Leave it to the government. It’s proposing a “tax and cap” regime for energy producers which will require fossil-fuel generating plants to pay extra. The idea is to encourage clean fuels and discourage dirty ones. That’s fine in theory. But instead of helping our future energy situation, it’s going to make it a lot worse.
The price of oil has already doubled in the past six months to over $60 per barrel. But it’s just the beginning of oil’s next gigantic price surge. If you thought that oil was ridiculously expensive last summer, you haven’t seen anything yet.
It doesn’t matter whether you believe in “Peak Oil” because this isn’t about Peak Oil coming to fruition. Peak Oil believes that oil discoveries have peaked leading to oil production’s inevitable decline.
This crisis will be strictly man-made. Governments and oil companies have already planted the seeds of the next great energy crisis. And there’s nothing anybody can do to prevent those seeds from sprouting.
The U.S. government got its religion late. But it’s now following the lead of European governments in limiting the use of fossil fuels through taxes and restrictive regulations.
That’s bad enough in itself. But then there’s the roller-coaster ride which oil prices have taken. The price of oil fell more than $100 from over $140 to under $40 (before going back up again). Oil companies everywhere had the same response. They all cut back on oil spending and production…
• OPEC has cut back production by 2.2 billion barrels a day.
• UAE has put off plans to expand oil production by 1 million barrels a day.
• Saudi Arabia has delayed two $10-$20 billion refining projects (and may cancel them altogether).
• Russia’s biggest oil company, Gazprom, has slashed production spending by 24 percent.
• Venezuela, Nigeria, Malaysia and other national oil companies have cut back on their capital spending.
• Statoil, EnCana, Petro-Canada, Suncor, Imperial Oil, and Royal Dutch Shell have all delayed or cancelled major projects in Canada’s vast but expensive-to-produce oil sands.
How bad are these cutbacks? Just ask the widely respected oil consulting agency, the International Energy Agency. It recently warned of a “second capacity crunch” causing widespread underinvestment in the oil industry.
Oil’s recent price rise could have loosened up oil producers’ purse strings. But oil companies are facing increasing disincentives from a government trying to replace fossil fuels with renewables.
If you want to know how the CEOs of Big Oil feel about the Obama administration’s energy policy, just ask Jim Mulva, head of ConocoPhillips.
This global oil company has operations in more than 30 countries. Mulva said last week that government intervention in the energy market “has an impact on the willingness of companies to pour billions into the development of new projects.”
In the meantime, the Obama administration is spending hundreds of millions of dollars on renewables, like the $467 million to encourage the development of geothermal and solar energy.|
The result? Geothermal and solar energy will have slightly bigger pieces of the energy pie. But oil priced at over $150 per barrel will kill the U.S. and global economic recovery in its infancy.
The cost of plastics and resins will go way up. Gas prices will surge over $5/ gallon. New highs in jet fuel will crash several airline companies. Actually, practically everything will cost more. I don’t think that’s what these governments have in mind.
And even with ample government support you shouldn’t invest in geothermal or solar companies. They will still depend on government subsidies to compete with the price of electricity generated by – take a guess – fossil fuels.
Instead you should invest in oil producers but not just any oil producer. Thanks to vast underinvestment and government policies, the price of oil will sky rocket. The only thing keeping the price of oil from going higher right now is that we’re still in the middle of the worst recession in seven decades.
But once demand returns, watch out.
Total’s CEO Christophe de Margerie says that a rise in demand while supply is constrained will unleash oil prices again.
And Mitsubishi warns that spare capacity will quickly disappear when oil demand picks back up.
But, as I said, most oil companies have cut back production and spending. That’s going to prevent them from getting windfall profits from soaring oil prices.
But four of the world’s major oil companies haven’t cut back on spending. Three of them are Exxon Mobil, Chevron and Thailand’s PTT Exploration & Production. But by far the best oil investment you could make is in a fourth big oil company.
Last year it spent 34 percent more on drilling for oil. And this year it’s spending 19 percent more. While the other oil majors are cutting back on spending and facing stagnant output, this company plans on raising production by 7-11 percent a year. I’m predicting its shares will go up at least 80 percent over the next three years, and the gains could be much bigger than that.
I’m sorry but I can’t give you the name of the company because it’s my latest recommendation to readers of my INCOME service. They deserve first crack at this company, especially since its price is so cheap at the moment. But if you’re interested in this company, just click here for more information, including how to sign up in order to get this company as your first recommendation.
Invest well,
Andrew












OPEC has not cut production by 2.2 billion bpd. You don’t even proof read your own sales copy and all you care about is selling your investment service.
Where is demand coming from when airlines go out of business? Where will demand be when gas is $5 dollars per gallon? Oil’s very surge will in itself kill demand because it has no grounding in market practices. Where is this recovery we all speak of coming from? Can we just stop and breath for one second. This entire piece assumes economic recovery while simultaneously painting the backdrop of renewed recession. That’s not logical. Why would someone invest, assuming higher demand, when the very $150 oil they hope for would cause demand to decline.
Cap and trade is a whole other demon in itself. The reality is, it has nothing to do with climate change. This has always been about re-distribution of wealth. Yes there will be subsidies that fuel alternative energies but they pale in comparison to the real energy subsidies paid by China, India and most oil producing nations. For one day float real market energy prices in the third world and we’ll see where demand finds itself.
Cap and trade with re-distribution at its heart will cause major depressionary forces in the west and social unrest. Behind all of this is a socialist wave that has been thirty years in brewing in the United States.
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