Wolf
Richter www.testosteronepit.com www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
What would have been a demented propagandist’s
flight of fancy a decade ago has become reality: For the first time
in history, the US imports more oil from our dear and reliable
neighbor Canada than from OPEC. With major consequences.
Two primary reasons:
- Rising oil production in Canada; hence, more oil to import.
- Soaring oil production in the US, hence drastically lower oil imports in general.
Their combination has come out of OPEC’s
hide. The chart, based on EIA data from January 1993 through January
2014, shows that imports from OPEC have been cut nearly in half from
about 200 million barrels during the peak months of January and
August 2008 to 102.7 million barrels in January 2014. During that
time, US domestic oil production has jumped 49%.
For
those who remember the oil embargo in the 1970s, what it did to the
price of gasoline at the pump, and how it sucked money out of your
wallet faster than you could put it back in – a condition that
persists today – and for those who always wondered why the heck
Saudi Arabia was ever considered an ally of
the US though it’s one of the worst dictatorships on the planet,
this is a welcome development.
US independence from all crude oil imports? Not
anytime soon. But North America as a whole – Mexico, US, and Canada
– will likely increase production enough to where imports from OPEC
become essentially irrelevant over the next few years.
Implications? You bet. For decades, oil has
been the driver of US foreign policy in the Middle East. Horrific and
costly wars were started for the general enrichment of US defense
contractors and others as part of this oil policy. But soon, America
should be able to simply shrug off any threats of extortion wafting
over from Saudi Arabia, or from the countries around the Persian
Gulf. As the Saudis and the Chinese become very unhappy bedfellows,
America’s hypocritical Middle East policies – we bow
reverentially before one dictator and bomb another – might become
just a tad less hypocritical, though I’m not all that hopeful in
that regard.
Another
conundrum: The tiny country of Belgium that became famous to the
chagrin of some people because it
did just fine for
a couple of years without a national government – well, it’s
growing an enormous mountain of US Treasuries. Read…. What
the Heck is Going on With US Treasuries In Belgium?
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