Friday, April 4, 2008

THE "SAUDI PRIZE" ... A BUSH IN THE WHITE HOUSE

It was 1986, conservation efforts were paying off, competition in the oil industry was returning, and gas prices were plummeting. In The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power, author Daniel Yergin details the efforts of then Vice President George Bush to assure the Saudis – and U.S. domestic oil producers – that the U.S. should support artificially high prices in energy. On a trip to the Middle East VP Bush made it clear to the Saudis that, as Yergin put it, "market forces had gone too far" and had the potential to cripple America’s energy industry.

Well, I’m sure Papa Bush would be quite content with the following.
At its March 2000 meeting, OPEC set up a price band mechanism, triggered by the OPEC basket price, to respond to changes in world oil market conditions. According to the price band mechanism, OPEC basket prices above $28 per barrel for 20 consecutive trading days or below $22 per barrel for 10 consecutive trading days would result in production adjustments …
And, just like that, competition is mugged by collusion. Think about this the next time you hear some Talking Head drone on about “market” forces in the oil industry.

But I really liked this comment: “At its January 30, 2005 meeting, OPEC decided that market changes had rendered the band unrealistic, and decided to temporarily suspend the price band mechanism” … Translated this says “OPEC’s already making so much stinking money they no longer have to manipulate production levels.”

Papa Bush is no doubt pleased.

- Mark

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