Quick links to a few items I found interesting.
Category Archives: energy
The Changing Face of World Oil Markets
Here’s the introduction to a new paper I just finished:
This year the oil industry celebrated its 155th birthday, continuing a rich history of booms, busts and dramatic technological changes. Many old hands in the oil patch may view recent developments as a continuation of the same old story, wondering if the high prices of the last decade will prove to be another transient cycle with which technological advances will again eventually catch up. But there have been some dramatic changes over the last decade that could mark a major turning point in the history of the world’s use of this key energy source. In this article I review five of the ways in which the world of energy may have changed forever.
Below I provide a summary of the paper’s five main conclusions along with a few of the figures from the paper.
Keeping oil production from falling
Production flows from a given oil field naturally decline over time, but we keep trying harder and technology keeps improving. Which force is winning the race?
Gasoline prices in perspective
Many reporters have been pushing the meme that:
Consumers will pay the highest Fourth of July gasoline prices in six years.
Energy and the economy 30 years later
Also at the meeting of the International Association for Energy Economics last week I was honored to receive an award from the association for outstanding contributions to the profession. Here are the remarks I made at the awards banquet.
Energy demand and GDP
Last week I was at the annual meeting of the International Association for Energy Economics in New York City. One of the many interesting presentations was by Professor David Stern of Australian National University describing his research with Zsuzsanna Csereklyei and Maria del Mar Rubio Varas developing some stylized facts about energy and economic growth.
Gasoline price calculator
What do recent developments in Iraq imply for the price U.S. motorists should expect to pay for gasoline?
Iraq, oil markets, and the U.S. economy
The group is calling itself the Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham, translated as the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria, or ISIS. And so it may come to be.
Links for 2014-06-11
Quick links to a few items I found interesting.
Commodity prices and resource scarcity
How has the world managed to increase both population and living standards on a finite planet?