Here are 2 curves for oil consumption / production in the world (the results differ slightly after 2000):
A) from 1900 to 2005
Source: Wikipedia
B) 1975 to 2005
Source: French Union of Petroleum Industries
http://www.ufip.fr/?rubrique=1&ss_rubri ... 484&id=d_8
As a bonus, a map for 2002:
Evolution of production and world oil consumption
-
- Moderator
- posts: 79112
- Registration: 10/02/03, 14:06
- Location: Greenhouse planet
- x 10972
Hello,
I would have thought that during the last war 39-45 the petrol demand would have slightly increased, unless they were already boosting bombers and tanks to the water! not to mention the wells and refineries part in smoke ..
It is true that civilians spared the fuel,
If it had been necessary that the curve after 1960 continues on its trajectory I think that everything would have been syphoné, anyway, one is well gone to pump everything, even that which one not yet found!
Thank you for the details. I do not think the price is the solution, it will just spread a little consomation. The solution is to find another means of transport ..
Andre
I would have thought that during the last war 39-45 the petrol demand would have slightly increased, unless they were already boosting bombers and tanks to the water! not to mention the wells and refineries part in smoke ..
It is true that civilians spared the fuel,
If it had been necessary that the curve after 1960 continues on its trajectory I think that everything would have been syphoné, anyway, one is well gone to pump everything, even that which one not yet found!
Thank you for the details. I do not think the price is the solution, it will just spread a little consomation. The solution is to find another means of transport ..
Andre
0 x
-
- Econologue expert
- posts: 5111
- Registration: 28/09/09, 17:35
- Location: Isére
- x 554
-
- Econologue expert
- posts: 5111
- Registration: 28/09/09, 17:35
- Location: Isére
- x 554
Re: Evolution of production and world oil consumption
China's oil import record, 9.6 million b / d in October!
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News ... -High.html
China's Oil Imports Surge To Record High
By Irina Slav - Nov 08, 2018,
China's crude oil imports averaged 9.61 million barrels a day last month, customs data quoted by Reuters has revealed, with the agency noting the amount is the highest record. Once again, it was the independent refiners, or teapots, that drove them to increase their import quotas before they expired.
The total October volume of imports hit 40.80 million tons, of which teapots imported 8.22 million tons. Yet this was lower than the teapots' intake as forecast by S&P Platts last month, which was 9 million tons. It was, however, substantially higher than the 7.26 million tons independent Chinese refiners imported in September.
..........
https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News ... -High.html
1 x
-
- Econologue expert
- posts: 13644
- Registration: 17/03/14, 23:42
- Location: picardie
- x 1502
- Contact :
Re: Evolution of production and world oil consumption
Oil prices start to fall again
It is fashionable, in recent months, to announce that the price of a barrel of oil will soon rise to 100, 200, even 400 dollars. Oil analyst Art Berman, for his part, believes that the current bull cycle is coming to an end. Not only is the Iranian crisis in the process of being resolved, but world production has increased so much in 2018 that stocks have started to rise again. In the coming months, the price of oil will not collapse, but it will tend to decline.
The recent rise is first and foremost a reaction to Trump's threats, the August 7, to impose new sanctions against Iran. Markets feared a sharp drop in supplies and the price of Brent rose from 70,76 dollars on August 15 to 86,29 dollars on 1er October. The prospect of sanctions seeming to move away, the price had fallen back to 76,17 dollars on October 24.
0 x
-
- Similar topics
- Replies
- views
- Last message
-
- 103 Replies
- 64644 views
-
Last message by Remundo
View the latest post
30/07/23, 12:24A subject posted in the forum : Fossil fuels: oil, gas, coal and nuclear electricity (fission and fusion)
-
- 2 Replies
- 6780 views
-
Last message by sensei64
View the latest post
06/01/10, 20:00A subject posted in the forum : Fossil fuels: oil, gas, coal and nuclear electricity (fission and fusion)
Go back to "Fossil energies: oil, gas, coal and nuclear electricity (fission and fusion)"
Who is online ?
Users browsing this forum : No registered users and 288 guests