arabia can no longer "control" the price in both ways. They are pretty much pumping at their utmost capacity. They can only drive up prices by cutting production, not bring it down by extracting more.
I firmly believe that Saudi Arabia's extractable reserves are less than commonly believed. This is the biggest "dirty secret" the Saudis have.
The only way to keep prices in control over the next decade is drastically cutting demand or we're in for oil prices at $120 a barrel and more.
Posted by True German Ally 2004-11-22 8:14:43 PM||   2004-11-22 8:14:43 PM|| Front Page Top

00:06 josephmendiola
00:05 Floting Granter5198
23:59 Mike Sylwester
23:52 mojo
23:50 .com
23:48 3dc
23:42 mojo
23:32 lex
23:29 Mike Sylwester
23:22 Mike Sylwester
23:22 someone
23:21 someone
23:11 PBMcL
23:02 Frank G
23:00 Alaska Paul
22:57 Wo
22:56 Poison Reverse
22:53 Poison Reverse
22:41 Dishman
22:37 Frank G
22:36 Frank G
22:35 JosephMendiola
22:31 Darth VAda
22:31 Alaska Paul









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