As the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow wraps up, the oil and gas industries are once again the villains of the piece (coal of course is already beyond the pale). On the eve of the summit, Royal Dutch Shell’s CEO stated that the company would be absent from the climate talks after being told it would not be welcome. Teenage climate icon Greta Thunberg, whose tirades have repeatedly gone viral on social media over the past two weeks, tweeted “I don’t know about you, but I sure am not comfortable with having some of the world’s biggest villains influencing & dictating the fate of the world.”
Villains Of The Piece
Just prior to the start of the Glasgow summit, the US House Oversight Committee chair Carolyn Maloney accused ExxonMobil XOM in the US of “lying” about climate change since the 1970s “like the tobacco executives were (about smoking and the link to cancer)”. This is par for the course for Biden’s Democratic administration which has demonized the US oil and gas sector since achieving office. In the eyes of the administration, the oil giant had for years raised doubts about climate change, as in 1997 when its then-CEO Lee Raymond said the “case for global warming is far from airtight” and that scientific evidence was “inconclusive.” Perhaps Ms. Maloney in her indignation is unaware that even the highly qualified climate scientist Steven Koonin, undersecretary for science at the U.S. Department of Energy in the Obama administration, finds that climate science is far from “settled” in his masterly survey of the literature.
The Western oil majors have long been accustomed to being accused of being the new tobacco lobby, selling poison and destroying lives, with many of them adopting the role of supplicants begging for time to “transition” out of the hated fossil fuels into the sunny vales of “renewable” energy. But for non-Western state-owned oil producers, over which activist shareholders and virtue-signalling Western governments have little influence, the special ire expressed by various commentators is remarkable. Among the group of oil producers, Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil company, serves as a lightning rod.
Reliably vociferous Greenpeace expressed “grave concern” at “moves by the Saudi government to cripple the COP26 climate talks in Glasgow”. The NGO accused the Saudi government of being “smart, strategic and utterly cynical”, pushing back on including the 1.50 C goal — an arbitrary limit that seems to have taken on a life of its own — at the talks. Indeed, as an arsonist at the talks, the Saudis “light matches, drop them, start fires and walk away”, Greenpeace said
The Saudis As The Lightning Rod
But beyond the hyperbole and agitprop expected from the likes of such NGOs, even seasoned observers of oil markets seem to have taken to media-lynching the Saudis. A recent Bloomberg column accused Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz Bin Salman of “delivering a masterclass in gaslighting” when he argued that the roots of the current energy crisis can be found in the decades of anti-oil policies adopted by the developed countries. “Gas-lighting”, to remind ourselves, refers to psychological manipulation over an extended period of time that causes victims to question the validity of their own perception, leading to confusion and a dependency on the perpetrator. That is a serious charge indeed.
The article goes on to accuse Saudi Aramco, the state-owned oil company, of ignoring the world’s biggest consumers’ requests to increase oil supply. It continues, “despite what Prince Abdulaziz would have you believe, OPEC+ exists to look after the interests of its members, nobody else.” You would have thought that sovereign governments and their national oil companies are tasked with representing the interests of their citizens. The sheer chutzpah of the argument that oil producers should decide on their supply and pricing decisions on the basis of their customers’ views rather than on the laws of demand and supply is astonishing.
Or perhaps it reflects the ignorance of basic economics. As Adam Smith, a founding sage of the discipline, famously observed, “It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own self-interest. We address ourselves not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities, but of their advantages.” One might ask what were customers’ views when oil prices collapsed in mid-2014 and led to massive fiscal imbalances and the economic impoverishment of oil producers?
Economic Incompetence or Political Calculation?
In a recent TV interview, Harold Hamm – the famous US oil and gas entrepreneur and lead player in the “fracking revolution” that catapulted the country to its position as the world’s leading oil and gas producer – was asked about the Western onslaught on the industry apparent at COP26. The TV host asked him, “do you feel like Custer” (referring to American cavalry commander who led his men and himself to death at the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876)? His response: “this (Biden) administration does not understand Economics 101…and has it all backwards”. But perhaps it isn’t so much an ignorance of economics as much as the political awareness of the perceived benefits of hewing to the environmental left, the Democratic party’s activist base.
Mr. Hamm was referring to the Biden’s executive actions since attaining office, ranging from the revoked permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, suspended oil leasing in Alaska to the halting of permits to drill in oil and gas leases on federal lands. To that list, we could add the latest items. Joe Biden’s recent nominee Saule Omarova for the Comptroller of the Currency, a key financial regulator position, said this of coal, oil and gas industries: “We want them to go bankrupt if we want to tackle climate change.” And if shutting down the Keystone XL pipeline was not enough, the White House admitted early this week that it is studying the impact of shutting down the L5 pipeline which carries oil and gas liquids from Canada through Wisconsin and Michigan.
In another TV interview on November 6th, US Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm threw her head back and laughed when asked if there was a plan to bring down gasoline prices – now at 7-year highs, having increased by 60% in the past year. She apparently found the question hilarious and reverted to the standard response of her administration: “would that I had the magic wand on this…Oil is a global market. It is controlled by a cartel. That cartel is called OPEC, and they made a decision yesterday that they were not going to increase beyond what they were already planning.” There was no recognition of the sheer absurdity of castigating the OPEC+ oil producers’ refusal to ramp up oil exports beyond scheduled monthly increases while the Biden administration is doing its best to curtail domestic oil and gas production.
As countries emerge from the covid lockdowns, oil demand is surging. According to BP, global oil demand has now bounced back above 100 million barrels a day, a level that marked the peak seen before the pandemic. October gasoline sales in India reached an all-time high — 8.3% higher than in October 2019 — as covid cases diminish, the economy recovers and mobility increases. While the country “promises” net zero carbon emissions 50 years hence to COP26 host Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s evident delight, it is also busy planning the start of multiple new refinery construction projects driven by economic growth and concomitant oil demand.
While the Saudi government has announced large investments in renewable energy to the approbation of the climate crusaders, the state oil company Aramco forecasts continued global oil demand growth for the foreseeable future and will boost its oil production capacity to 13 million barrels per day (bpd) by 2027 from 12 million bpd now. Other producers that plan significant production capacity increases include the UAE, Iraq, Guyana and Brazil. As the developing countries undergo economic recovery from the covid pandemic, veteran oil analyst David Blackmon states baldly, “forget about peak oil (demand), we haven’t even reached peak coal (demand) yet”.
Forget About Peak Oil – We Haven’t Even Reached Peak Coal YetDavid BlackmonDespite all the heavy dissemination of narratives and talking points about a climate emergency and the energy tr…
While the vilification of the oil industry continues apace in the West, promises by the developing countries — accounting for 80% of the world’s population — to constrain carbon emissions at annual climate summits do not override their legitimate aspirations for better standards of living which depend on reliable fossil fuel supplies. As willing buyers, oil-short developing countries will continue to have durable and mutually-beneficial partnerships with oil producers. Apologetic Western oil companies and insouciant protestations by President Biden’s officials play little or no role in this equation.
On UK’s BBC Radio4 just heard the appalling Lord Gummer castigating India for their attitude to coal which wrecked the futile COP26. Let’s organize him a week in an Indian village without electricity and send him out early for water and to hack down the habitat for firewood. Only 300million with barely enough to eat,
Gummer’s lot are the real responsible parties for Grenfell.
Shouldn’t the spambot “Rio” have been banished by now?
Totally. Someone is falling down on the job. Even a simple text filter of the first 6 words, or the URL, would get rid of it. Until another comes along.
The URL had been in the banned list for days. This is a weird bot.
A week? I say give him at least a year until he can really see his ribs poking out and experience all the other jolly side effects of poor nutrition and hard labor that come with a subsistence “lifestyle”.
Notice how some MSM like the Guardian are mentioning only India as the retainers of some coal, while others like the NYT and the Independent name India and China. Who is reporting the truth here? Why are some lying?
One pays better than the other.
Which ones are not lying?
Let them eat mad cow
How much did Gummer make from renewables? 600 million wasnt it? He is on the board of some firm that sells them.
Blackrock is bidding on Aramco’s pipelines. https://www.google.com/amp/s/seekingalpha.com/amp/news/3767922-saudi-aramco-gas-pipelines-attract-bids-from-blackrock-brookfield-bloomberg
They just did this too: https://www.reuters.com/business/cop/blackrock-creates-biggest-climate-exchange-traded-fund-range-2021-10-26/
Remember this: playing both sides of the financial crisis in 08:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2020/03/25/business/blackrock-federal-reserve.amp.html
In detail here about 25 or so min in:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VYOEvurCVuk
BlackRock and its founder/CEO Larry Fink are completely dishonest. Fink has spent a career as a professional liar.
Q: How can you tell when Larry Fink is lying?
A: When his lips move.
The green swan
Central banking and financial stability in the age of climate change.
https://www.bis.org/publ/othp31.pdf
The Finks of the world are highly adept at scouting out gravy trains and then riding them as far as they go.
Master craftsmen in their chosen field will do “whatever it takes”.
With the blessings of traitorous leaders giving their own countries sovereignty away.
Great business plan, convince the Fed into “going direct” use that transfer of wealth (in the $Trillions) to buy up all the assets while subsiquent inflation it causes leaves you sitting pretty, eveyone else gets to “Own Nothing, and be Happy”.
Trebbles all round, for life.
re: “The Vilification Of Oil Producers …”
THINK that’s bad? Mention Randell Mills and Brilliant Light Power in the same breath to Ristvan and then stand back …
BTW, Rudd, Mills has boilers operating in the 250 kW range and is planning field trials with product now … where is ‘hot’ fusion at progress-wise? Yeah …
Good luck to Mills’ investors, which include U.S. taxpayers.
Mills jumped on the cold fusion band-wagon in the late 1980’s, and like Andrea Rossi, has peddled a similar story involving prototypes, demonstrations and field trials that will lead to commercial products (and riches) in just a few months.
The longevity and sustainability of these schemes and their claims is what I find most amazing.
Wake us up when they have something beyond a “field trial”. As scissor said we have heard this all before and the reason they just need a couple more million in investment for it all to go commercial.
Slightly off-topic, or not, I noticed last week that Jeff Carpoff has been sentenced to 30 years and his wife is due to be sentenced soon, both for running DC Solar, a renewables ponzi scheme. Wonder how many more will be under investigation? As to Randell Mills, after years of stating he has a working machine, he still hasn’t been able to come up with anything that works. The Mills BLP should be treated in the same way as was Mills’ 1988 cure for cancer – as complete and utter nonsense.
This is rather worse than th oil shocks under Nixon or Carter. While simple economic incompetence explains their aggravating political interventions by instituting price controls, the fanatics in various western governments seem to want a price spike. As the cliche goes, it is not a bug, it is a feature.
As the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow wraps up...
Just how pathetic our (UK at least) media and political elites really are was on show.
From the, er, Tory hating right-on Grauniad
“‘I am deeply sorry’: Alok Sharma fights back tears as watered-down Cop26 deal agreed”
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/video/2021/nov/14/i-am-deeply-sorry-alok-sharma-fights-back-tears-as-watered-down-cop26-deal-agreed-video
These total b’stards will never ask the public what they think about any aspect of the green agenda, let alone Net Zero.
Strangely, I feel thankful for the stance of the CCP on this and that can’t be right, can it?
“‘I am deeply sorry’: Alok Sharma fights back tears as watered-down Cop26 deal agreed”
I guess that was the guy I saw blubbering on the television news this morning. Crying over coal. What a pathetic sight!
It will be funny when Biden asks the post-2022 Congress for tens of billions of dollars to fund the UN Climate Fund. Actually, he will get nothing from the current Congress. Maybe he will try to direct funds from the “infrastructure” bill which was recently passed. There is enough loose change there to fund a mid-sized country.
Mr. Fair: Agreed, in fact there is enough loose change to bankrupt a mid-sized country after it’s all spent.
Too bad we can’t cancel the ability of the anti-fossil fuel folks to buy and use fossil fuels, and the products made from oil, gas and coal. They really don’t seem to have any understanding of the roles fossil fuels play in our lives.
A world without oil would kill billions…….oh, hang on a minute.
I think that is the ultimate goal.
I think Climate Believer does two.
“Big oil!” they screech …
“It must be someone’s fault.” they bray.
Maybe we need to define the problem better, using real, verified empirical evidence.
If they want to behave like children, then let’s treat them like children; take away their voting rights and send them back to school to learn how to be an adult. Actions have consequences which you must deal with as an adult – if you cannot foresee the obvious consequences and/or persist in blaming others for your actions, then you have no place in an adult world.
Official COP26 wind farm showcases obscene renewables costshttps://www.netzerowatch.com/cop26-windfarm-highlights-foolish-energy-policies/
The Griffin wind farm in Perthshire is the official electricity supplier to the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow, though of course the conference buildings actually rely on the grid mix of electricity generation, including nuclear, gas, and even coal to guarantee security of supply.
Even more embarrassingly, it now transpires that the Griffin wind farm has been receiving large payments to reduce generation due to low local demand and weak grid connection between the wind farm and the majority of the grid’s consumers.
The Scottish edition of the Daily Express has revealedthat the wind farm has received about £500,000 during the conference to reduce generation.
I tell you what. I’ll promise not to produce any electricity if someone gives me half a million quid. Deal?
Don’t tell anyone or it will make international headlines , LoL .
Listen to UN Climate Finance advisor, ex Bank of England chief, Marc Carney, ‘splain it all :
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/videos/2021-11-01/net-zero-a-ruthless-relentless-focus-for-gfanz-carney-video
Carney along with Bloomberg et al formed the GFANZ last year. It is all about a $150 trillion green bubble to save the system, not the planet.
The CAGW crowd is helping crude producers sell their product at a higher price. Somehow the basic Economics 101 relationship of Supply-Demand-Price is beyond these people.
Liberals and progressives just aren’t able to accept the fact that their policies aren’t popular with the masses. So they invent ever more powerful boogeymen to blame for their lack of success in selling their snake oil.
The people aren’t buying into their claims that CO2 is going to kill us all, so they invent massive conspiracies on the part of oil companies to explain this away.
No, they see oil companies as massive pots of gold to rob.
It is a greater display of power to ruin something than to make something better. When you ruin something you show not only that you have power, but that no one has the power to stop you.
Understand this and you will understand the Biden administration and the “elites” generally.
They know they are making things worse; they want to make things worse, they are doing it deliberately to show they cannot be stopped, and they laugh while they do it.
Doubt if Biden has much to do with the Biden administration .
What a depressing post.
and we all know this is the Biden that asked them to turn up the oil supply
And one that should be levelled fairly and squarely at the watermelons who created this fallacy in the first place and have continued to corrupt the minds of young people for over 40 years
And at the media. The so-called climate crisis is one huge gaslighting operation by them.
But bad news sells whether true or false .
Isn’t it time the fossil fuel industries took action and withdraw their products for a limited time, say 2 weeks as a starter, to show the world just how much of modern life is dependent on reliables?
Or at the very least start fighting back
We the public and accomplices of big oil would definitely prefer they not and we vote.
Well, yes, that would be better but we ain’t gonna get a vote on the matter
These days, even if you vote for the Tories you get socialists
Would be better to withdraw their products from anyone who voted for these administrations.
The current FF market conditions are doing just that. But politicians, NGOs, MSM and ideologues of all stripes will lie as to the true causes of the privation.
How brave the Democrats are to commit abuse after abuse and not worry about reelection. Or perhaps how confident.
Authoritarians always overreach. It’s in their nature.
There is a 97% consensus that NPR is a collection of idiots:
https://www.npr.org/2021/11/14/1055068583/gasoline-prices-gas-energy-inflation-biden
I keep hearing this about gas prices, but the Chevron where I usually fill up hasn’t gone up in more than 8 months.
What’s it cost?
The best bit about COP26 is it’s the gift that keeps on giving. A few sucker countries promised to do more and yet watch next years CO2 will be 4% up. We might even crack the 40GT mark all going well.
Lets party at COP27 next year and celebrate how well this all panned out 🙂
Since they lack the technological or economic means to achieve their stated goals, the climate change industry needs a scapegoat for their obvious failure. The oil and gas industry is serving this purpose. And, since their agenda includes political and economic change far beyond anything to do with climate, they are going to throw everything at it they can possibly think of in order to keep it going. The idea of climate change is far more important than any actual climate change.
Rampant inflation, just ahead. It is the free market’s way of working around the idiots.
That’s real cute. She must be quite uncomfortable then, because the world’s biggest villains are, right now, influencing and dictating the fate of the world through all this “climate crisis” BS.
” ….. world’s biggest villains …. ”
It takes one to know one.
I hate to pick nit, but Granholm wasn’t asked about gas prices, or even oil prices. She was asked what her plan for increasing American oil production. She either didn’t understand the question or artfully dodged it. Everyone else seems to have misunderstood it as well.
She was asked straight up about her plan to increase oil production, that is 100% correct.
Aaron writes:
“She either didn’t understand the question”
“That is hilarious,” Granholm said, throwing her head back with laughter
“or artfully dodged it”
She laughed like crazy. Apparently, energy production is a hilarious subject to her. Some “artful dodge”. This is the Energy Secretary of the US. She thinks energy production is a big joke.
She understood the question all right. She understood it perfectly.
Yes, she understood the question. It just struck her funny that someone would expect the Biden administration to want to increase oil production, when she knows that’s not in the cards.
It did not strike her funny bone, the laughter was, as almost everything a department head in the US Government does, they rehearse what responses for certain more dangerous or emphatic questions.
They don’t answer, they ignore or divert difficult or unwanted questions.
You think she practiced that laugh?
True.
I vote for artful dodging.
Aaron, not sure who you are picking nits with in this string. You are correct she was asked about production. In the context of rising prices, the question is at least indirectly about price. The real reason for this response is to correct this- J. Granholm is not bright enough to qualify for “artful”. She dodged by first laughing, then pitching an utterly debunked Dem talking point. She didn’t get the memo that U.S. production could bring down the “global market” price BECAUSE IT DID! So I had to jump in to say, not an “artful” dodge.
Also, she didn’t misunderstand the question at all, she just can’t admit that U.S. should produce oil. She’s not smart enough to come up with an original lie, she has to repeat a debunked lie. She is very grateful for Meg Whitmer, because we can no longer say that Granholm was the dumbest MI gov of all time.
Who imagined that human extinction would be a self-fulfilling prophesy?
OT answer:
Austria starts a lockdown for not vaccinated people.
My conclusion:
The non-vaccinated are protected while the vaccinated infect among themselves 😀
It looks like the only thing the vaccine is good at. is keep you from every having natural immunity. That what a study in England is showing.
None of these administrations have learned that lockdowns do nothing but delay the inevitable.
Or, they don’t care, and just enjoy the abject control of their citizens.
Well, I caught the ChiCom virus (WuFlu) in July, 2020, again in October, 2020, had the two jabs in February, 2021 and got the disease again in October, 2021. At the age of 73, I assume I’ll probably get it again, the state of my luck. Each time has been like a week-long bad cold. The ChiCom gift will be with us forever and everybody, knowingly or not, will get it. Government: “Never let a crisis go to waste.”
We just found out that the U.S. government pays no attention as to whether a person who has had the Wuhan virus infection can get infected a second time, or whether they are safe from a second infection. They are not collecting statistics for this question for some unknown reason.
I was wondering if anyone knows of others who are collecting this information? Israel? Others?
The elites in the U.S. act like gaining immunity after getting a Wuhan virus infection has no significance.
Oil producers are in a no win situation and they know it. Keep pumping and they’re killing the planet or stop pumping and they’re killing the people.
and just what makes you think that piece of fantasy?
Written from the media perspective, not mine.
One is real,the other is imaginary.
Here’s my take on COP 26. The decision was a nice failure but some heavy duty promises got made along the way. This ain’t over.
https://www.cfact.org/2021/11/14/cop-26-radicals-lose-on-every-issue/