Russian oil trading well above price cap

Energy News Beat

The G7 and EU have imposed a $60 per barrel price ceiling mechanism in an effort to curtail Moscow’s energy revenues

The average price of Russia’s flagship Urals blend of crude oil was $81.52 a barrel in October, the Ministry of Finance reported on Wednesday, 35% above the $60 price cap imposed by G7 and the EU in December.

The discount to the Brent benchmark last month stood at $9.57 per barrel.

Data shows that in annual terms, the average cost of Urals has increased by 15%. In October 2022, a barrel of Russian oil traded at $70.62.

However, in monthly terms the cost of Urals decreased by nearly 2%. In September, a barrel of Russian crude cost an average of $83.08. During the first 10 months of this year, the average price of Urals decreased significantly compared to the same period of 2022, standing at $61.84 per barrel versus $79.57.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said last month that Russian oil export revenue surged by $1.8 billion in September, describing the spike as a combination of growth in total export volumes and higher average prices for Russian crude and oil products. Russia netted $18.8 billion from oil exports in September, making it the most profitable month since July 2022, according to the IEA.

The EU and G7 countries have largely failed to enforce a $60 per barrel price cap on Russian seaborne oil exports which was agreed in December 2022, according to data. Similar restrictions were introduced in February for exports of Russian petroleum products. The measures were aimed at reducing Russia’s energy revenues.


READ MORE:
Russia’s oil revenues surge – IEA

Russian President Vladimir Putin subsequently signed a decree, which took effect on February 1, introducing retaliatory measures to the price cap on Russian oil exports. It bans the supply of oil and petroleum products to countries applying a price cap in their contracts and also prohibits deliveries if a contract directly or indirectly mentions the cap.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

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Daily Energy Standup Episode #243 – Russia Increases Oil Exports, EU Eyes Sanctions; Norway Rethinks EV Leadership, California EV Challenges

Energy News Beat

Daily Standup Top Stories

Russia’s Oil Exports Climb Despite Its Commitment To Cut Supply

By Tsvetana Paraskova of OilPrice.com Russia’s crude oil exports by sea have been exceeding the country’s targeted export reductions as part of the OPEC+ pact for weeks, with the most recent week’s observed shipments as […]

Russia poised to ‘sharply increase’ oil exports in November – Kpler

Analysts link the move to maintenance works at several refineries and higher global crude prices Russia is likely to sharply increase oil exports in November, business daily Kommersant reported on Tuesday, citing Kpler analysts. According […]

EU looks to expand sanctions on Russia – Bloomberg

The bloc has so far imposed 11 packages of restrictions against Moscow over the Ukraine conflict The European Union is in talks on a new round of sanctions that would impact some €5 billion ($5.3 […]

Why Norway — the poster child for electric cars — is having second thoughts

OSLO, Norway — With motor vehicles generating nearly a 10th of global CO2 emissions, governments and environmentalists around the world are scrambling to mitigate the damage. In wealthy countries, strategies often revolve around electrifying cars — and […]

California’s EV conundrums

Without crude oil that is the basis for most of the products now in society, citizens of developing nations may never be able to enjoy the abundant lifestyles available to wealthier countries. As California is […]

Highlights of the Podcast

00:00 – Intro
03:47 – Russia poised to ‘sharply increase’ oil exports in November – Kpler
05:09 – Russia’s Oil Exports Climb Despite Its Commitment To Cut Supply
06:38 – EU looks to expand sanctions on Russia – Bloomberg
08:58 – Why Norway — the poster child for electric cars — is having second thoughts
12:14 – California’s EV conundrums
14:25 – Markets Update
19:10 – Earnings: Northern Oil and Gas reported strong earnings with record quarterly production.
22:12 – Outro

Follow Stuart On LinkedIn and Twitter

Follow Michael On LinkedIn and Twitter

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Michael Tanner: [00:00:15] What is going on? Everybody, welcome in to another edition of the Daily Energy News Beat. Stand up here on this gorgeous Thursday, November 2nd, 2023. As always, I’m your humble correspondent, Michael Tanner, coming to you from an undisclosed location here in Dallas, Texas, joined by the executive producer of the show, the purveyor of the show and the director and publisher of the world’s greatest Web site, EnergyNewsBeat.com Stuart Turley, My man. We do this. [00:00:38][23.2]

Stuart Turley: [00:00:38] It’s is a beautiful day in the neighborhood. And what a great day we’ve had. And you crack me up right before the show. You’re sitting there. I got to travel. Shoot me. Oh, my goodness. [00:00:47][9.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:00:48] I do have to do some traveling this both of the next two weekends, actually. Luckily, it’s not going to impact the show. But I’ll be honest, I despise traveling and I’m now forced to do it these next two weekends. But the things you do for people you enjoy. So that’s beside the point. Regardless of my travel schedule, we have an absolutely banger of a show lined up. We’re going to fly all the way over to Russia and we’re going to start there first. Russia up to, quote, sharply increased oil exports in November. That’s according to our favorite data rig data provider, Kepler. Next up, oil exports. Russia’s oil exports climb despite its commitment to cut supply. Next up, EU looks to expand sanctions on Russia. That’s according to Bloomberg. Yikes. Next up, why Norway? The poster child for electric cars, is having second thoughts. And then after our tour of the EU, we finally come back to our favorite state. California’s The Conundrum stool. Then toss it over me will lightly touch on what happened in the markets. Considering the Fed’s decision to hold rates at current. What that means, hopefully for the energy markets. We did see oil and gas prices react to that. Natural gas holds fairly flat. We did see the EIA come out and release their crude oil storage numbers and we also had two earnings that we will slightly dive into. One of the issues favorite company north. And so, you know, we had to cover them and then we’ll dive into another earnings that I find I found very interesting and then we’ll let you guys get on out of here and and finish up your Thursday. We appreciate everybody who stuck with us. Stuck with us so far, man. I’m tongue tied today. Hopefully, hopefully this show gets better for the listener. But before we dive into all of this, guys, remember the news and analysis you’re about to hear is brought to you by the world’s greatest website www.energynewsbeat.com the best place for all of your energy news still in the team do a tremendous job keeping that up to speed with everything that you need to know to stay at the tip of the spear when it comes to the energy business. You could check us out on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube at Energy News Beat. Go give us a subscribe there. That’s really the best way to to support the show. You can email us [email protected] you can interact with the show via [email protected] Kind of our new data news combo. So check it out. Give us your feedback. You can also check out the description below, whether you’re on YouTube or podcast, see all of the links to the articles timestamps. You can jump ahead. See here about northern oil and gas is great quarter or learn what the you know the EIA crude oil numbers did or just you can’t get enough of you’re ready to hear about Russia you can do all of that by clicking on the timestamps again we appreciate our team for keeping that all up to speed. I’m going to Brett those Stu, where do you want to begin? Let’s buckle. [00:03:27][159.0]

Stuart Turley: [00:03:28] Up. Buckle up. It’s going to be a crazy flight and hopefully we don’t run into that flight lady or whatever her name. I don’t care what you send me. I mean, if you if you see that, we’ll you know, if you see that on your flight tomorrow, run. Okay. That was weird. Okay. Russia poised to sharply increase oil exports and no exports. But now you got me. Can’t talk exports in November. I’ll tell you what this is. Analysts link the move to maintenance works in several oil refineries and higher global crude prices. Russia is likely to increase all exports in November. Here’s some key numbers, Michael. 200,000 barrels per day increase in next month, reaching up to 3.7 billion barrels per day. That’s a bunch. [00:04:22][53.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:04:23] It is, but. [00:04:23][0.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:04:23] Billion barrels per day. That is a bunch. And here’s that’s even. [00:04:26][3.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:04:27] What’s interesting is this comes in the face of the fact that the next article you’re about to cover, which is or one of the articles that we’re looking at, is EU looks to expand sanctions on Russia. So I know I’m jumping ahead here, but just the sharp decrease between what’s going on on the actual ground level, which is Keppler they’re a data provider. They’re not going to just say that without having some underlying facts. Well, then why would the EU be looking to increase sanctions? It’s almost as if what you’ve been saying this whole time is absolutely true. So do sanctions don’t work? [00:04:59][31.5]

Stuart Turley: [00:05:00] Absolutely they don’t work. And all they do. Putin laughs. Eh? He laughs all the way to the bank. So anyway, let’s go ahead and go to the next article here. Russia’s oil exports climb despite commitment to cut. Supply. Here’s where I got a little tickle at this article here. A little bit. What? Politicians actually tells the truth, right? So is it Novak, their head of their oil and energy? Is he over there going, Oh, yeah, okay. He’s going to do an imitation of Putin. So this is Stuart Turley imitating Novak. Who’s imitating Burton? Hey, I will cut. Right. So if you sit back and kind of take a look, the four week average crude shipments out of Russia were slightly lower than 3.48 million in the week of October 29th, around 20,000 barrels per day compared to the four week average the week before. Here’s where it goes. Russia has pledged to reduce its oil exports by 300,000 barrels per day until the end of 2023. In a show of solidarity with its Opec+ partner, Saudi Arabia. They’re wanting to help increase the price because, Michael, if you remember our article a couple of days there. Saudi Arabia wants it at that 122 107 to 120 mark. So Russia is saying yes, but they’re doing the old is shaking their head. Yes. And your wife is saying, did you take the trash out and you’re going, Yeah. No, I didn’t. So it’s pretty interesting when you take a look at this. But what is pre this is a precursor to the other article. You gave a hint that the EU looks to expand sanctions on Russia. Why did the sanctions cross the road? It was to try to penalize somebody. And this was not what happened. I mean, so BLOCK has so far imposed 11 packages of restrictions against Moscow over the Ukraine. They are now talking about the next round, which would impact some $5.3 billion trade with Russia. This is nuts. It’s going to they’re targeting trying to skirt the bans through third countries. They can’t even, you know, manage their way out of a paper bag, let alone a crisis. [00:07:17][137.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:07:18] Yeah, I mean, I don’t want to make it seem like we’re just we’re standing up for Russia. It’s clearly what they’re doing in Ukraine is wrong, But it’s pretty funny to the level at which we will go to attempt to sanction somebody without really doing it. I mean, they’re trying to go after the loopholes in which they’re using to get around the current sanctions. But all this rules into it’s clear sanctions don’t work. And if they’re able to skirt and get access to the dark fleet, I guarantee now they’re going to have access and get around these. So it all comes back to say, you know, like you said, you can say you’re in you’ve passed sanctions on one hand without really enforcing anything on the other. [00:07:53][35.0]

Stuart Turley: [00:07:53] Oh, it’s like I’m President Biden and I use the word loosely because he doesn’t even know he’s president. And when you sit back and think he listened. Do you remember right before we were on this, right as he released these sanctions on the Nord Stream? He goes, oh, yeah, you guys go ahead, put in the Nord Stream. And then they did not enforce the sanctions on Iran in two different ways. And that went from Trump under Trump. They were doing less than 300,000. They were lucky to do the 250000 to 300000 in Iran under Trump. Now they’re up there with Russia at that 3 million barrel mark, 3.5 million. This is not. [00:08:41][47.8]

Michael Tanner: [00:08:42] So. It really is nuts. And I think it goes to show, unfortunately, you’ve been right from the beginning. Sanctions don’t work. Let’s go to Norway. [00:08:50][7.4]

Stuart Turley: [00:08:51] Let’s go around. I really want to go to Norway. I just really think this is going to be a fun one. And Michael, why Norway? The poster child for electric cars, is having second thoughts. This article is not just 100% bashing on EVs. It’s because this is their way of life. And just as t this article up a little bit, Norway has so much electric hydro that it makes sense. Everybody was all on board because their cost of energy is very low when it comes in and you’re using hydro. You know I love me some hydro. I got some right over here. Okay, let’s go through this. So he flew across the Atlantic to see what the fuss about was this. The evening TV boom has really taken a look. No Norway one really took their cities and their towns and became more like the U.S. and they people really enjoyed being able to get out and see all the beautiful sights. And then you take a look at everybody, all of the world controlling folks. They’re wanting to shut down everything. Norway does not have any public transportation. So even if you don’t want a car, people in town wanted to get to their lake houses. So. When you take a look at this now, it fizzled. Norway’s dreams of becoming a global hub of TV manufacturing fizzles when the companies ran into financial problems. Look at this. If our producer can roll this cam, this picture in Michael, scroll down in the in the thing. Do you see the little red car in the center that that. [00:10:36][104.9]

Michael Tanner: [00:10:37] Toy things you got as a kid where like you is like a Flintstone car where you have to use your feet to pedal. [00:10:41][4.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:10:42] Oh, no kidding. I’m over here going for would not want to get into that. You know, if Thor was out of Norse mythology, he would laugh that it’s about as big as his hammer is this car. So when you come down, even subsidies, fuel, car sales. But Norway’s cities wanted fewer cars and the citizens wanted more cars. They didn’t want to follow this. What are you seeing in this trend of the story? It’s the same thing that’s happening in the U.S. People aren’t going to give up their cars. So I can see that this is also going to be a resurgence in the ice engines as well, too. [00:11:25][42.6]

Michael Tanner: [00:11:25] Well, and I mean, again, you have to remember, Norway is a small country. It may slightly work. Now, again, I think the the point of this article is that something that went was intended to be good, which was a big subsidy for EVs, turned out to basically only be a subsidy for the rich because they started buying EV Porsches and the lower income people still didn’t move the needle to even give them a car. So it is interesting considering that fact. I mean, you’re talking about, you know, only the, you know, $45,000 of tax free incentives to order and buy EVs. That’s insane. Clearly, the United States can’t do that. But I think it’s an interesting it’s an interesting article, but I think there’s not much analogy that we can really compare other than what’s going on in our favorite state, California, which I think is up next. [00:12:11][45.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:12:12] Oh, it is. All right. California’s EV conundrums. You got to love a good California. And you know, I got to give a shout out to half of the state that is listening to us because we get such huge numbers out of California. We got to love it. And so I think that there is there is hope for California since half of them listen to the podcast. But so yeah, exactly. [00:12:35][23.6]

Michael Tanner: [00:12:36] So we only know that we at least know there’s four people on board. [00:12:40][4.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:12:41] All right. So, you know, California followed Germany and tried to lead the world to zero crude oil. So if we take a look at this, the conundrums around California TV is a nice list here of eight things. We’re not going to go through all of them. But due to the EV battery fire, this is number four on the list, Michael. Questionable means of transporting EVs from foreign manufacturers to the U.S. And when you and I talked about this on the other show, insurance is causing it. So they don’t want them on the transports coming across the pond. Conditions have grown so dire for the supply chain that one’s another one. And so now it’s links to the Chinese slave labor unions. So it’s one thing to have a slave labor, a labor union, it’s another to have a slave labor union. Maybe they would go on strike. That was funny, by the way. [00:13:35][54.2]

Michael Tanner: [00:13:36] Okay, I’m going I’m about to go on strike. [00:13:38][1.7]

Stuart Turley: [00:13:39] So the rate is you guys. [00:13:40][1.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:13:41] The Energy News Beat podcast is unionizing, right? [00:13:43][2.2]

Stuart Turley: [00:13:43] Except your H.R.. How in the world are you going. [00:13:46][2.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:13:46] To I mean, your hand management. So how does that work? [00:13:48][2.4]

Stuart Turley: [00:13:49] Oh, my gosh, You’re in trouble, dude. Okay. The regulatory tax landscape led the steady drop in the number of California refineries. It’s not going to happen, dude. I mean, California cannot. Absolutely. I in our story yesterday on yesterday’s podcast, natural gas, compressed natural gas, I guarantee you that’s the road for shipping. And if California wants to eat, they’re going to love natural gas or compressed natural gas coming around the corner for those engines. So. [00:14:21][32.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:22] Yep, absolutely. [00:14:22][0.3]

Stuart Turley: [00:14:23] After you, dude. [00:14:23][0.8]

Michael Tanner: [00:14:24] All right. Well, go ahead. Move over to the finance segment then. You know, pretty decent day for the overall markets. We saw the S&P 500 up one percentage point, NASDAQ up one and three quarters percentage points, mainly off to the back of the Federal Reserve, confirming what I think people mostly expected to happen. But it’s still you know, I think the market breathed a sigh of relief because, you know, we didn’t know what was going to happen considering all of the things that the Fed has done. But the Fed has come out and officially not raised rates. They’ve kept their their base base interest rate at five and a quarter to five and a half, which is really where it’s been since July. You know, this is the basically the second meeting where they’ve chosen to hold out of a string of 11 rate hike, which include four in 2023. You know, Jerome Powell came out was a little bit more optimistic that these higher rates are doing what they think. I love how he continued to talk about how the labor market was still tight. And, you know, if you’re if you’re I somebody who understands Fed speak, that means that they’ve got to get that unemployment rate higher because that’s going to now bring inflation down. So, you know, you got to remember, you know, they actively are raising rates to put people out of work so that inflation comes down and does what they want to do. Now, they’ll give you Fed speak for all the other junk. And Jerome Powell is probably one of the more what I would call least fed speak of all the Fed. I mean, it was hard to listen to Greenspan. It was even it was hard to listen to Ben Bernanke. I mean, that guy was that was he was probably the one that perfected the idea of Fed speak. Janet Yellen was had a little bit of that. But, you know, Jerome Powell coming from the investment banking world is actually fairly straight up and down considering the fact that you know what his predecessors are. So I think that really that decision, I think, filter both through the financial, you know, the overall financial markets, but really into energy. We saw, you know, with rates where they were, we did actually see a drop of oil down to 80, 97. That could have also been due to the fact that we saw a crude oil inventory build of about 800,000 barrels. That was a little bit less. It was less than what was expected. So you think the Street would like it? But I think the overall sentiment is that this this this war that’s going on in Israel and know we keep coming back to it, it doesn’t seem like there’s going to be any supply disruptions. And I think that’s beginning to settle in as we move forward. And that premium that we’ve been trading on due to the fact that this, you know, supposedly the heightened tension war between Israel and Gaza, it seems like it’s going to be you know, I hate to say it so long as a fear, but a conventional war, Israel’s going to invade Gaza and that’s it. Nothing. You know, it’s like nothing’s going to happen when it comes to the overall energy markets. You know, you know, not that we want that to happen, but that’s the sentiment that I think is settling in right now. STU So I don’t know how you see that conflict going from an energy standpoint, but I think the market has sort of extracted about all of that premium that was trading into it when it comes to war. I mean, we’re sitting at 80, 95 right now. [00:17:18][173.9]

Stuart Turley: [00:17:18] I know and I disagree with you. I do think there is some coming around the corner where they are kind of confused on them. But now let me go back to speak in Fed. I think that Powell actually I would understand the Coneheads better than a Fed if he’s beaten. Half the guard thought. I understand that more than what I understand from Powell. So that’s pretty sad when you say you know, naff all the Garth thought and it makes more sense. There is no way that they can fix inflation. Now let’s come back over here to the other side of this coin. I think the war is going to really dramatically impact energy prices. And there’s because several reasons, and that is the lack of investment in oil. And you’ve heard several of the big boys, Exxon, come out and say it and everything else and they must listen to the podcast as well, Michael, because they did actually say, you know, we need trillions invested in order to keep it going. Even if there is a recession, a global recession, there still is not enough production in order to lower it very long. I almost personally believe that there is somehow price manipulation going on on the oil. I don’t I have no nothing to base it on, but nothing from all the experts I’ve talked to in the last several days says that it absolutely makes sense. Yeah. [00:18:52][93.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:18:52] No, I mean, you’re you’re you’re you’re you’re absolutely right. And you know, it very well could increase. I just think what we’re seeing is the shrinking of that premium. But no, you’re absolutely right. Crazy things could happen. I want to point out, Stu, we had you know, we’re in the midst of earnings season right now. You go to energynewsbeat.com, look at our finance tags. You be able to see all of the different earnings that are rolling in to companies that I wanted to highlight to northern oil and gas your favorite. I love that you know you always say good management good numbers pretty good month for the are pretty good quarter for no other oil and gas. They get record quarterly production of about 102,000 bogey per day that’s 62% oil adjusted net income at 61,000,161 million with adjusted well at 385 million. IT technical gap net income was only 26,000,026.1 million. But that was just due to some charges. Excluding net working capital. They had some cash flow from operations about $263.9 million, which was an increase of 29% from the third quarter of 2022. It generated about $127 million of free cash flow. You got to remember, that’s a non-GAAP financial number. I always like to look at. You know, there are non-op companies do. So one of the big things you worry about is capital expenditures. Their third quarter CapEx budget was 260,000,120 182.3 million. That DOE was actually drilling a completion, drilling and completion or AFI buys. You know, there it was a little bit higher than the prior quarter due to the fact that they saw a slight increase in development activity occurred at one of their successful leases, ground game. So they went ahead and authorized, you know, two extra wells, one at 9.7 and 9 million. To give you an idea, their CapEx is spent about us is spent at about 59% of it is spent in the Permian. So you can tell they’re heavy in the Permian. They end with about 870 million of liquid eight or 879 million of liquidity. 166 of that is borrowing available under the credit facility, and they only sent about 13 million of cash. You got to love non-op business. Maybe you could just sit on a little amount of cash. It’s really nice. They got 2.2 billion of debt, but it’s sort of spread out. You know, I just say this because I got a little bit on our business do and they do it right? [00:21:10][138.1]

Stuart Turley: [00:21:11] Oh, absolutely. I’m I’m all in on non-op, especially when you got somebody that actually can understand the charts, they can understand the geological data and you can actually verify and validate drill, but verify. Oh, that’s a new one. [00:21:27][16.4]

Michael Tanner: [00:21:28] Drill bit there, but verify. [00:21:29][1.2]

Stuart Turley: [00:21:30] I like. [00:21:30][0.2]

Michael Tanner: [00:21:31] That. No fun. No, no, no. [00:21:32][1.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:21:33] Fine wildcat. There’s no wildcat. There’s no wildcats when you drill, but verify, That’s a T-shirt waiting to happen, dude. [00:21:40][7.5]

Michael Tanner: [00:21:41] Yeah. Some of the other earnings we’ve got available, guys. You know, marathon drop today, California Resources drop today. Pacific Land. We saw Apache, Silver Bow, Viper Energy Partners, Magnolia, Permian, Reese and and and bury Petroleum Earth stone or we ran those so me talking to a myriad of earnings go check those out on energy news beat you want to dive in more I mean they’re going to be good we saw commodity prices go up again. The headline really is this M&A space. So, Stu, we will continue to stay up to speed on that. Anything else, though? Well, what should we leave these folks with? [00:22:14][33.8]

Stuart Turley: [00:22:15] Buckle up. It’s going to be a lot of fun. I mean, feds big scares me. [00:22:20][4.3]

Michael Tanner: [00:22:20] Well, in so-to-speak. Buckle up, folks. So I will let you guys get out of there and get back to work. We appreciate you guys. Check this out. Have a great weekend. You’ll hear an interview from Stu. We dropping the ball on Friday. Stu, who drops interview wise? [00:22:33][13.5]

Stuart Turley: [00:22:34] We just dropped This one was a really good thank you for asking. We just dropped the secretary general of the African Petroleum Producers. They’re 18 member nations. It’s the African version of OPEC. They carry a big stick and they are phenomenal. I now have several new African leaders that are coming online that are going to be on the podcast. I’ll be able to share those names. And we also have about four others that I’m trying to work with the team on and which ones are going to send down. But we have, I think, six that are coming out very quickly though. [00:23:10][36.0]

Michael Tanner: [00:23:10] Yeah, you’ll see those on Friday and then Saturday you guys can hear the weekly recap where we cover, where we were, the suit, the team picks out some of their favorite favorite segments, slices it up and we send it out for a little Saturday news. You get a Sunday off and we will be back in your year on Monday, guys. So we appreciate it. Enjoy the rest of the week, guys. Enjoy the podcast on Friday, enjoy the weekly recap on Saturday. And Stu and I will see you on Monday, folks. [00:23:10][0.0][1352.0]

– Get in Contact With The Show –

The post Daily Energy Standup Episode #243 – Russia Increases Oil Exports, EU Eyes Sanctions; Norway Rethinks EV Leadership, California EV Challenges appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged

Energy News Beat

Gloomy conditions tend to be the best type for a budding new rally to really take hold.
The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Investor’s Business Daily. 

The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged

Energy News Beat

Gloomy conditions tend to be the best type for a budding new rally to really take hold.
The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Investor’s Business Daily. 

The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged

Energy News Beat

Gloomy conditions tend to be the best type for a budding new rally to really take hold.
The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Investor’s Business Daily. 

The post Nasdaq Marks This Bullish Shift After Fed Chief Powell’s Decision To Leave Rates Unchanged appeared first on Energy News Beat.

 

California’s EV conundrums

Energy News Beat

Without crude oil that is the basis for most of the products now in society, citizens of developing nations may never be able to enjoy the abundant lifestyles available to wealthier countries.

As California is attempting to lead the world toward zero crude oil production, worldwide efforts to meet the supply chain demands of extracting 4 billion gallons of crude oil every day from this planet, there may be shortages and inflation in perpetuity to continue to make all the products of our materialistic society, being enjoyed by the current residents in the wealthier countries on this planet.

Meanwhile, the list of conundrums surrounding California’s EV mandate is growing:

Lack of a sufficient number of buyers outside the elite profile of existing EV owners.

The Government’s lack of ethical, moral, and social responsibilities, by encouraging the social injustice of subsidies for well-off people who can afford EVs, continues exploiting the human rights of workers with yellow, brown, and black skin in the supply chain that are mining for exotic minerals and metals in poorer developing countries to support the green movement in wealthy countries.

Conditions have grown so dire for the supply chain of raw materials needed for EV batteries that Washington is cracking down on EV components that have links to Chinese Uyghur slave labor that are helping to build EVs.

Due to EV battery fire potentials, questionable means of transporting EVs from foreign manufacturers to the USA consumers.

Concerns about occasional electricity from wind and solar being able to charge EV batteries.

The limited life of the EV battery compared with conventional vehicles, the limitations of EVs during emergencies such as fires, floods, and power blackouts.

China restricting exports of graphite, a key mineral used for making EV batteries.

Automakers will continue to face challenging supply chain issues to make all the parts and components of EVs as the supply of oil derivatives manufactured from crude oil will be in shorter supply. The typical car today is made with about 260 pounds of plastics.

The crude oil industry’s time in California is limited, and the oil-refining industry is behaving as any industry would in comparable circumstances by transitioning its operations away from gasoline to activities that will prove to be more profitable in the long run. And as crude oil supply falls further, much higher gasoline prices will become a way of life for Californians, as the conundrums associated with EV mandates may be growing.

Standard economic logic indicates that high California gas prices should encourage fuels supply to be shipped to California from other states. But this doesn’t happen because no other state formulates California’s unique gasoline blend.

In addition, the West Coast fuels market is isolated from other supply/demand centers as California is an energy island. The Sierra Mountains are a natural barrier that prevents the state from pipeline access to any of that excess oil. As such, the West Coast is susceptible to unexpected outages from West Coast refineries as it is unable to refill an unexpected loss in supply by quickly supplying additional products from outside of the region.

If gasoline is imported into California, which does occur when a California refinery goes offline for repair or maintenance, California typically imports gasoline via marine shipments, which usually take three to four weeks to deliver. To meet the demands of the fourth largest economy in the world, imports of gasoline into California come from sources that include India, South Korea, the United Kingdom, Russia, and New Brunswick, Canada. This process is expensive, and takes weeks for the fuel to arrive at California ports.

California’s regulatory and tax landscape has led to a steady drop in the number of California refineries. In the early 1980s, when California’s population was 24 million, there were 40 operating refineries in the state, which refined over 2.5 million barrels of crude oil per day. Forty years later, with a population of 39 million, the number of refineries dropped by 14, which refines less than 2 million barrels of crude oil per day currently. The reality is that gasoline and diesel supply is decreasing while demand is increasing; is fuel (no pun intended) for continuous price increases.

Refineries are also shutting down because California has imposed a new regulation that bans the sale of gas-powered cars and light trucks by 2035, and the State requires 35 percent of new car sales to be zero-emission vehicles by 2026. It makes no economic sense to invest in new capacity in a state that has de facto outlawed the industry’s existence in a few years.

In addition, refineries are also shutting down because there are incredibly lucrative state and federal tax incentives to produce biofuels, totaling a whopping $1 per gallon, and cease the manufacturing of gasoline and diesel. A Marathon refinery that had a crude oil refining capacity of 166,000 barrels per day is being retrofitted to produce biodiesel and is expected to be producing biofuel next year. Similarly, Global Clean Energy is converting a 66,000-barrel-per-day-capacity refinery in Bakersfield to biodiesel, and World Energy has invested $350 million to convert a 50,000-barrel-per-day-capacity refinery to biodiesel.

California regulators and legislators are getting what they want: less crude oil produced and consumed. And Californians, particularly low- and middle-income households, are paying a dear price for the preferences of those Tesla-driving legislators and regulators as fuel demand remains against a diminishing supply of gasoline and diesel.

You cannot build something from nothing. Thus, California’s EV conundrums will most likely grow as everything that needs electricity, and every infrastructure, has parts and components that are made from oil derivatives manufactured from crude oil, from the light bulb to the iPhone, defibrillator, and all the parts of toilets, spacecraft, and EVs.

Source: Cfact.org

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DAVID BLACKMON: A Reckoning Is Coming For The Failing Energy Transition

Energy News Beat

It didn’t make a ton of news in the United States media, but a new study published by the International Energy Agency in mid-October emphasizes the enormous potential roadblock to a successful energy transition posed by a projected need to refurbish and double capacity on global electricity grids.

The study, titled, “Electricity Grids and Secure Energy Transitions,” advises governments that investments in expanding and refurbishing power grids must “nearly double by 2030 to over USD 600 billion per year after over a decade of stagnation at the global level, with emphasis on digitalising and modernising distribution grids.” That level of new investment in just this single piece of the overarching plans for a complete re-tooling of the global energy system is not currently a part of existing policies around the world. Given that most developed countries are already saddled with overwhelming public debt and the lack of means in developing countries, the prospect for a doubling of current grid investments seems dubious at best.

But, if anything, the goals laid out in this IEA missive only become more implausible as one reads through the list. Perhaps the most extraordinary among them is the agency’s estimate that reaching the UN’s goal of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 would require the refurbishment, upgrading and build-out of 80 million kilometers of new transmission lines by 2040. For those who struggle with conversion factors, 80 million km is roughly the equivalent of 50 million miles, or 2,000 times the Earth’s circumference.

That is the equivalent of all the transmission capacity built by mankind in history, and the IEA says it must be accomplished in just 17 years for this energy transition to succeed. IEA notes that achieving this extraordinary goal – among other improbable propositions laid out in the report – will require “secure supply chains and a skilled workforce,” neither of which currently exists.

How will this massive expansion in necessary skilled workers be achieved? The report doesn’t really say.

How will those supply chains – almost all of which are currently dominated by a single country, China – be secured? The report says only “Governments can support the expansion of supply chains by creating firm and transparent project pipelines and by standardising procurement and technical installations.” Sounds easy, right? But the U.S. congress has a hard time just agreeing what day of the week it is: The thought that it will suddenly develop the ability to engage in that sort of complex thinking and legislating in a constructive way is absurdly unlikely.

The report then somewhat hilariously points to another elephant residing in the energy transition’s living room, noting that governments all over the world need to streamline their energy permitting processes to accommodate this massive grid expansion. Again, using the U.S. congress as an example, West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin has spent the last 19 months trying to put together enough votes to approve legislation that would address just a small portion of what is really needed in this realm and had no success, with no real prospects of that changing until, at best, 2025, when the next congress will be sworn into office.

Think about this in the context of a story I wrote in June about the TransWest Express transmission project, which had finally received its final permits from the federal government. This is a line that is about 1300 miles long, designed to carry electricity generated by Wyoming wind farms to customers on the West coast. The punch line on this single transmission project is that the permitting process took 17 years to achieve. Assuming no new litigation arises, it will now take about another 3 years to complete and place into service.

Like so many of the work products published by the IEA in recent years, this report’s findings seem to be motivated mostly to help achieve political goals based mainly on wishful thinking, with little consideration given to long-ingrained dynamics at play in the real world. Even if overwhelming debt burdens and resource and supply chain challenges could be just wished away, the political impediments to achieving these unrealistic goals seem destined to force a day of reckoning for the entire energy transition plan.

Source: Dailycaller.com

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Why Norway — the poster child for electric cars — is having second thoughts

Energy News Beat

OSLO, Norway — With motor vehicles generating nearly a 10th of global CO2 emissions, governments and environmentalists around the world are scrambling to mitigate the damage. In wealthy countries, strategies often revolve around electrifying cars — and for good reason, many are looking to Norway for inspiration.

Over the last decade, Norway has emerged as the world’s undisputed leader in electric vehicle adoption. With generous government incentives available, 87 percent of the country’s new car sales are now fully electric, a share that dwarfs that of the European Union (13 percent) and the United States (7 percent). Norway’s muscular EV push has garnered headlines in outlets like the New York Times and the Guardian while drawing praise from the Environmental Defense Fund, the World Economic Forum, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk. “I’d like to thank the people of Norway again for their incredible support of electric vehicles,” he tweeted last December. “Norway rocks!!”

I’ve been writing about transportation for the better part of a decade, so all that fawning international attention piqued my curiosity. Does Norway offer a climate strategy that other countries could copy chapter and verse? Or has the hype outpaced the reality?

So I flew across the Atlantic to see what the fuss was about. I discovered a Norwegian EV bonanza that has indeed reduced emissions — but at the expense of compromising vital societal goals. Eye-popping EV subsidies have flowed largely to the affluent, contributing to the gap between rich and poor in a country proud of its egalitarian social policies.

Worse, the EV boom has hobbled Norwegian cities’ efforts to untether themselves from the automobile and enable residents to instead travel by transit or bicycle, decisions that do more to reduce emissions, enhance road safety, and enliven urban life than swapping a gas-powered car for an electric one.

Despite the hosannas from abroad, Norway’s government has begun to unwind some of its electrification subsidies in order to mitigate the downsides of no-holds-barred EV promotion.

“Countries should introduce EV subsidies in a way that doesn’t widen inequality or stimulate car use at the expense of other transport modes,” Bjørne Grimsrud, director of the transportation research center TØI, told me over coffee in Oslo. “But that’s what ended up happening here in Norway.”

And it could happen in other countries, too, including in the United States, where transportation is the single largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. The federal government now offers tantalizing rebates to Americans in the market for an electric car, but nothing at all for more climate-friendly vehicles like e-bikes or golf carts (nor a financial lifeline for beleaguered public subway and bus systems).

Ending the sales of gas-powered cars, as Norway is close to doing, is an essential step toward addressing climate change. But a 2020 study found that even the most optimistic forecasts for global EV adoption would not prevent a potentially catastrophic 2 degree Celsius rise in global temperatures. Reducing driving — not just gas-powered driving — is crucial.

As the world’s EV trendsetter, Norway’s experience offers a bevy of lessons for other nations seeking to decarbonize transportation. But some of those lessons are cautionary.

How Norway fell in love with the electric car

At first glance, Norway’s EV embrace might seem odd. The country lacks a domestic auto industry and its dominant export is, of all things, fossil fuels. Nevertheless, Norway’s unique geography and identity helped put it at the vanguard of car electrification.

Historically, Norway has been mostly rural; as recently as 1960, half the nation’s population resided in the countryside. But as the postwar economy boomed, Norwegians migrated to cities, and especially to their fast-growing, sprawling suburbs (much as Americans did at the time). They also fell hard for the automobile.

“The car was this genius idea for Norwegians,” Ulrik Eriksen, author of the book A Country on Four Wheels, told me over dinner in Oslo, after stashing his cargo e-bike. “Because there is plenty of land, cars opened up urban space for people to live in, letting more of them get sizable single-family homes.”

Norway embarked on a road-building binge, constructing bridges over fjords and boring tunnels through mountains to connect downtowns with new neighborhoods on the urban fringe. As Norwegian cities expanded, public transit took a back seat. Bergen, for instance, shuttered its extensive tramway service in the 1960s, dumping some of the trams into the North Sea.

Those decisions cast a long shadow: Norway still has one of Europe’s lowest rates of public transportation usage and a higher car ownership rate than Denmark and Sweden, its Scandinavian neighbors. “Most Norwegian cities now have more of a car-centric, American approach toward transportation than a multi-modal, European one,” Eriksen said.

Norway’s city residents often own an automobile even though they seldom use it, Oslo-based urban planner Anine Hartmann told me. “Norwegians identify as coming from the place where their parents or grandparents come from,” she said. “Many people have a car to return to that place or simply to visit a cabin in the country.”

By the 1990s, the automobile was Norway’s indispensable vehicle. It was then that Norwegian entrepreneurs launched two early electric car startups, Buddy and Think. Though their models were clunky and inefficient by today’s standards, the companies spurred excitement that Norway could become a global hub of EV production. Seeking to give the carmakers a tailwind, the Norwegian government exempted EVs from the country’s steep taxes on car purchases, which today add an average of $27,000 to each sale. Even better, EV owners — who at the time were few and far between — would not pay for tolls, parking, or ferries (over all those fjords) anywhere in the country.

Norway’s dreams of becoming a global hub of EV manufacturing quickly fizzled when the companies ran into financial problems. (This summer, I spotted a tiny, aged Buddy squeezed into an Oslo parking spot, dwarfed by SUVs on either side.) But the incentives remained on the books; since few people were buying EVs, their cost was negligible.

That changed as the global EV market improved in the mid-2010s, with carmakers like Tesla offering stylish, high-performance models that attracted more buyers. Norway’s EV policies were now championed as a centerpiece of the national effort to slow climate change in an economy whose electricity is already clean, produced largely from hydropower. “We want people to buy electric cars,” Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg said in 2019. “It is the most important thing you can do personally and privately to help reduce climate emissions.”

As EV models improved, Norwegians began to realize how valuable the cost savings from government incentives could be, particularly for urban commuters. After an already discounted EV purchase, owners’ ongoing expenses were minimal because Norwegian electricity is inexpensive (due to abundant hydropower), and EVs were exempt from tolls, parking, and ferries. EV owners were even invited to drive in bus-only lanes.

Hundreds of thousands of Norwegians responded to the government’s invitation to buy an EV, seemingly saving money and the planet in one fell swoop. But not every EV purchase replaced a gas guzzler; Grimsrud noted that the Norwegians owned 10 percent more cars per capita at the end of the 2010s than they did at the decade’s outset, in large part due to the EV incentives. “The families who could afford a second or third car ran off to the shop and bought one,” he said.

Norway’s incentives have unquestionably reshaped the country’s car market and reduced carbon emissions. EVs’ share of new vehicle sales surged from 1 percent in 2014 to 83 percent today. Around one in four cars on Norwegian roads is now electric, and the country’s surface transportation emissions fell 8.3 percent between 2014 and 2023.

The national government seems ready to declare victory. “When it comes to electrical vehicles, I’m quite proud,” Cecilie Knibe Kroglund, Norway’s state secretary for transportation, told me at the Oslo headquarters of the Ministry of Transport. “My main lesson is that incentives work. We have succeeded at a large scale.”

But not everyone shares her enthusiasm. Although the EV rush has reduced tailpipe emissions, it has also entrenched car dependence, which inflicts other kinds of damage. “Climate change gave Norway an opportunity to change how we travel,” said Eriksen. “I worry we had this once-in-a-generation chance to fix our transportation network, and we blew it.”

EV subsidies fueled car sales, but Norway’s cities want fewer cars

As electric car sales picked up throughout the 2010s, Norway placed few constraints on its EV incentives. Wealthy Norwegians could buy as many high-end EVs as they liked, receiving a full package of subsidies on each one. Luxury carmakers like Porsche advertised Norway’s promotions in their marketing materials.

Although the EV policies were fueling a car-buying frenzy for affluent residents, they offered little to those of limited means. Many low-income Norwegians do not own a car: In Bergen, for instance, 67 percent of households in the lowest income quartile go without one. One recent study found the likelihood that a Norwegian household would purchase an EV rose 26 percent with each 100,000 Norwegian Krones (around $11,000) in annual income, suggesting that electrification subsidies — which ballooned to $4 billion in 2022, equivalent to 2 percent of the national budget — have redistributed resources toward the rich.

Meanwhile, EV incentives have undermined the shift away from automobiles that Norwegian city officials, like their counterparts throughout Europe, are increasingly encouraging. “Everyone agrees that 100 percent of cars should be electric. That’s not the question,” Tiina Ruohonen, a climate advisor to the mayor of Oslo, told me. “The real question is whether you really need to own a car in Oslo.”

Over the last decade, Oslo has joined Bergen, Trondheim, and Stavanger (Norway’s four largest cities) in committing to meet all future trip growth through transit, biking, and walking — not cars. Seeking to reduce driving, Oslo has removed over 4,000 parking spots since 2016 while also building bike lanes, widening sidewalks, and adjusting traffic patterns to reduce through traffic. Those efforts helped the city achieve a remarkable milestone in 2019: For a full year, not a single pedestrian or cyclist was killed in a crash.

A street in Oslo’s city center. David Zipper for Vox

Walking and biking through Oslo helped me understand how it became so safe. The few motor vehicles I encountered within the city center moved carefully through streets thronged with pedestrians (some blocks are entirely car-free). Traffic typically moved at the speed of my e-bike; my one moment of anxiety came when a passing streetcar startled me as I gazed at Oslo’s picturesque harbor.

Many local leaders recognize that reducing car dependence will enhance urban life. “I am certain that when people imagine their ideal city, it would not be a dream of polluted air, cars jammed in endless traffic, or streets filled up with parked cars,” Hanne Marcussen, Oslo’s former vice mayor of urban development, told Fast Company in 2019.

But there are inherent conflicts between cities’ efforts to limit driving and the Norwegian government’s promotion of EVs. Oslo’s elimination of street parking and creation of pedestrian-only streets, for instance, nudge Norwegians away from driving, but they also diminish EVs’ usefulness.

“The way to get people to buy EVs is to make them easy and cheap to use,” said Eriksen. “But cities don’t want driving cars to be easy and cheap.” A recent study of EV subsidies in Bergen underscores those tensions, finding that promoting EV adoption hampers cities’ ability to build dense neighborhoods that shorten trips and strengthen transit.

The effect of EV adoption on public transportation has been a particular concern for Norway’s cities because boosting transit ridership has been a linchpin of local mobility strategies. Bergen, for instance, opened its first light rail line in 2010, and Trondheim overhauled its bus fleet in 2019. But because generous EV incentives make driving cheaper, they make public transportation relatively less cost-competitive.

Worse, EV promotions have shrunk the funding available to invest in transit improvements because Norwegian public transportation budgets are partly funded through the road tolls that the national government exempted EV owners from paying. As more Norwegians purchased EVs, transit revenue fell, threatening major investments like a new metro line in Oslo. “One of my primary concerns is that because we are subsidizing EVs through the cheaper toll roads, we don’t have the money to pay for big transit infrastructure projects,” said Eivind Trædal, an Oslo city councilmember who until a few weeks ago led the city’s council’s environment and transportation committee.

National officials, for their part, have stuck to pro-EV messaging and refrained from discouraging driving. Despite its generous incentives for electric cars, the Norwegian government provides no discounts for those buying e-bikes or e-cargo bikes (Oslo and Bergen offer limited programs for residents). The country’s current 12-year National Transport Plan includes initiatives to catalyze the adoption of zero-emissions vehicles, but none to reduce car trips.

Trædal said that politics led the Norwegian government to downplay reducing transportation emissions through transit, biking, and walking — all of which produce significantly fewer emissions than driving an EV. “Nobody’s mad about getting a cheaper new car, right?” he shrugged. “It’s politically easier to just give them car subsidies.”

When I asked Kroglund, the country’s transportation state secretary, if Norway’s government seeks to reduce total kilometers driven, she said it does not. “We don’t have a specific goal [to reduce driving],” she told me. “Of course, we would like to get more people on public transportation and bikes. But that is more something that cities work on.”

But national policy decisions inevitably affect local transportation efforts — and sometimes undermine them. Last October, the Norwegian Public Roads Administration opened E39, a four-lane highway into Bergen that the city had opposed due to concerns that it would increase driving. Those fears proved justified. Lars Ove Kvalbein, a Bergen city adviser on sustainable mobility, told me that before E39 opened, 30 percent of those traveling into the city from the south had used a car, but after the highway opened that share jumped to 40 percent.

“E39 was part of a national plan that smashed all the positive local plans to pieces,” he said.

Other countries can avoid repeating Norway’s mistakes

In the last few years, Norway has begun to confront the tensions within its push for car electrification. In 2017, the country began requiring EV owners to pay for parking, road tolls, and ferries, although they still receive a discount. As of this past January, only the first $45,000 of a new EV’s purchase price is tax-free. Buyers of the largest (and often priciest) EVs must also pay an additional fee that scales with vehicle weight.

“The argument is to make the tax system more fair,” said transportation state secretary Kroglund, “and not give benefits for things that are unnecessary for the transition to EVs.” As a result of the new policies, Norwegian sales of some high-end EVs, like the enormous Chinese Hongqi SUV, have collapsed.

Looking to the future, TØI’s Grimsrud hopes that Norway’s next 12-year National Transport Plan beginning in 2025 will include a goal of limiting total driving, which could restrain highway expansion plans and direct more investment toward transit. “If you start with a national goal for reducing transportation emissions, it will force you to focus more on public transportation and less on road construction,” he said.

For other countries, a clear Norwegian lesson is that a focus on reducing transportation emissions through electric car adoption can worsen inequality. Capping the price of eligible vehicles and limiting the number of EVs that a household can purchase tax-free are intuitive moves that Norway took only belatedly.

At the same time, Norway offers a warning about the dangers of promoting EVs at the expense of modes that are more beneficial to the environment as well as urban life. The national government’s decision to subsidize electric cars but not e-bikes makes no sense from a climate perspective, although the United States Congress made the same mistake when it passed the Inflation Reduction Act last year. At a minimum, countries should ensure that EV adoption does not deplete resources needed for public transportation investments, as has happened in Norway and could occur in the US, since EVs reduce gasoline tax revenues, a portion of which funds American transit.

With frequent bus and rail service, walkable city centers, and expanding networks of bike lanes (including, in Bergen, the longest purpose-built bike tunnel in the world), Norwegian cities are far ahead of American peers in providing viable alternatives to driving. Nevertheless, over the last decade, US cities have taken significant steps forward: Bike share programs are now a fixture, and new bus rapid transit lines have emerged in places like Madison, Richmond, and Washington, DC. New York City and San Francisco have even experimented with making major thoroughfares car-free. But if local initiatives aren’t matched with supportive federal policies, Norway’s experience suggests that an influx of electric vehicles can hinder efforts to escape the automobile’s urban stranglehold.

“The mistake is to think that EVs solve all your problems when it comes to transport,” said Ruohonen, the Oslo mayoral adviser. “They don’t.”

Source: Vox.com

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The Writing’s On The Great Wall For A China Crash

Energy News Beat

Authored by James Gorrie via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

As the saying goes, if you want to know what’s really going on, follow the money. That catchphrase doesn’t just apply to foreign companies and investors backing out of China. It also applies to the Chinese economy.

A No-Confidence Vote

In the midst of widespread economic duress and growing social disruption, following the money trail shows how Chinese investors are voting with their wallets.

Consumer spending is down, and the savings rate is up.

Capital is flowing out of China any way it can, and it all amounts to a definite no-confidence vote for Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

The CCP Tries to Hide the Facts

In true CCP fashion, the state puts the blame for its failed policies on those who point them out. Anyone who mentions the crumbling economy, for example, is guilty of creating “financial stability.” Even though the CCP would consider prosecuting journalists and economists who report accurately about the falling employment numbers and the high debt levels that plague local governments, China’s worsening economic conditions are too dramatic and widespread to hide.

Of course, financial stability isn’t threatened by people talking about it. It’s the CCP that’s destroying the economy. Even recent history shows that the less involved the Party is in the economy, the better it performs.

The property market and the development sector are perfect examples, though not the only ones. Both continue to be heavily manipulated by the CCP, and both are hemorrhaging value, as financial ruin in flagship companies such as Evergrande and Country Garden contribute to deteriorating conditions in the wider economy. Completed projects that remain unsold are being demolished, work on existing projects is being halted, and other development plans are being canceled, even as the development companies owe billions to creditors.

More Than a Cyclical Downturn

The reality of what’s happening is starting to dawn on the Chinese. Many understand that the current trend is much more than a cyclical downturn, which is typical of capitalist economies. Growth in the second quarter of 2023 was reported to be only 0.8 percent. Still, that statistic is hardly trustworthy in a country that runs on graft and political favors and routinely fudges the numbers. The reported third-quarter gain of 4.9 percent is touted but not believable, given the real estate collapse, falling consumer spending, and lower exports.

Going forward, as the CCP takes more control, a stagnant economy may be the best-case scenario. Jobs in property development, related industries, and manufacturing sectors are all struggling as foreign companies leave China’s shores.

A Stagnating Middle Class

Meanwhile, individual investors, mostly from the middle class—who put their life savings into properties that aren’t even built and likely won’t ever be built—are seeing their wealth evaporate before their eyes as valuations crater.

This stagnation is primarily due to two factors: internal policies and external ones. Internally, an economy based on graft and corruption rather than one based on market signals—such as the price mechanism that allocates resources and assets where they’re most needed in the economy—can’t sustain itself. Thus, turning profitable private enterprises into debt-ridden state-owned enterprises, which is a euphemism for confiscation by the CCP, has destroyed entrepreneurship—the economic engine of China.

Add to that the CCP’s fundamental shift from economic growth to internal security and stability. It’s a vicious cycle wherein more Party control results in less economic activity, financial duress, and civil discontent. The Party then doubles down on more state control and more oppression.

In short, the Party is more concerned with maintaining its grip on power than it is with growing the economy or supporting the middle class.

Companies Are Fleeing ‘Uninvestible’ China

But there are external factors, or consequences, as well.

Over the past year, the flight of Western manufacturers out of China has accelerated. American and European firms are seeing the writing on the wall. They see the world’s growing disenchantment with Beijing’s trade and foreign policies, with many anticipating a decline in economic stability and a greater degree of decoupling from China in the foreseeable future. As a result, they’re relocating their operations out of China to friendlier nations.

‘Friendshoring’ Making Things Worse

This trend is known as “friendshoring.” In essence, countries such as Vietnam, Indonesia, India, and Mexico are capturing companies exiting China. They offer less political risk, friendlier trade policies, lower labor costs, and are closer to markets. Barring any major shifts in Chinese leadership, companies leaving China are unlikely to return, which is a growing economic and financial gap for the CCP to fill.

Youth Unemployment Rate at Record High

Other symptoms of the collapse are evident, such as the soaring unemployment rate for young people. It is now a reported 20 percent, but counting those who live with their parents for financial reasons, it’s likely approaching 50 percent. Underemployment makes that picture even worse, which is leading to an angry younger generation. Disaffected youth who see no good options for a better future can be a volatile force to reckon with.

The Race to Exit Chinese Real Estate

All of these reasons and others are why some wealthy Chinese have been selling their China properties as quickly as they can. They’re desperately trying to move their money out of China and invest abroad before the value of their Chinese real estate holdings loses even more value. They know the trajectory of the Chinese economy and want out.

Many are buying real estate in Japan.

It’s not just proximity attracting Chinese investors to Japanese real estate, although that is a significant factor. Another enticement is that owning real estate (or a profitable business) in Japan can lead to long-term or even permanent residency visas. That gives Chinese investors an easy way out of the country to avoid the coming meltdown, as well as avoiding the iron hand of the CCP.

The “China miracle” is no more.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

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Cost of critical energy fuel spikes

Energy News Beat

Global uranium prices reached their highest point in more than 15 years in late October, according to COMEX data, with analysts attributing the sharp rise to a range of factors, including geopolitical tensions.

Uranium futures for November delivery jumped to $74.5 per pound on Monday, data shows. The radioactive metal’s price is up 55% since the beginning of the year.

Resurgent demand for uranium – which is widely used for nuclear energy – has been putting pressure on prices in light of limited global reserves. Analysts have been reporting renewed global interest in nuclear power amid declining energy supplies from Russia.

Adding to those concerns, Canadian miner Cameco, the world’s second largest uranium producer, has lowered output forecast for 2023. Another major producer, France’s Orano, has also been facing difficulties due to a recent coup in Niger, which accounts for 4% of global uranium output. The African country was the second-largest supplier of uranium to the EU last year as Russian energy supplies dwindled.


READ MORE:
Niger coup triggers global uranium price warning

The International Energy Agency (IEA) had previously projected a spike in worldwide demand for critical minerals, including uranium, due to renewed interest in nuclear power.

A recent report from the World Nuclear Association has forecast nuclear capacity growing nearly 80% and demand for uranium roughly doubling by 2040.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

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