There Would Be No Iranian Nuclear Talks If Not For Fracking 236
Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Matthew Philips writes at Bloomberg that US Secretary of State John Kerry landed in Geneva on Friday to begin negotiations with Iran over its nuclear weapons program and there is sudden optimism that a deal is in the offing. But the simple fact is that Iran would not be coming to the negotiating table without the US oil boom. Over the last two years, the US has increased its crude production by about 2 million barrels a day. According to a recent report from the Congressional Research Service (pdf), Iran's oil exports have been cut in half since 2011 (PDF), from 2.5 million barrels per day to a bit more than 1 million today. As a result, Iran has had to halt an equal amount of production. 'I think it's pretty clear that without the U.S. shale revolution, it never would have been possible to put this kind of embargo on Iran,' says Julius Walker. 'Without US production gains, I think we'd be looking at $150 a barrel.' Instead, international prices have hovered around $110, and are less than $100 in the US. According to data from Bloomberg, the combined carrying capacity of oil tankers leaving Iranian ports last month dropped 22 percent from September. 'They're having a very hard time finding buyers,' says Walker. If a deal gets done, the trick will be to ease Iranian oil back onto the broader market without disrupting prices. If not managed properly, flooding the market with Iranian crude could carry its own negative consequences by suddenly making fracked oil in the US unprofitable."
CAFE Standards (Score:2)
Re:CAFE Standards (Score:4, Insightful)
Except no, because of the Jevon's Paradox [wikipedia.org]. Making the use of a resource more efficient actually increases total demand.
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Driving is pretty saturated (note short term stiffness in gasoline demand) so it seems unlikely this is important.
While that's true in the short term, I don't think that many effects from CAFE standards would be described as 'short term'. There's no reason that demand can't be inelastic in the short term (filling up) and elastic in the long term (auto purchases).
And, the effect has never been shown to increase demand...
Never? That's quite an assertion you've got there, son. Care to let the rest of us in on your sources?
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Not showing an effect would be a negative, how do you expect someone to prove a negative?
I don't, it was a rhetorical question. IOW: If you can't prove a negative, you shouldn't claim a negative.
But to bring this out of nitpick-land - I'd take almost anything reliable as evidence that an example hasn't been found.
I'm not saying he's right, I'm saying that you and you need to prove the positive.
No I don't, I haven't made a claim.
Again, to avoid the nitpick - If this is true, I'd like to know it's true to a reasonable degree of certainty. I'd have to be insane to believe everything I've read on an internet forum.
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Except no, because of the Jevon's Paradox [wikipedia.org]. Making the use of a resource more efficient actually increases total demand.
Jevon's Paradox is not a general rule, but an exception to a rule. I doubt if it applies in this case. Do you really think that most people consume more fuel when they buy a more efficient car? Note: They may indeed drive more, but the question is whether they drive enough more to consume even more fuel than if they bought an SUV instead of a Prius.
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You're right, people who already have a car will not change their usage much. It's people who couldn't afford to drive (teenagers, working poor, etc), who switch to driving when it gets cheaper. This is the increase in usage that Jevon's Paradox entails.
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The problem with that reasoning is that CAFE standards only apply to the fleet average. My 1998 Saturn got nearly 40 MPG on the highway. If gas cost was an issue for me, I had that very affordable option 15 years ago - and there were equally efficient cars before that. Not only that, the efficient cars tended to be cheap: a 1989 Geo Metro was $6,000 and got over 40 MPG.
Anyway, teenagers and the working poor always had cheap and efficient cars available. Safety standards may have actually made things worse f
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Except that they sort of are http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_Average_Fuel_Economy#SUVs_and_minivans_created_due_to_original_mandate [wikipedia.org]
SUVs and Minivans (and many "cars" that people don't realize fit in into those categories) are excluded from the more stringent car standard of 30.2 MPG and are instead allowed to guzzle just like true trucks at the less stringent 24.1 MPG rate.
The amount and type of loopholes in CAFE have changed over the years but there are still a large number of vehicles sold to avera
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100% torque at 0 RPM is all you need to hear to know it's suitability for towing. There's a reason why trains use electric motors instead of gearboxes.
As for the batteries, I'd put them under the bed. The trailer itself I'd generally look more into putting a generator into than more batteries.
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Well, yes, but trucks used to be excluded entirely. And you get a lot more return on investment by improving their fuel economy, since it started so poor. Making a 20MPG truck into a 21MPG truck is better than making a 30MPG sedan into a 31MPG sedan, and half of all "cars" sold were "trucks".
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The rotten economy has also kept demand from growing.
The Law of Unintended Consequence (Score:4, Interesting)
Law of global oligarchs (Score:2)
I agree with your general sentiment certainly, however we can look at history and see that our diplomatic success with Iran has *nothing* to do with fracking.
This is a PR propaganda article.
Iran has been a Banana Republic for global oligarch companies like Royal Dutch Shell, British Petroleum, Gasprom, etc...
anti-democratic dictators were installed by special operations work who would give favorable oil trading to the colonial oligarches...
it has happened **OVER and OVER** through history....
this is about t
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happenstance... (Score:2)
it's possible, I can acknowledge that for sure...somewhere far down the chain, I'm sure that public perception that fracking in the US has reduced demand significantly has affected commodities trading...
you're coming from the right place, so I don't mind talking a bit of semantics, but this topic is easily trolled...
Infrastructure? (Score:2)
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Stalin was pretty good at it! Pretty bad at a lot of other things, but crash industrialization of Russia at all costs, that he was pretty solid at. To the extent that rural areas of Russia nowadays have a lot of USSR nostalgia, because the glorious Soviet infrastructure is slowly crumbling and not really being maintained anymore.
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It depends on the revolution. Stalin is one counter example even if the electrification of the USSR started when Lenin was still around but there are more like Hitler (autobahn), Mussolini (trains running on time, draining swamps infested with malaria, etc).
The thing is they had the means and/or the allies with the resources to do it. As for Venezuela don't have a clue. Can't they ask the Chinese for help or something?
Negative Consequence? (Score:2)
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I think what they're trying to avoid is allowing politics to cause whiplash to the economy.
Subsidies. (Score:5, Insightful)
"If not managed properly, flooding the market with Iranian crude could carry its own negative consequences by suddenly making fracked oil in the US unprofitable."
You know all those people comaining about the money the government 'wastes' on subsidising green energy?
The government spends a lot more on oil, just less directly. Whole wars have been fought to keep that fuel affordable, and now they are even important enough to engage in market price manipulation to protect their profits.
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Whenever I see someone like you say, "all we need is alternative energy to get rid of our oil usage," I shake my head in disbelief at how horribly you can misunderstand the energy markets............
Table (Score:2)
>"Iran would not be coming to the negotiating table without the US oil boom."
This is a perfect example of how oil has created such a horrible political mess over the years. It has been very dangerous for us to be so dependent on the middle east.
While I am glad our increased independence is forcing Iran and such to the table, I really wish it were because we accomplished that independence through renewable energy sources. Still, I guess we should take what we can get for now.
Re:Table (Score:4, Insightful)
The sad part is that we're not using some great portion of the profits from oil to work on alternatives. When we run out of oil or its environmental effects become so deleterious that we can no longer justify its use, we will have squandered vast amounts of money and resources.
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The sad part is that we're not using some great portion of the profits from oil to work on alternatives. When we run out of oil or its environmental effects become so deleterious that we can no longer justify its use, we will have squandered vast amounts of money and resources.
The implication here is that there is no better use for those profits on oil than to find alternatives to oil. Or rather I should say, to find more alternatives than the vast assortment we already have. I think that is deeply in error.
The problem is threefold. First, we already have huge investments in alternatives to oil and related industries. Second, oil remains too cheap for the alternatives to be viable and isn't sufficiently harmful to preclude its use on your other stated grounds. Third, when oil
I call BS (Score:2)
China could easily pick up the slack.
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Where are the Chinese oil fields? How much of the world supply of oil does China produce?
I don't think for a second that China could "pick up the slack".
Money Talks (Score:3)
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**reduction in demand** not fracking! (Score:2)
Misleading article...the whole context is wrong...
First off, the collusion in the oil industry is not fully known, so we are just guessing when we talk about 'global supply'
2nd, the US does not get its oil from Iran...our demand/supply is tagentially not directly related
3rd and most importantly for this PR propaganda of a TFA: It was a **decrease in demand** not fracking!
If the US automakers hadn't **killed the electric car** there would have been at least an **equal drop in demand**
Fracking has *nothing* t
Oil is a commodity (Score:2)
2nd, the US does not get its oil from Iran...our demand/supply is tagentially not directly related
Oil is a commodity. Every barrel the United States doesn't buy from country A is a barrel that country A gets to sell instead of Iran.
3rd and most importantly for this PR propaganda of a TFA: It was a **decrease in demand** not fracking!
Perhaps the truth is both an increase in supply due to substitution with fracked gas and a decrease in demand due to CAFE and foreign counterparts.
Argument is an oversimplification (Score:3)
Oil is a commodity. The sky is blue.
that doesn't mean you have a point...you have *half* a point...your argument has only one leg to stand on...
wrong...you are ignoring important distinctions leading to a reductive argument
the global energy industry is not like AP Economics...the concept of supply/demand you illustrate above is about on the level of trying to talk quantum entanglement by comment
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The US can import oil from certain suppliers for very cheap compared to others
I'm interested. Where can I read more about these suppliers that give discounts to the United States so that I don't make the same mistake?
Fracking does not produce the oil that becomes gasoline
Correct. Hydrofracturing doesn't produce anything. It does help extract natural gas, a product that can substitute for gasoline in CNG-converted cars. It's not an overnight substitution, as converting a gasoline vehicle to CNG isn't cost-free. But over time, as fleets of CNG bi-fuel vehicles are deployed, the substitution effect reduces gasoline demand.
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You can also convert natural gas to diesel using Fischer-Tropsch. However that requires infrastructure to do it.
AFAIK fracking is about more than natural gas however.
Saudi Arabia (Score:2)
check out Aamaco...wholly owned subsidiary of Saudi Aramco ;)
then check out who Bush Sr. was partying with on 9/11 :P
Amoco not affiliated with Aramco (Score:2)
check out Aamaco...wholly owned subsidiary of Saudi Aramco ;)
Never heard of "Aamaco". There's "AAMCO", an automotive transmission repair company. There's "Amoco", which used to be Standard Oil of Indiana and became part of BP a decade and a half ago. But Wikipedia's article about Amoco mentions nothing about Saudi Aramco. Its article about Saudi Aramco does, however mention Saudi Aramco's origin in a joint venture between the companies that became Chevron and Texaco, which later drew investment from what is now ExxonMobil. Between 1973 and 1980, however, the Saudis a
so, you found it, in other words (Score:2)
yes. exactly.
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If the US automakers hadn't **killed the electric car** there would have been at least an **equal drop in demand**
Someone should tell all the Tesla and Leaf drivers their cars are dead.
US consumption of oil is way down (Score:2, Informative)
Increased supply is only part of the equation.
US oil consumption has dropped down to mid 1990's level: http://www.eia.gov/countries/country-data.cfm?fips=US#pet [eia.gov]
The trend of declining oil consumption should continue due to factors such as:
- continued underemployment
- aging population
- urbanization
- improved vehicle fuel efficiency
Also, Iran knows that if Republicans come back to power, Israel will be able to dupe the US into attacking Iran. It is prudent for Iran to negotiate a deal with an administration t
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Also, Iran knows that if Republicans come back to power, Israel will be able to dupe the US into attacking Iran. It is prudent for Iran to negotiate a deal with an administration that is capable of negotiating (and isn't Israel's puppet).
Since the Carter Administration, every President has said we need to negotiate a peace between Israel and Palestine, the middle east, etc. Every. Last. One. Don't give me that "the republicans..." bull... it's been everyone for the past 20 years. And with every new Presidency, nothing happens. America loves to say it'll get everyone to the negotiating table, and then they... don't. Even Jon Stewart from the Daily Show, who happens to be Jewish, says the US is impotent when it comes to Israel.
Also, how stupi
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I think we're going to see a surge in the prevalence of natural gas-powered ICE vehicles as well, plus a gradual rise in EVs.
I'll ignore your silly Republican-baiting.
Problem? (Score:4, Interesting)
flooding the market with Iranian crude could carry its own negative consequences by suddenly making fracked oil in the US unprofitable."
And this is a problem how, exactly? Fuck the frackers. Gimme my cheap gas. I'm sick of you bastards charging so much... you're squeezing the poor and putting our economy in the crapper. Cheap gas = fast economic recovery, not this stagnant crap.
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This article is complete bullcrap. There is no way the 1-2 million barrels per day that Iran produces is going to flood anything. US oil production is FOUR TIMES that of Iran's most optimistic max. Add in what's going on in Canada as well and the premise is flat out preposterous.
$150 a barrel (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the bubble where ideology and proof are one and the same.
Bad Headline, and there's more going on. (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, the USA is falling apart. Therefore the need for nukes isn't quite as extreme as it once was. Also, Germany and Denmark are pointing towards how an advanced society can operate without nukes or carbon, and in a place as sunny as Iran, this becomes a kind of no-brainer.
Iran's biggest worry is their biggest asset: The South Pars gas field. The Europeans want it BAD as an alternative to Russian natgas, and the Americans would love to take it away from Iran, just cuz the Americans are a bunch of greedy dicks who'd love to stick it to the Russians, and screw the Iranians in the process. As long as South Pars stays underground, the Russians have their captured market (Europe) and Iran has money in the bank. As long as Iran was banging the nuke drum, the Americans were able to keep their psychotic fear machine rolling. Now that the USA Empire is entering late afternoon, they can afford to play nice with them and their pointy little all american bullet headed saxon mother's sons. Franking is crushing the natgas market, but everyone knows franking is a temporary solution, so Iran will hold that Ace of South Pars and cash big time when they will need the money to transition to solar. At that point the USA will be in some kind of tizzy tea party dipshit media freak show - probably with Britney Spears running as a Republican and (fill in name of faceless bureaucrat) on the Democratic ticket and some frothing tool of the Koch guard as a third party spoiler.
Ya gotta look at this stuff with a longer term view...
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The idea that Germany and Denmark can operate without carbon or nukes is far from realized. In fact what the shutdown on nukes in Europe has caused is a boom in coal consumption, construction of new coal burning power plants in Europe and an increase in carbon emissions in Europe.
http://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21569039-europes-energy-policy-delivers-worst-all-possible-worlds-unwelcome-renaissance [economist.com]
Very incomplete article (Score:4, Informative)
Awful, Awful, Awful (Score:4, Insightful)
First, let's start with two facts, and let's assume they are true: "the US has increased its crude production by about 2 million barrels a day" and "Iran's oil exports have been cut in half since 2011 (PDF), from 2.5 million barrels per day to a bit more than 1 million today". The implication in the summary is that Iran's oil production was reduced because the US increased oil production. Let's think about this for a second. This argument would make sense if all three of these claims were true: (1) Iran and the US were the only oil producers in the world, (2) The US was the only oil consumer in the world, (3) US oil consumption remained stable over the past two years. None of these claims are true. First, oil is a global commodity - there are plenty of producers and plenty of consumers. To put this in context, the global oil production is about 80-90 million barrels per day ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_oil_production [wikipedia.org] ). So, why would it be true that an increase in 2 million barrels per day in the US would lead directly to a 1.5 million barrel reduction in Iran? Even worse, the US does not purchase any oil from Iran.(though there could be indirect effects, for example, a reduction in US oil purchasing could result in other nations purchasing more oil from Saudi Arabia or Canada, thus reducing their need to buy from Iran). If this is an indirect effect, then we would expect all oil-producing nations (*not* just Iran) to have a small reduction in oil sales (i.e. Saudi Arabia and Canada and Venezuela and other net-oil-export nations would all share in the decline).
In short, it's absolutely absurd to tie an increase of 2 million barrels/oil per day in the US to a 1.5 million barrel/oil per day sales reduction in Iran. These two things don't have any cause-and-effect relationship. They are merely correlated in time. (And I'd bet $100 that if the US never did any fracking, Iran would see the exact same decline in oil production.)
I can see the political implications of making this claim though: it allows (pro-oil) Republicans to pretend that fracking (which they support) resulted in forcing Iran (the country they hate) into a weaker position which pressures them to negotiate with the US. This allows them to take credit for Iran coming to the negotiating table while also undermining any anti-fracking talk. In short: if you damn liberals try to stop fracking, you're helping "Death to America" Iran. Why do you hate freedom?
or put another way (Score:2)
the sanctions on iran have artificially raised the price of crude, transferring trillions of dollars from consumers to producers
Making fracking unprofitable (Score:3)
How is making fracking unprofitable a negative thing?
Ayatollahs to step up funding to Green groups (Score:2)
The Ayatollahs and the House of Saud should increase their funding of the various North American Green groups. Without green group obstruction, we'd have another huge new source of oil in ANWR, we'd be almost done with the Keystone Pipeline, and we would have vast new production offshore.
Also useful to Ayatollahs and the Saudi royals:
- Boko Harem terrorist attacks threatening to destabilize oil production in Nigeria
- Socialist nationalization of oil production facilities in Venezuela under Chavez and Madur
oops (Score:2)
Rouhani is why (Score:5, Interesting)
I have no problem with that (Score:2)
In fact, I think it would be great if fracking and oil sands projects were unprofitable.
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This just in:
A politician tells a lie.
See the full report at eleven o'clock.
Re:Interesting argument (Score:5, Informative)
It's a global market - oil gets shipped all around the world via tanker. If the US buys less oil, that means the sellers have more oil to sell, which they in turn sell to someone else (Probably China, they have huge demand), who in turn then doesn't buy from Iran. It's all interconnected.
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Yet you posted something that is contradicted by it. Nor did your reply address the contradiction.
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You probably should have accounted for that in your original snarky comment then. /snark
Re:Interesting argument (Score:4, Informative)
Which doesn't matter for a global fungible commodity. Think of the oil and gas markets as giant buckets with streams of inputs from various sources and streams of outputs to other places. Direct inputs and outputs don't matter, just the net inputs and outputs.
Re:Interesting argument (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Interesting argument (Score:4, Interesting)
Interestingly enough the US imported more in 2012 from the Persian Gulf. We've mostly trimmed the amount of business we do with nations like Mexico, Nigeria, and Brazil, in response to our new gains in supply. This is just crude oil, a substantial part of US demand is met by imported petroleum products too, of course. U.S. Crude Oil Imports [eia.gov] Mexico is due to begin declining in production in the next few years, and the Trans Alaska Pipeline may have to be shut down soon as well - this is more of a wildcard, estimates of how low the flow through can go before it becomes unprofitable to operate vary a great deal - so new sources of supply are going to be needed, even with US demand having peaked and declining slowly owing to less driving/more efficient new vehicles/the slow inroads made by EVs removing demand for gasoline entirely.
read the fucking summary (Score:3, Informative)
'I think it's pretty clear that without the U.S. shale revolution, it never would have been possible to put this kind of embargo on Iran,'
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'I think it's pretty clear that without the U.S. shale revolution, it never would have been possible to put this kind of embargo on Iran,'
Just because the summary says something doesn't make it true - is the world oil production so tight that using sanctions to cut off 1.7% of the global production would be impossible without US shale oil? Neither the summary nor the linked article explain why only US shale could have made up the difference. The opinion of a single analyst is hardly "proof".
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It's not fracking, that caused Iranians not to export crude, it's that little thing called sanctions. - Says one person
'I think it's pretty clear that without the U.S. shale revolution, it never would have been possible to put this kind of embargo on Iran,' - Says someone else, who has a political agenda.
Well, clearly the first person had to be wrong. There's no other explanation.
Re:read the fucking summary (Score:5, Informative)
The 'fucking summary' is wrong, though. Iranian oil makes up a very tiny fraction of US imports.
It is not about how much US imports from Iran. It's the ability to shut down Iranian oil imports without having an effect on global oil prices, because US is now able to make up the difference. Just trying to be clear on what TFA 'claims', since, not being an oil industry expert, I have no clue whether it is true or not.
Re:read the fucking summary (Score:4, Insightful)
This is only sort of right. It is true that the US doesn't use Iranian oil, however, the oil it does or did import displaced oil other countries could use so it in effect would have had the same impacts as if the US was doing so. Let's look at this from a simple point of view. Suppose the world in it's entirety produced 10 units of oil per day. From that 10 units of oil, every single country and business that wanted to, could purchase and use oil at about $100 a subunit if it didn't already create their needs themselves. Now suppose the US of some other random country all the sudden decides that a producer cannot produce and sell 1 unit of oil. Now, whether the US or other random country ever purchased oil from them or not, the entire world has to get buy with 9 units total or ignore the sanctions to maintain the 10 units. That is unless the one unit was made up somewhere else allowing the sanctions to hold and creating 10 units.
The oil markets are not per country but rather world wide and drops in production in one area will globally impact prices if it isn't made up somewhere else. The US us making it up somewhere else.
This is probably more true then anything. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was a bit crazy, he was a twelver to start with but also held a grudge against the US for how they handled Iran's attempt to help with Afghanistan. So it was like telling a bi-polar girlfriend that her sister is cuter than she is or the dress she is wearing doesn't make her look as fat as the other ones. Most of the "freakish" anti western sentiment can be traced to the coalition forces booting his troops from Afghanistan making him look bad and his believe in the twelfth Imam coming back and delivering paradise.
Re:read the fucking summary (Score:5, Informative)
The 'fucking summary' is wrong, though. Iranian oil makes up a very tiny fraction of US imports.
You should look up the word fungible [wikipedia.org]. It makes little difference whether Iran sells direct to the USA or not. If Iran sells instead to Europe and China, and they participate in the sanctions, then they will have to buy elsewhere. Likewise, fracking in America means Americans import less, leaving more oil for others. There is only one world market for oil.
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True. But the sanctions were never all that impervious [thomsonreuters.com].
On the other hand, with reduced demand for their Oil, (due to the US being a net exporter of oil), there is more oil available on the market. Other oil importers don't need to go to Iran.
Theoretically, with less of a market for oil Iran should not need Nuclear power and could be meeting their energy demands with modern oil and gas generation facilities, Far less costly and easier to build.
Therefore, they don't NEED nuclear. And they can't make the cl
Re:Bull (Score:4, Informative)
(due to the US being a net exporter of oil)
You have a strange [eia.gov] notion of "net exporter".
And if you think it's too old data because of the shale oil "booming" the EIA also provides data for 2013 [eia.gov].
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I suspect he meant North America, but I can only speculate.
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That's correct. But remarkably, we are (recently) a net exporter of oil products:
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052970203441704577068670488306242 [wsj.com]
As I understand it, we put more effort into refineries, and apparently it's cheaper for some countries to let us import it, process it, and ship it. I'm not sure why more countries don't build their own refineries. Expertise? Pollution controls? Other needed raw materials?
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Therefore, they don't NEED nuclear.
That's right. And since they have lots of trees, they don't NEED oil and gas either. Let them burn wood! They're nothing but a bunch of sand niggers anyway. What would they know about the health hazards of smog, right? You're a bigoted asshole.
US is a net importer (Score:4, Informative)
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Therefore, they don't NEED nuclear.
Sure, let's keep burning those fossils fuels to the bitter end.
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"Theoretically, with less of a market for oil Iran should not need Nuclear power and could be meeting their energy demands with modern oil and gas generation facilities, Far less costly and easier to build."
Theoretically, any gallon of oil that gets burned in Iran can't be exported for a profit and any gallon of oil that doesn't get into the world out of its reserves is a gallon that doesn't add money to its gross domestic product.
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Yes, yes, thank you Captain Obvious.
The point is that the spending on Nuclear energy may vastly exceed the revenue from Oil sales since the US has reduced its demand to the point that it cuts Iranian exports in half, and the international price drops.
When you look at the Nuclear expenditure and the increasingly real probability that Israel will destroy it the minute it becomes active, there is even more reason for the Iranians to stall for time by pretending to negotiate.
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More likely the Israeli and puppet US sanctions are facing criticism and doubt and the US is more amendable to negotiation rather than being left to look like Israel's fool as the rest of the world abandons the sanctions. Israel of course will be kicking US politician's heads to continue the sanctions as Israel continues to attempt to position itself as the main power in the middle east, with the US military as it's puppet attack dog. The success or failure of the talks will be dependent upon how much face
I believe everything that I read (Score:5, Insightful)
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Or perhaps it isn't just a way for anybody to say anything. It just is.
Not everything has to be a conspiracy theory. Coincidences do happen, quite often in fact. If you disagree, then might I refer you to Alex Jones whose very words should be music to your ears.
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I agree that it is a coincidence that our increased oil production has brought Iran to the bargaining table, and that the negotiations have nothing to do with fracking at all.
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For that to make sense Iran's oil would have to be somehow less valuable than oil recovered from fracking. It isn't, if anything it's probably better because sweet crude tends to come from there. There's no reason their output would decrease unless they deliberately wanted it to.
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I agree with you that Iran's oil is more valuable. The reliability of the source is somewhat less, given the instability in the region.
I really don't believe that fracking has anything to do with Iran deciding to negotiate.
Remember, fracked sources have a very quick falloff. It's given rise to a term, "Red Queen effect" which means a fracked well has to do more and more fracking just to maintain the same level of output.
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-10-10/u-dot-s-dot-shale-oil-boom-may-not-las [businessweek.com]
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So essentially we've gotten nothing from fracking
Did you even RTFA^HS^HHeadline? "We" have leverage over Iran. Which is generally recognized as a good thing (feel free to argue).
Whether or not it's worth the vast environmental damage is for you to decide, but don't display your stupidity by claiming there are absolutely no upsides.
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I don't remember Israel, Pakistan, or India threatening their neighbors or openly supporting terrorist groups. There is a little more reason to be concerned with Iran then there was with other countries when they got the nukes.
Re:What was the point of the embargo again? (Score:5, Informative)
Wat?
I can't believe I just read that. If you don't remember these things, all it means is you need to revise your 20th century history again.
Let's review. Israel, in its extremely short life so far, has managed to obtain a global reputation for being insanely aggressive and warlike. The very creation of it led immediately to war with its new neighbours. Israel not only has nukes, but also created the Mossad, which openly assassinates people it doesn't like. Its leaders routinely threaten to attack or invade Iran if Israel's "friends" even think about being the slightest bit reasonable or diplomatic. Fear of what the completely crazy Israeli leadership might do if diplomacy fails is one of the reasons the rest of the world has implemented sanctions - it's seen as marginally preferable to Israel starting all out war in the middle east, which we know they wouldn't hesitate to do.
Pakistan and India have been at each others throats since the moment India became independent from the British Empire. The Partition was the rest of one of the most bloody civil wars in recent history. Since then both India and Pakistan have managed to obtain nukes, and their constant fighting over Kashmir is rated one of the most likely triggers for nuclear war. Each side routinely accuses the other of sponsoring terrorist attacks.
Of all the countries in the world you could have picked to try and make Iran look bad, you could not have chosen worse. Iran, despite the incredible amounts of shit they have had dumped on them in recent times, is not at all likely to invade a neighbour or randomly start a war in the middle east. I know this runs counter to US and Israeli propaganda, but there's no evidence at all that this is even slightly likely to happen - the Iranian leader has even said that war is un-Islamic, and he's really big on not doing things that are un-Islamic. Contrast this to the Israeli leaders who talk about war all the time.
BTW the story is crap. It's been obvious for ages that the sanctions have been put in place because America is Israeli's bitch and Europe is America's bitch. They aren't going to be removed, ever, because the people who control the sanctions regime are motivated by power, and only power. See how the moment it looked like there might be progress in Geneva the American's were running to Israel to re-assure them that the sanctions weren't going to be lifted no matter what happens (and that's despite them being struck down as illegal in European courts).
Re: (Score:3)
Comprehension isn't one of your dtrong points is it? Read again what wad said. When the got nuke capabilities, india and pakistan were not fighting, israel , was seen as pure defensive when they got theirs. None of the countries were seen as hhostile to other countries when they got their nukes. Everything you said happened after they got their nukes and they were seen to br defensive and not a world threat. In fact, even what you mentioning happening, none of the nukes have been used offensivly making my p