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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Iraqi State Company to Repair Oil Wells. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Iraqi State Company to Repair Oil Wells
by Mike the Usurper at 9:08 pm EDT, Aug 28, 2005

That means the reassigned project could take months longer at a time when delays already come at a high price. With the price of oil topping $60 a barrel, the Iraqi government is losing hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue from the dilapidated wells.

I disagree. Assuming the project EVER starts shipping oil again, it may be just in time to start sending it out at... $120 a barrel? More?


 
RE: Iraqi State Company to Repair Oil Wells
by flynn23 at 10:24 am EDT, Aug 29, 2005

Mike the Usurper wrote:

That means the reassigned project could take months longer at a time when delays already come at a high price. With the price of oil topping $60 a barrel, the Iraqi government is losing hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue from the dilapidated wells.

I disagree. Assuming the project EVER starts shipping oil again, it may be just in time to start sending it out at... $120 a barrel? More?

Not likely. With that amount of production coming into supply, demand would probably not advance enough to justify a 2x price increase. Even if the delay caused the price to creep up to that level, the fact that you'd have more supply coming online (sizable!) would deflate the price a little. Unless of course, this is all being controlled by one master cartel who will stop at nothing to disrupt the world's economic system by driving the price of fossil fuel into a stratospheric range that no country could afford. =\


  
RE: Iraqi State Company to Repair Oil Wells
by Mike the Usurper at 8:53 pm EDT, Aug 29, 2005

flynn23 wrote:

Mike the Usurper wrote:

That means the reassigned project could take months longer at a time when delays already come at a high price. With the price of oil topping $60 a barrel, the Iraqi government is losing hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue from the dilapidated wells.

I disagree. Assuming the project EVER starts shipping oil again, it may be just in time to start sending it out at... $120 a barrel? More?

Not likely. With that amount of production coming into supply, demand would probably not advance enough to justify a 2x price increase. Even if the delay caused the price to creep up to that level, the fact that you'd have more supply coming online (sizable!) would deflate the price a little. Unless of course, this is all being controlled by one master cartel who will stop at nothing to disrupt the world's economic system by driving the price of fossil fuel into a stratospheric range that no country could afford. =\

One word. China.


   
RE: Iraqi State Company to Repair Oil Wells
by flynn23 at 11:05 am EDT, Aug 30, 2005

Mike the Usurper wrote:

flynn23 wrote:

Mike the Usurper wrote:

That means the reassigned project could take months longer at a time when delays already come at a high price. With the price of oil topping $60 a barrel, the Iraqi government is losing hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue from the dilapidated wells.

I disagree. Assuming the project EVER starts shipping oil again, it may be just in time to start sending it out at... $120 a barrel? More?

Not likely. With that amount of production coming into supply, demand would probably not advance enough to justify a 2x price increase. Even if the delay caused the price to creep up to that level, the fact that you'd have more supply coming online (sizable!) would deflate the price a little. Unless of course, this is all being controlled by one master cartel who will stop at nothing to disrupt the world's economic system by driving the price of fossil fuel into a stratospheric range that no country could afford. =\

One word. China.

Perhaps, but I honestly believe that Chinese growth rates are not accurate. There's been many cases where the Chinese procure mass quantities of things just to let them sit around. It gives them a powerful position in negotiations. Plus they have massive oil reserves and oil fields of their own.


 
 
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