Another New Oil High: $117.40 A Barrel

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ADAM SCHRECK | April 21, 2008 10:10 PM EST | AP

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The price board of a Chevron gas station is shown in San Francisco, Monday, April 21, 2008. Rising gasoline prices tightened the squeeze on drivers Monday, jumping to an average $3.50 a gallon at filling stations across the country. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

NEW YORK — Rising gasoline prices tightened the squeeze on drivers Monday, jumping for the first time to an average $3.50 a gallon at filling stations across the country with no sign of relief.

Crude oil set a record for the sixth day in a row _ this time closing above $117 a barrel _ after an attack on a Japanese oil tanker in the Middle East rattled investors.

"It's killing us," said Jean Beuns, a New York cab driver who estimated he now makes $125 to $150 less per month than in the fall because of costlier gas. "And it was so quick. Every day you see the price go up 5, 6, 10 cents more."

Diesel prices at the pump also struck a record high of $4.20 a gallon, according to AAA and the Oil Price Information Service. That's sure to add to truckers' costs and drive up the price of food, clothing and other goods shipped by truck.

"You and I are going to pay more," said Bob Costello, chief economist of American Trucking Associations. "Exactly how much ... I can't tell you, but it's got to show up."

Gasoline and diesel prices are expected to keep climbing as they trace the path of crude. Oil prices are charging ahead along with a host of commodities that are enticing speculators seeking hedges against a weakening dollar.

Light, sweet crude for May delivery rose to a record $117.76 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange before settling at $117.48, up 79 cents from Friday's close.

Gas jumped more than a nickel over the weekend and is up 23 percent from a year ago. Drivers in New Jersey are paying the least, while drivers in California pay the most, $3.86 a gallon for regular unleaded.

The Energy Department predicted earlier this month that monthly average gasoline price will peak at more than $3.60 per gallon in June and could even reach $4.

"It's uncharted territory," said Tom Kloza of the Oil Price Information Service, Wall, N.J. "I don't think we're done, but I have to believe we're in the eighth or ninth inning" of price increases.

The higher prices are already prompting some drivers to cut back. In New York, Elvis Ragbir and Anthony Winckler said they are driving less and taking the subway more.

"I'm spending my gas money on MetroCards," Winckler said in the waiting room of a vehicle inspection station in Manhattan. Ragbir, a delivery truck driver, said he is looking to trade in his Lexus LS 400 for a smaller car.

In downtown Chicago, Sharon Cooper spent $52 to fill up three-quarters of the tank in her Toyota Highlander SUV. She said she tries not to let the prices get to her, although she too is changing her habits and buying a bike to commute to work.

Energy Department data show Americans used about 1 percent less gas in the four weeks ended April 11 than they did a year earlier.

That change, while not drastic, is significant, Mariano Gurfinkel, project manager at the Center for Energy Economics at the University of Texas at Austin, who expects per-capita demand to drop further this summer unless gas prices fall.

Americans will continue to drive, but some may change their summer vacation destinations as gasoline costs continue to make a bigger dent in their pocketbooks, Gurfinkel said.

Crude oil rose Monday after the 150,000-ton tanker Takayama was struck off the coast of Yemen as it headed for Saudi Arabia, its Japanese operator, Nippon Yusen K.K., said.

Kyodo News agency reported that the Japanese tanker was fired on by a rocket launcher from a small boat. None of the ship's 23 crew members was injured, but several hundreds of gallons of fuel leaked before a 1-inch hole in the tanker's stern was repaired, the company said.

Meanwhile, militants in Nigeria renewed their attacks on oil facilities in the south of the African nation. Nigeria is a major supplier to the U.S., and attacks in the past two years have cut nearly a quareter of the country's oil output.

"There's clearly some geopolitical tension in the market," said Mark Pervan, senior commodity strategist at the ANZ Bank in Melbourne, Australia. "This will die down, but the market is pretty jittery at the moment."

An OPEC official also said over the weekend that the group was not likely to increase production. The official said oil prices would likely rise and said OPEC might boost production if the price pressure was because of a supply shortage, something he doubted.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil futures rose 1.9 cents to settle at $3.3114 a gallon while gasoline futures fell about a penny to settle at $2.9791 a gallon. Natural gas futures jumped 14.6 cents to settle at $10.733 per 1,000 cubic feet.

___

Associated Press Writers Dave Carpenter in Chicago, Dan Caterinicchia in Washington, Pablo Gorondi in Budapest and Thomas Hogue in Bangkok, Thailand, contributed to this report.

 
 

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- Stevelagain See Profile I'm a Fan of Stevelagain permalink

They are talking about raising the margin limits on oil traders in order to kill some of the speculation.

I suspect that approach might backfire.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:01 PM on 04/21/2008
- mmckinl See Profile I'm a Fan of mmckinl permalink

Oil ... we depend on it yet we do not even know what our suppliers have. The Arab members of OPEC won't even let us do an oil audit to see if their claims of reserves are true !

Now the Saudis say they will cap production ... Are they capping to save their resources or because they are in peak production?

Get ready for a rude awakening my friends ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 04/21/2008
- chicago25624 See Profile I'm a Fan of chicago25624 permalink

Just imagine how many millions or billions of dollars would have stayed here in the U.S. if only we had drilled in ANWR? But as Billary stated in 1994, it would take us 10 years to see the first drop. Hmmm 1994 plus 10 years wow, we would be swimming in oil and profits would have stayed right here.

And we have and have had the technology to drill for a long time, safely.

You liberals scream about independence, but do nothing but block the US from getting her own oil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 04/21/2008
- kevinabt See Profile I'm a Fan of kevinabt permalink

It is very wise to not use up all our local petroleum right now while prices are relatively low and there are no shortages. Best to save that oil for when it will be really useful, like when Venezuela and/or Saudi Arabia stop selling to us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 04/21/2008
- sixthskinjob See Profile I'm a Fan of sixthskinjob permalink

Or better yet, pump their (OPEC) wells dry. Just imagine the mark-up the US could unleash upon the new oil junkies...err, I mean "developing economies".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:52 PM on 04/21/2008
- Gilda See Profile I'm a Fan of Gilda permalink

Those closed door energy meetings with Dick Cheney have paid in dividends!
God Bless America and don't forget your flag pins!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 04/21/2008
- Mike169 See Profile I'm a Fan of Mike169 permalink

I love when the trolls come to this site and say that they thank god that liberals don't run the economy. How could they be worse than this crew that is robbing the country blind now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 04/21/2008
- BPCentrisAmerican See Profile I'm a Fan of BPCentrisAmerican permalink

Has anyone seen the film "There Will by Blood? Daniel Day-Lewis plays the roll of uncompromising oilman who pretends to be a quail hunting while exploring land in Texas during the early 1900s. When his son asked him why he is telling the town he wants to buy the land for quail hunting, his ansure is "why should I pay oil prices for land when I can pay quail prices". He is so ballistic that he murders anyone who he thinks crosses him when it would be simpler to keep end of the bargain or forgive them, which becomes his undoing. I think that makes my point.

This is exactly why the Bush Admistarion tried an Iranian style over though of Hugo Chavez. Chavez was planning on nationalizing his oil supply, which dose not mean the oil companies are not allowed to drill their, it just means they take less profit. Since we import 16% our oil from Venezuela it seems to me that screwing around with there internal politics is really flawed thinking. This is also why the US is staying in Iraq even when we have clearly worn out welcome. Iraq pumped 46 billion dollars worth of crude in 07, yet the US is spending 12 billion a month and thousands of lives to stay there. If Republicans believe the US is going to spend 3 trillion dollars and hundreds of thousand of lives in Iraq to bring them democracy, than their stupider than I thought.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 04/21/2008
- BOBONDE See Profile I'm a Fan of BOBONDE permalink

WE WOULD NOT HAVE PRICES LIKE THIS IF BUSH AND HIS MINIONS IN THE GOP HADN'T GONE INTO IRAQ, I HOPE THE HIGHEST GAS PRICES HIT THE RED STATES FIRST, TIME FOR CHANGE!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 04/21/2008
- OneVoiceInACrowd See Profile I'm a Fan of OneVoiceInACrowd permalink

We would've still had to deal with high prices due to new demand from china and india, but, not as high, like you say.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 04/21/2008
- JonasH See Profile I'm a Fan of JonasH permalink

Speaking as a european, I'd like to point out oil prices are not too high as long as the squealing of americans can't be heard from the other side of the atlantic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 04/21/2008
- ProfGoose See Profile I'm a Fan of ProfGoose permalink

I hope that you will all check out The Oil Drum today, as there's a great feature called "OilWatch Monthly" which details oil production and supply numbers from around the world.

http://theoildrum.com

Basically, many of the world's largest suppliers are at or past peak. We all need to learn a lot more about this...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 04/21/2008
- JacobSinger See Profile I'm a Fan of JacobSinger permalink

The Oil Drum is an oil industry shil site. Nice try, but we're not buying your bullshit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:51 PM on 04/21/2008
- mmckinl See Profile I'm a Fan of mmckinl permalink

Paul Krugman reads it ... He has mentioned it several times in his blog recently.

Get ready for peak oil my friend.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 04/21/2008
- Rule Of Law See Profile I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law permalink

Does it have the cost of production per barrel?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 04/21/2008
- kevinabt See Profile I'm a Fan of kevinabt permalink

Totally missing the point....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 04/21/2008
- Rule Of Law See Profile I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law permalink

A question--does anyone have the cost figures on what it takes to produce a barrel of oil? Not turn it into gasoline, just get it out of the ground and into a barrel ready to be shipped, because that's how I understand the established price is set when Exxon buys a barrel to take home and refine.

I had heard about $1.50--anyone?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:26 PM on 04/21/2008
- NotMyPrez See Profile I'm a Fan of NotMyPrez permalink

what irks me is heating oil, which is a cruder grade than petroleum. Yet it goes for about the same as a gallon of gas. Used to be a fraction of that. As the warmer months come, it won't be as bad, but when we are in the middle of winter, and at 130 dollars a barrel, what then?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 04/21/2008
- Paul See Profile I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

The price to produce a barrel of oil depends on what oilfield the barrel comes from.

In Saudi Arabia, most of the fields have been in place for 30 years and more, the wells flow (no pumping needed) and the cost to produce is almost negligable.

But if you have just put in a new platform in the North Sea, or in deep water in the Gulf of Mexico, the oil companies have put several billion up front, even before they drill the first well. Those production costs are going to be very high, if only to get a reasonable return on the investment over say, 10 years, because of the cost of capital.

I don't envy the oil company execs - they are being asked to sign off on multi-jillion dollar investments today that will not return even one penny for five years - and will only be profitable if the price of oil stays near historic highs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 04/21/2008
- kevinabt See Profile I'm a Fan of kevinabt permalink

I envy them. Have you seen their profits? Very high upfront investment doesn't seem to be hurting them much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 04/21/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView permalink

My guess is that information is private but oil makes up about 50% of gasoline, rifining and transportation costs have risen too.

I would be nice if the USA had built an oil refinery in the last 30 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 04/21/2008
- PierreLeClerke See Profile I'm a Fan of PierreLeClerke permalink

Present domestic refinery capacity is at 80% by choice of the producers in response to reduced demand. If the majors thought they could sell more refined products, they would build more capacity. Simple economics. Please educate yourself about true inventories and production capacity as I have urged. Don't swallow the Bull from the wholly owned subsidiary the MSM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 04/21/2008
- PierreLeClerke See Profile I'm a Fan of PierreLeClerke permalink

This is the foundation for the single greatest shift of assets from the tables of the multitudes to the blood soaked hands of the few Robber Baron masters of the Universe. This shift/theft has been overseen and facilitated with the full assistance and cooperation of their wholly owned subsidiaries, the Executive branch and the main stream media propaganda mass marketing machine.
This at a time when the SPR is so full we could not add another teaspoon of crude to it and with historic records being set for domestic inventories for gasoline and crude.
Arm your self with accurate information America, go to the Energy Information Agencies web site for weekly inventory and production reports from your complacent governments energy department. Consumption is down over 10% in the U.S. and to keep pricing at all time highs refiners have cut production to about 80%. Market manipulation 101.
The bottom line is you will do nothing about it but complain while your being raped.
Everything you eat, everything you touch has the price of energy built in to it.
We haven't begun to feel the whirlwind of our inaction. Enjoy the ride to the bottom America, the land of the enabler.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 04/21/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView permalink

Sounds good Pierre, enjoy your name.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 04/21/2008
- BPCentrisAmerican See Profile I'm a Fan of BPCentrisAmerican permalink

If we were allowed to drill for our own oil this would not be a problem.

By REAGANRIGHT

That"s an interesting point, except Big Oil wants public land for nothing, they also want the tax payer to update refineries and pipe lines. In short they want you and I to pay for exploration while they ship oil to the Asian Rim. With oil prices above a $117 a barrel, Exxon dose not need our help in the form tax dollars. I have this very same conservastion with my conservative friends who believe free market economics actually applies to the oil business.

North Dakota is estimated to have the 3rd largest oil deposits in the world sitting about 10,000 feet below it and we now have the drilling technology to reach it, the question in my mind and people like Senator Byron Dorgan, who derives the benefits of such a discovery, China, Japan or the US, and with a such a huge oil find at $117 a barrel why should the tax payer accept $4 an acre to explore it, if you owned that land which you do, would you lease it for 4 bucks an acre?

How many industries can raise the price-of refined product while still in the tanks of the distributor, when oil speculators drive up the price of the crude just hours before. That"s like raising the price of an auto sitting on showroom floor when the price of steel goose up.

Something stinks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 04/21/2008
- NotMyPrez See Profile I'm a Fan of NotMyPrez permalink

Dose- an amount, a measurement

Does- verb form of To Do.

Does a dose for does matter?

English, what a concept.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 04/21/2008
- Rule Of Law See Profile I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law permalink

If we take oil from Public Lands, then the oil should belong to the public. We could pay the oil companies a fair extraction and refining fee. Could you imagine?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 04/21/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView permalink

What if we killed a buffalo or a bird, there is good reason not to drill.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 04/21/2008
- Razz See Profile I'm a Fan of Razz permalink

Does anyone know if there is a running petition going on right now that speaks against this insanity?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 04/21/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView permalink

Ahh yes, a petition will persuade the oil companies . . . what are you in high school?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 04/21/2008
- Razz See Profile I'm a Fan of Razz permalink

Apparently you are in a kindergarten. A petition is never meant to persuade any company. A petition is a request to an authority, most commonly a government official or public entity. If we have thousands of signatures, it will force the local government to at least talk about the issue. Then from there, the state and then maybe the federal government.
Please learn the meaning of a petition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 04/21/2008
- wolf58 See Profile I'm a Fan of wolf58 permalink

June 2000
Gov. George W. Bush of Texas said today that if he was president, he would bring down gasoline prices through sheer force of personality, by creating enough political good will with oil-producing nations that they would increase their supply of crude.

''I would work with our friends in OPEC to convince them to open up the spigot, to increase the supply,'' Mr. Bush, the presumptive Republican candidate for president, told reporters here today. ''Use the capital that my administration will earn, with the Kuwaitis or the Saudis, and convince them to open up the spigot.''

Implicit in his comments was a criticism of the Clinton administration as failing to take advantage of the good will that the United States built with Kuwait and Saudi Arabia during the Persian Gulf war in 1991. Also implicit was that as the son of the president who built the coalition that drove the Iraqis out of Kuwait, Mr. Bush would be able to establish ties on a personal level that would persuade oil-producing nations that they owed the United States something in return.

''Ours is a nation that helped Kuwait and the Saudis, and you'd think we'd have the capital necessary to convince them to increase the crude supplies,'' he said.

Asked why the Clinton administration had not been able to use the power of personal persuasion, Mr. Bush said: ''The fundamental question is, 'Will I be a successful president when it comes to foreign policy?' ''