Libs show their capitalist streak
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Libs show their capitalist streak
ScoMo shows he is ready to seize a bargain as he looks to grab cheap oil. Greeny and Union puppet AnAl can only blubber gibberish about the Climate Change SCAM and Sports Rorts!!!!
Gas to fire economic recovery and capitalise on cheap oil prices
By Mike Foley April 21, 2020 — 3.51pm
Energy Minister Angus Taylor wants Australia to capitalise on depressed global oil and gas markets to deliver cheap energy for industry and boost the strategic oil reserve during the coronavirus crisis.
The price of crude oil has plummeted, driven down by a price war among producing nations and coronavirus restrictions. The spot price for liquefied natural gas contracts is tied to the oil price and the gas market, a major energy source for Australian industry and manufacturing, has also seen price falls.
Energy Minister Angus Taylor. CREDIT:AAP
East Coast wholesale gas sold for $4.30 a gigajoule on Tuesday, down from contract prices that ranged between $9 to $12 a gigajoule earlier this year.
Mr Taylor told The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age the government was looking to invest in gas projects to provide more cheap energy, and indicated he would also snap up cheap oil to boost Australia’s strategic reserves.
Read on about ScoMo's oil grab here
https://www.watoday.com.au/politics/fed ... 54lw8.html
Gas to fire economic recovery and capitalise on cheap oil prices
By Mike Foley April 21, 2020 — 3.51pm
Energy Minister Angus Taylor wants Australia to capitalise on depressed global oil and gas markets to deliver cheap energy for industry and boost the strategic oil reserve during the coronavirus crisis.
The price of crude oil has plummeted, driven down by a price war among producing nations and coronavirus restrictions. The spot price for liquefied natural gas contracts is tied to the oil price and the gas market, a major energy source for Australian industry and manufacturing, has also seen price falls.
Energy Minister Angus Taylor. CREDIT:AAP
East Coast wholesale gas sold for $4.30 a gigajoule on Tuesday, down from contract prices that ranged between $9 to $12 a gigajoule earlier this year.
Mr Taylor told The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age the government was looking to invest in gas projects to provide more cheap energy, and indicated he would also snap up cheap oil to boost Australia’s strategic reserves.
Read on about ScoMo's oil grab here
https://www.watoday.com.au/politics/fed ... 54lw8.html
- The4thEstate
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
But ... but ... but even if oil is a bargain right now, buying it would lead to the use of evil fossil fuel and the certain destruction of planet Earth within 12 years!!!
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
There is no storage for oil.
There is no demand and the same supply, hence a glut on the market
There is no demand and the same supply, hence a glut on the market
Right Wing is the Natural Progression.
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
What a load of Greeny silly impractical propaganda rubbish.
Have a look at the HUGE ENERGY REQUIREMENTS of large manufacturing and ship building and transport and mining and large construction on land and sea - these will use diesel for many many years as simple electric mouse power batteries are just a silly joke.
Diesel use will ONLY reduce when the ultimate HYDROGEN ENERGY comes on line as hydrogen CAN supply the huge energy required for these applications.
ScoMo is right on to secure cheap fuel to ensure Australia's energy security.
Reality kicks in with a 600HP or more diesel powered large truck moving probably 40 tonnes or more
.
Have a look at the HUGE ENERGY REQUIREMENTS of large manufacturing and ship building and transport and mining and large construction on land and sea - these will use diesel for many many years as simple electric mouse power batteries are just a silly joke.
Diesel use will ONLY reduce when the ultimate HYDROGEN ENERGY comes on line as hydrogen CAN supply the huge energy required for these applications.
ScoMo is right on to secure cheap fuel to ensure Australia's energy security.
Reality kicks in with a 600HP or more diesel powered large truck moving probably 40 tonnes or more
.
- Outlaw Yogi
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
Well the strategy wonks have been banging on about our non existent 90 day fuel reserve for years now, so now it's at give away prices they reckon they going to fix the situation for a song. They better build the storage facilities pronto, or the price will rebound before there's a squirt in the first tank.
If Donald Trump is so close to the Ruskis, why couldn't he get Vladimir Putin to put novichok in Xi Jjinping's lipstick?
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
Supply and Demand aware ScoMo snaps up an oily bargain.
The bit of fanciful guff in this article about being able to operate without oil is just childish Greeny gibberish.
What we can learn from the Morrison government’s $94 million crude oil purchase
Gareth Hutchens 10:00pm, Apr 26, 2020 Updated: 5:19pm, Apr 26
Oil prices fell below zero for the first time in history in the US. The global oil industry has a limited amount of storage capacity for the physical oil it produces, Gareth Hutchens explains. Photo: Getty
Here’s something for economics students.
Did you hear the Australian government bought $94 million of crude oil from the United States last week?
If you wanted an example of the difference between an energy stock and an energy flow, it’s a good case study.
It will come in handy the next time you’re learning about transport and energy systems.
Last week, Australia took advantage of record-low oil prices to buy a stockpile of crude oil from the US.
Crude oil is the raw material that’s turned into petrol, diesel, LPG and jet fuel.
Under international fuel security rules, countries are meant to have an emergency stockpile of 90 days’ worth of net-oil imports, but Australia has neglected to meet that threshold for years.
By the standard definition, Australia only had 56 days’ worth of reserves at the end of February, but it had 81 days’ worth when including oil en route to Australia.
The Morrison government’s purchase secured the equivalent of another four or five days of oil for Australia’s emergency reserves, getting us closer to the 90-day emergency threshold.
However, since crude oil is an energy stock, the oil will have to be physically stored somewhere.
Australia doesn’t have the capacity to store it, so it will have to stay in the US (with the storage space leased from the US government).
In an emergency, we’ll also have to wait a number of weeks for the oil to be shipped to Australia.
What’s a stock and what’s a flow?
It highlights the difference between an energy stock and a flow.
An energy stock is a good with a finite supply that can be shipped around and put in storage, but can only be used once and can’t be replenished (on a human time scale).
Fossil fuels are examples of energy stocks: Oil, coal, gas and uranium.
An energy flow, on the other hand, is a continuous, steady stream or supply of energy that doesn’t exhaust (it is constantly renewed), and can have an infinite supply.
Most renewable energy sources take the form of flows. Think of wind power and solar power.
Microgrids and neighbourhood power sharing
And since renewable energy flows can be produced almost anywhere, they can lend themselves to decentralised forms of energy production and consumption.
For example, a car powered by lithium-ion batteries, which can be recharged by a renewable energy source, doesn’t have to wait for crude oil to be shipped from another country to Australia before it can run.
Houses with rooftop solar and battery systems can produce a lot (if not all) of their own power, so they don’t have to depend so heavily on coal being dug from the ground somewhere, hauled to a power station, turned into energy, and sent their way.
And rechargeable battery technology means renewable energy flows can be turned into stocks (of a kind).
For instance, the West Australian government is trialling a number of “community batteries” for households with rooftop solar systems that can’t afford their own batteries.
The community batteries, built by Tesla, allow households – for less than $2 a day – to temporarily store the excess power produced by their rooftop solar systems so they can draw on it at night.
Current problem with oil industry
The crisis hitting the oil industry at the moment is a crisis of oversupply of energy stocks.
The global oil industry has a limited amount of storage capacity for the physical oil it produces.
When the world’s economies are functioning normally it’s not usually a problem, but since multiple economies have shut down and closed themselves off from the world to stop the coronavirus spreading, there has been an unprecedented drop in global demand for oil.
The good news is that petrol is cheap – like, 1990s cheap. Photo: Getty
The severe drop in demand has created a significant problem of excess supply.
Oil wells can’t simply be turned off and on again to meet wild swings in demand – it often makes economic sense to keep pumping oil from a well and sell the oil at a loss, or pay someone to take the oil off your hands, while you wait for normal market conditions to return.
That’s what we’re seeing at the moment.
The drop in demand has been so significant the global oil industry is struggling to cope with its growing stockpiles of unwanted oil and its limited storage capacity.
And that’s why prices have plummeted.
Since the value of a good is partly determined by demand for that good, the value of oil has eroded dramatically.
https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/2020 ... -purchase/
The bit of fanciful guff in this article about being able to operate without oil is just childish Greeny gibberish.
What we can learn from the Morrison government’s $94 million crude oil purchase
Gareth Hutchens 10:00pm, Apr 26, 2020 Updated: 5:19pm, Apr 26
Oil prices fell below zero for the first time in history in the US. The global oil industry has a limited amount of storage capacity for the physical oil it produces, Gareth Hutchens explains. Photo: Getty
Here’s something for economics students.
Did you hear the Australian government bought $94 million of crude oil from the United States last week?
If you wanted an example of the difference between an energy stock and an energy flow, it’s a good case study.
It will come in handy the next time you’re learning about transport and energy systems.
Last week, Australia took advantage of record-low oil prices to buy a stockpile of crude oil from the US.
Crude oil is the raw material that’s turned into petrol, diesel, LPG and jet fuel.
Under international fuel security rules, countries are meant to have an emergency stockpile of 90 days’ worth of net-oil imports, but Australia has neglected to meet that threshold for years.
By the standard definition, Australia only had 56 days’ worth of reserves at the end of February, but it had 81 days’ worth when including oil en route to Australia.
The Morrison government’s purchase secured the equivalent of another four or five days of oil for Australia’s emergency reserves, getting us closer to the 90-day emergency threshold.
However, since crude oil is an energy stock, the oil will have to be physically stored somewhere.
Australia doesn’t have the capacity to store it, so it will have to stay in the US (with the storage space leased from the US government).
In an emergency, we’ll also have to wait a number of weeks for the oil to be shipped to Australia.
What’s a stock and what’s a flow?
It highlights the difference between an energy stock and a flow.
An energy stock is a good with a finite supply that can be shipped around and put in storage, but can only be used once and can’t be replenished (on a human time scale).
Fossil fuels are examples of energy stocks: Oil, coal, gas and uranium.
An energy flow, on the other hand, is a continuous, steady stream or supply of energy that doesn’t exhaust (it is constantly renewed), and can have an infinite supply.
Most renewable energy sources take the form of flows. Think of wind power and solar power.
Microgrids and neighbourhood power sharing
And since renewable energy flows can be produced almost anywhere, they can lend themselves to decentralised forms of energy production and consumption.
For example, a car powered by lithium-ion batteries, which can be recharged by a renewable energy source, doesn’t have to wait for crude oil to be shipped from another country to Australia before it can run.
Houses with rooftop solar and battery systems can produce a lot (if not all) of their own power, so they don’t have to depend so heavily on coal being dug from the ground somewhere, hauled to a power station, turned into energy, and sent their way.
And rechargeable battery technology means renewable energy flows can be turned into stocks (of a kind).
For instance, the West Australian government is trialling a number of “community batteries” for households with rooftop solar systems that can’t afford their own batteries.
The community batteries, built by Tesla, allow households – for less than $2 a day – to temporarily store the excess power produced by their rooftop solar systems so they can draw on it at night.
Current problem with oil industry
The crisis hitting the oil industry at the moment is a crisis of oversupply of energy stocks.
The global oil industry has a limited amount of storage capacity for the physical oil it produces.
When the world’s economies are functioning normally it’s not usually a problem, but since multiple economies have shut down and closed themselves off from the world to stop the coronavirus spreading, there has been an unprecedented drop in global demand for oil.
The good news is that petrol is cheap – like, 1990s cheap. Photo: Getty
The severe drop in demand has created a significant problem of excess supply.
Oil wells can’t simply be turned off and on again to meet wild swings in demand – it often makes economic sense to keep pumping oil from a well and sell the oil at a loss, or pay someone to take the oil off your hands, while you wait for normal market conditions to return.
That’s what we’re seeing at the moment.
The drop in demand has been so significant the global oil industry is struggling to cope with its growing stockpiles of unwanted oil and its limited storage capacity.
And that’s why prices have plummeted.
Since the value of a good is partly determined by demand for that good, the value of oil has eroded dramatically.
https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/2020 ... -purchase/
- Valkie
- Posts: 2662
- Joined: Sun Jul 29, 2018 4:07 pm
Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
It is for this reason I have been promoting the idea of targeted strikes on fuel distributors.
Every month review the median price of the fuel distributors.
The one with the highest price is bypassed by everyone for a month.
Do it often enough And they will Truely be competing to be the lowest price.
If, and we all know they will, the collude and keep the same median price.
Randomly select a distributor and ban them for 3 months.
It will send them to the wall.
We pay far too much for fuel, and everything else.
It's time to take matters into our own hands.
Every month review the median price of the fuel distributors.
The one with the highest price is bypassed by everyone for a month.
Do it often enough And they will Truely be competing to be the lowest price.
If, and we all know they will, the collude and keep the same median price.
Randomly select a distributor and ban them for 3 months.
It will send them to the wall.
We pay far too much for fuel, and everything else.
It's time to take matters into our own hands.
I have a dream
A world free from the plague of Islam
A world that has never known the horrors of the cult of death.
My hope is that in time, Islam will be nothing but a bad dream
A world free from the plague of Islam
A world that has never known the horrors of the cult of death.
My hope is that in time, Islam will be nothing but a bad dream
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Re: Libs show their capitalist streak
Is it really so simple ?
How petrol prices are determined.
https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/petro ... uel-prices
https://www.aip.com.au/sites/default/fi ... tralia.pdf
https://www.goget.com.au/blog/why-the-c ... luctuates/
How petrol prices are determined.
https://www.accc.gov.au/consumers/petro ... uel-prices
https://www.aip.com.au/sites/default/fi ... tralia.pdf
https://www.goget.com.au/blog/why-the-c ... luctuates/
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