Posts Tagged ‘Natural Gas’

Natural Gas Price Fall May Be Limited, ’Bullish’ Bernstein Says

Natural gas prices may be supported by delays to new natural gas supplies and a possible slowdown in U.S. onshore output, Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. said.

Days’ Supply of Oil: Calculating Global Inventories

We easily have enough peanut-butter to last the Summer.” Problem: enrollment has risen from 1000 campers to 1400 campers, over that ten year period.

OPEC Achieves Cuts in Output, Halting Price Slide

After months of gradually closing the oil spigot, members of the OPEC cartel have managed to stop the slide in oil prices — at least for now.

The Patch: Peak supply vs. peak demand

The market’s obsession with plummeting oil demand has been so pervasive in the past six months it even fostered a new theory — peak demand.

Oil drying up as world remains unaware

For more than a century it has been cheaper than coffee and as constant as ocean waves.

New Cartel Announces the End of Cheap Gas

We are familiar with OPEC and the effects they have had on the price of oil over the years. The OPEC nations meet on a regular basis to decide how much oil they will allow the rest of the world to have from their stores. They set quotas and limits on production in an attempt, they say, to keep the price steady at a level that is good for both consumers and the producers. We’ve seen how that works.

Putin: no more cheap gas

ussia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that the world financial crisis and rising costs mean the price of natural gas is going to rise.

Officials say Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) imports to rise, but with risks

The surge in US gas production will be short-lived and won’t preclude the need for increased liquefied natural gas imports in the coming years, energy project developers and economists agreed December 4 in New Orleans.

Drilling Boom Revives Hopes for Natural Gas

American natural gas production is rising at a clip not seen in half a century, pushing down prices of the fuel and reversing conventional wisdom that domestic gas fields were in irreversible decline.