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www.economist.com...
Big Oil is pretty small next to the industry's true giants: the national oil companies (NOCs) owned or controlled by the governments of oil-rich countries, which manage over 90% of the world's oil, depending on how you count. Of the 20 biggest oil firms, in terms of reserves of oil and gas, 16 are NOCs. Saudi Aramco, the biggest, has more than ten times the reserves that Exxon does.
"The increase in China's energy demand between 2002 and 2005 was equivalent to Japan's current annual energy use." This nugget of information, buried in the International Energy Agency's latest World Energy Outlook, tells one almost all one needs to know about what is happening to the world's energy economy. - Financial Times 11/13/07
Originally posted by Beachcoma
reply to post by BlueRidge
Okay, for the most part that made sense. But what about the cost of extracting the oil itself? Hasn't that increased due to reserves being in harder to reach locations? What about the fact that demand has also increased? There are more vehicles on the road, more products manufactured that require hydrocarbons as a raw material... these things should increase the demand and therefore the price, even if it were purchased with gold.
Originally posted by Beachcoma
reply to post by BlueRidge
Or the chart could suggest that the *actual* value of gold has increased slightly, hence why the price of oil in goldgrams remain steady.