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Friday, June 26, 2020

US #Sanctions on #Venezuela has left 18MM Barrels Of #Oil Stranded Out At Sea

Estimates based on shipping data, industry sources, and documents of Venezuela's state oil firm PDVSA, show at least 16 tankers with 18 Million Barrels of Oil are idling off the coasts of Africa and Southeast Asia because few potential buyers would risk U.S. sanctions for dealing with the regime of Nicolas Maduro.


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Wednesday, June 17, 2020

#RenewableEnergy will become the largest area of spending in the #energy industry in 2021, says @GoldmanSachs


Spending on renewable power is set to overtake oil and gas drilling for the first time next year as clean energy affords a $16 trillion investment opportunity through 2030, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Renewables including biofuels will account for about a quarter of all energy spending next year, up from about 15% in 2014, Goldman analysts including Michele Della Vigna said in a June 16 note. This is in part driven by diverging costs of capital, as borrowing rates have risen to as high as 20% for hydrocarbon projects compared with as little as 3% for clean energy.

"Renewable power will become the largest area of spending in the energy industry in 2021, on our estimates, surpassing upstream oil and gas for the first time in history," Goldman said in the note.






Monday, June 1, 2020

No more free Gas for #Venezuela #OOTT

Venezuelans awoke to new petrol prices on Monday — and the realisation that for the first time in decades they will have to pay close to market rates if they want to fill up their tanks more than a few times a month.
These are the new terms under the price regime:

  • Venezuelan motorists will still get some petrol almost for free. They will be allowed 120 litres a month — enough to fill an average car twice — for 5,000 bolívares ($0.02) a litre, meaning it will cost $1.20 to fill a car; Motorcyclists will be allowed 60 litres a month. 

  • Anyone who wants more will have to buy it from one of 200 designated petrol stations and pay 50 US cents per litre, only slightly cheaper than in the US and many countries in Latin America. They will have to pay in dollars, 

  • To get their heavily subsidised initial quota, people will need a valid "Fatherland Card", a " voluntary" ID introduced by President Nicolás Maduro in 2017, and used to distribute subsidised food and goods and services to the population. Many government opponents refuse to register for the card, saying the Maduro regime uses it to exercise totalitarian control.  

Venezuela's oil output has crashed during 21 years of leftwing rule. A founding member of Opec, the country used to supply about 15 per cent of the world's oil. Now it accounts for less than 1 per cent.

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