Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 08/2014

A Rapidly Changing Energy World, Or Perhaps Not

Irwin M. Stelzer

June 2012

Hudson Institute

Abstract

Slow growth here and in China, and recession in Europe are reducing demand for oil. Inventories in the U.S. are at a 22-year high. The Federal Reserve Board’s QEs that pumped paper money into the economy and drove up the nominal price of oil have come to an end. And the twelve OPEC oil cartelists, who between them supply 40% of the world’s oil, are producing 1.6 million barrels in excess of the agreed daily quota of 30 million barrels. As a result, U.S. benchmark crude oil prices are now closer to $80 per barrel than to the $110 they reached only four months ago.