...energy crises.Regarding the current energy crisis, it should be understood that in addition to the uncertainty about blocking transit/outbound traffic from the Persian Gulf:Firstly, it is not known how much production will remain after all this carnage in the Middle East? Here it is necessary to take into account the physical damage to the infrastructure + technological degradation after freezing the wells.Secondly, the war may drag on, as the United States does not demonstrate sufficient ...
...military superiority to solve an extremely specific military task – ensuring outbound traffic from the region and protecting critical infrastructure from drones and missiles. There is no other military task now, because all other goals are derived from the general goal – the functioning of trade flows in the region.If we evaluate the falling average annual oil supply volumes, there have been only two examples in world history – 1974, where the average annual volume decreased by 4.9% or 2.8...
... 1981 (-5.5%) YoY or (-3.45 million b/d), in 1982 (-3.8%) yoy or (-2.26 million b/d), then in 1983 (-1.1%) yoy or (-0.65 million b/d).In 1984, the market stabilized with an increase in production of 1.8% yoy, and in 1985 it decreased again by 0.5% yoy, while a full-fledged recovery in production began in 1986.How did prices react? 1978 – $12.9 on average per year per barrel, 1979 – $32.1, 1980 – $37.9, 1981 – $36.7, 1982 – $33.4, 1983 – $29.8, 1984 – $28.8, 1985 – $27.3.The maximum monthly...
... average price was in Nov.79 – $42 per barrel. The average annual peak was in 1980 (an increase of almost 3 times from the base of 1978) and then a gradual decline, but prices were high until 1985, followed by a collapse from 1986 to 1990 – an average of $18.Oil supply recovered to 1979 levels only by 1994, meaning the oil crisis had lasted for almost 15 years with varying intensity, so supply shocks of this magnitude are a long–term story.As for the countries of the Middle East, from a pe...