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Politics : Rat's Nest - Chronicles of Collapse -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (12100)5/7/2011 9:43:48 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24232
 
Putting on Blinders - the EIA Budget cuts
Posted by Heading Out on May 6, 2011 - 9:30am

If you read many of the pieces that I write here, you will soon notice that I am convinced that this country and most of the civilized world has a problem with future oil supply. That problem is getting worse rather rapidly, and this is causing the price increases that you have noticed every time you visit a gas station. It is popular and easy to blame the current increases on either speculators or the “evil” oil companies. While both may play a role on the edges of what is going on, the harsh reality is that prices now are largely controlled by those nations who form the OPEC partnership. Saudi Arabia, who supplies the largest portion of OPEC oil, has said that it is uncomfortable with current oil prices, since they are getting high enough that they could cause another recession. However that did not stop them from raising their prices in April and they now need the high prices to help pay to keep Saudi Arabia from seeing any of the riots that are happening to other countries. One has to know how to separate the popular myths from the actual reality.

And if legislatures at both state and national level are to make the right choices about what to do as oil prices keep going up (bearing in mind that it was a cause of the major recession in 2008) they too need to know what is really going on. There are alternate strategies for changing domestic production and alternate fuels (such as the growing supply of natural gas) that could be a significant help in the near future. Some of those that seemed to be promising, don’t always work as fast as promised, as we found out with cellulosic ethanol. They (and the rest of us who try and explain what’s happening) need to know not only what is going on, but as things change, what the effects of new rules events (such as banning drilling for a while in the Gulf of Mexico) are having on current and future supplies. It is only in this way the rational and useful steps to help get America, and the rest of the world, off this addiction to OPEC oil can be picked out, and put into place.

Because of the need to trim the Federal budget, different Federal agencies are cutting back on the services that they provide to the public. One of the most recent has been the Energy Information Agency who have just explained in a press release, the cuts they are making. Bear in mind that this is the agency that is supposed to provide the information I have just said that we have to have. With a tip to Gregor, the cuts that are occurring are given below, together with a comment.

Oil and Natural Gas Information

Do not prepare or publish 2011 edition of the annual data release on U.S. proved oil and natural gas reserves.
Curtail efforts to understand linkages between physical energy markets and financial trading.
Suspend analysis and reporting on the market impacts of planned refinery outages
Curtail collection and dissemination of monthly state-level data on wholesale petroleum product prices, including gasoline, diesel, heating oil, propane, residual fuel oil, and kerosene. Also, terminate the preparation and publication of the annual petroleum marketing data report and the fuel oil and kerosene sales report.
Suspend auditing of data submitted by major oil and natural gas companies and reporting on their 2010 financial performance through EIA's Financial Reporting System.
Reduce collection of data from natural gas marketing companies.
Cancel the planned increase in resources to be applied to petroleum data quality issues.
Reduce data collection from smaller entities across a range of EIA oil and natural gas surveys.
Electricity, Renewables, and Coal Information

Reduce data on electricity exports and imports.
Terminate annual data collection and report on geothermal space heating (heat pump) systems.
Terminate annual data collection and report on solar thermal systems.
Reduce data collection from smaller entities across a range of EIA electricity and coal surveys.
Consumption, Efficiency, and International Energy Information

Suspend work on EIA's 2011 Commercial Buildings Energy Consumption Survey (CBECS), the Nation's only source of statistical data for energy consumption and related characteristics of commercial buildings.
Terminate updates to EIA's International Energy Statistics.
Energy Analysis Capacity

Halt preparation of the 2012 edition of EIA's International Energy Outlook.
Suspend further upgrades to the National Energy Modeling System (NEMS). NEMS is the country's preeminent tool for developing projections of U.S. energy production, consumption, prices, and technologies and its results are widely used by policymakers, industry, and others in making energy-related decisions. A multiyear project to replace aging NEMS components will be halted.
Eliminate annual published inventory of Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the United States.
Limit responses to requests from policymakers for special analyses.
In addition to these program changes, EIA will cut live telephone support at its Customer Contact Center.

So, here we are in a mess. Generally when you’re in a mess it is a good idea to understand what the mess looks like, so that you can work out how to get out of it. But now that information is not going to be locally available. Yes there will still be the information from the IEA, though it is not really comparable, and OPEC itself provides Monthly Oil Market Reports, but that is a little less independent than most, and does not cover the internal production within this country that is a valuable tool to indicate how fast we are approaching the next crisis. (And the indications are that it may well hit right around the next election). And ignoring the information (or deliberately choosing not to collect it), is not going to affect the situation from developing, only perhaps possibly it might slow our noticing, but since we go to gas stations very regularly I think that is a bit doubtful.

At some point in the future, perhaps even that soon, politicians and administrators are going to complain “but nobody told us!!” and rush to blame the industry yet again. But the truth is, there was a group that was keeping the records, and who could tell those with the responsibility to fix it when there was a problem. And the Administration just closed it down. We will regret that lack of information and the warning messages that it would have brought.

theoildrum.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (12100)5/7/2011 10:53:36 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24232
 
Central Asia feels gas pinch as Russia cuts supply
By PETER LEONARD

ALMATY, Kazakhstan

A shortage of fuel in Russia is hurting millions beyond its borders in Central Asia, where former satellite states still rely almost completely on Moscow's gas supplies -- and its decisions to tighten the taps from one day to the next.

Russia's government responded this week to domestic fuel shortages by hiking export fees and imposing a temporary export ban on fuel, measures that threaten to cause severe deficits in impoverished Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

In those mainly Muslim countries, which lie on China's mountainous western frontier, the stakes are high as the all-important sowing season beckons.

The specter of food crises raises alarm over political stability in nations scarred by recent violence -- weeks after Russia tightened fuel supplies to Kyrgyzstan last year, causing the cost of living to spike, a popular uprising overthrew the government and left more than 85 people dead.

Long lines of cars formed at gas stations in the Tajik capital Dushanbe this week, as motorists hoped to pre-empt a further bounce in prices.

"The prices are going up before our very eyes," said Akhmed Abdulloyev, a motorist in his mid-40s. He said prices rose three cents in just a day, with some stations selling gas at 5.3 somoni ($1.2) per liter.

Station attendants in Dushanbe have refused to fill buyers' canisters, citing urgent demand from other customers and dwindling reserves. Tajikistan imported nine-tenths of its fuel from Russia last year.

The root of the problem lies in Russia, where fuel shortages have left numerous gas stations almost dry, a peculiar predicament for a country so rich in oil reserves.

Russia has one of the fastest-growing automotive markets in Europe, and government incentives for motorists to trade in old models for new cars have boosted the number of automobiles on the road.

With no new oil refineries appearing in Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union, however, gas supply often doesn't meet demand.

As of May 1, Russia hiked the export duty on gasoline by 44 percent, a move designed to make it more profitable for fuel retailers to sell domestically than abroad.

The Energy Ministry estimates the move will keep an additional 200,000 tons of commercial high-octane gasoline per month within the country.

Russian officials have also signaled a temporary export ban in May. Although Russian officials have contradicted each other on the situation, panic-buying in Central Asia is already creating shortages.

The Russian export tariff hike is as an especially rude awakening for Tajikistan, which had been hoping the tariff might be lifted altogether.

The cost of filling up gas tanks is a particularly sensitive topic in Kyrgyzstan, which hosts a U.S. air base crucial to operations in nearby Afghanistan.

Russia's imposition of duties on fuel exports to Kyrgyzstan early last year had a sharp knock-on effect on gas retail prices. That exacerbated nationwide discontent which culminated with the storming in April 2010 of government offices and the overthrow of former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev.

Kyrgyzstan's Oil Traders Association chairman Zhumakadyr Akeneyev said 92 percent of fuel imports are sourced from Russia, with the remainder coming from neighboring Kazakhstan.

A delegation of Kyrgyz fuel traders has negotiated a deal with Russian suppliers not to halt deliveries to Kyrgyzstan, Akeneyev said, although it is yet to be seen whether those promises can and will be kept as Moscow frets over its own consumers' needs.

"The only restriction will be on certain types of high-octane gasoline, the delivery of which will be limited," Akeneyev said, referring to the car fuel used by regular motorists.

Gas prices in Kyrgyzstan may rise only by about 4 percent, he said.

Despite that optimistic assessment, drivers in the capital, Bishkek, are still grumbling.

"We have to raise prices for our services, which means we will have fewer customers. With every passing month, life in Kyrgyzstan becomes more expensive, I don't know how I will earn money for bread if this goes on," said taxi driver Gasan Khusainov.

Some of Kyrgyzstan's and Tajikistan's most important export commodities are agricultural goods, such as fruit, vegetables and cotton.

Farmers need to buy large amounts of fuel to run agricultural machinery in the coming crunch months as the sowing season approaches.

"Increased prices for fuel are a disaster for the Tajik economy," said political analyst Saymuddin Dustov. "With the price of cotton so high, this year was very important to us, but with fuel like this, that advantage will be useless."

businessweek.com