Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work on this. We aren't dependent. We are net exporters.
But oil barrel prices are tied together worldwide.
Also, the US is sitting on vast oil reserves that could be tapped in case of emergency. Currently prices aren't high enough for companies to want to go after those.
Yes. Here are the data: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/PET_MOVE_WKLY_DC_NUS-Z00_MBBLPD_W.htm
We both import and export, but exports are larger than imports. But if Saudi Arabia cuts prices, US producers have to reduce their prices, otherwise US users would just purchase the cheaper overseas oil.
The oil industry is used to boom and bust. The companies that go bust get swallowed up by those who are prepared for it. Saudi has tried to drive the US out of the market before, and it didn't work. The US industry just made dramatic strides in reducing their costs.
The thing about fracking is that it is quickly scalable. You drill a well, hit oil and, if prices are low, you wait. When prices go up, you frack the well and produce. It's called the "fracklog."
Anonymous wrote:Huh? We're really not. We haven't been, since fracking started.
Anonymous wrote:I have heard multiple times in the media that we are "oil independent" and we now export more than we import. I don't know if this is true or if its bullshit.
If true, why are we still dealing with these overly wealthy princes and sultans in Saudi Arabia???
Don't you think its still a national security issue that we have a dependency on mid east oil???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work on this. We aren't dependent. We are net exporters.
But oil barrel prices are tied together worldwide.
Also, the US is sitting on vast oil reserves that could be tapped in case of emergency. Currently prices aren't high enough for companies to want to go after those.
Yes. Here are the data: https://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/PET_MOVE_WKLY_DC_NUS-Z00_MBBLPD_W.htm
We both import and export, but exports are larger than imports. But if Saudi Arabia cuts prices, US producers have to reduce their prices, otherwise US users would just purchase the cheaper overseas oil.
Anonymous wrote:Oil is globally traded, there is a world market, so there is a world price (with some adjustments for local quality). So even if we don't import oil from Saudi, what it does has a huge impact on the price of oil here.
Anonymous wrote:I work on this. We aren't dependent. We are net exporters.
But oil barrel prices are tied together worldwide.
Also, the US is sitting on vast oil reserves that could be tapped in case of emergency. Currently prices aren't high enough for companies to want to go after those.