

Terrorism for Algiers vs prosperity for Dubai

May 23 2008
As the price of oil climbs to $135 a barrel and petrol at the pump reaches 114p a litre, motorists are wondering how long this latest spike is going to last. Is it just another of those temporary jumps in the cost of fuel that we saw in the 1970s and 1980s or is this a new reality which will last for good?
The answer is that it is likely to stay. While market prices may or may not continue shooting into the stratosphere over the next few months, they are certainly incapable of falling back down to the levels of $60-$70 a barrel seen even a year ago.
The reason is that oil supply is increasingly constrained by extraction costs while demand, fanned by the growth of huge emerging economies like China and India, is remorseless. The International Energy Agency forecasts that in 2008, the world will need an extra 1.3 million barrels a day (bpd), but only 800,000 extra bpd will be supplied.
As the price of oil climbs to $135 a barrel and petrol at the pump reaches 114p a litre, motorists are wondering how long this latest spike is going to last. Is it just another of those temporary jumps in the cost of fuel that we saw in the 1970s and 1980s or is this a new reality which will last for good?
The answer is that it is likely to stay. While market prices may or may not continue shooting into the stratosphere over the next few months, they are certainly incapable of falling back down to the levels of $60-$70 a barrel seen even a year ago.
The reason is that oil supply is increasingly constrained by extraction costs while demand, fanned by the growth of huge emerging economies like China and India, is remorseless. The International Energy Agency forecasts that in 2008, the world will need an extra 1.3 million barrels a day (bpd), but only 800,000 extra bpd will be supplied.
Read more on the article at UK MSN MONEY














































