The elected president of Venezuela Edmundo González Urrutia had to flee to Spain and is currently in exile in that country after the regime issued an arrest warrant against him for subversion. González Urrutia obtained 67% of the votes in the election day of July 28, against 30% for Nicolás Maduro with 83.5% of the votes verified with published tally sheets, winning in all states (source: resultadosconvzla.com). We reject the arrest warrant, and the fraud intended by the National Electoral Council – CNE of Venezuela, proclaiming Nicolás Maduro as president-elect for a new presidential term and its ratification by the Supreme Court of Justice-TSJ, both without showing the voting minutes or any other support.  EnergiesNet ” Latin America & Caribbean web portal with news and information on Energy, Oil, Gas, Renewables, Engineering, Technology, and Environment.– Contact : Elio Ohep, editor at  EnergiesNet@gmail.com +584142763041-   The elected president of Venezuela Edmundo González Urrutia had to flee to Spain and is currently in exile in that country after the regime issued an arrest warrant against him for subversion. González Urrutia obtained 67% of the votes in the election day of July 28, against 30% for Nicolás Maduro with 83.5% of the votes verified with published tally sheets, winning in all states (source: resultadosconvzla.com). We reject the arrest warrant, and the fraud intended by the National Electoral Council – CNE of Venezuela, proclaiming Nicolás Maduro as president-elect for a new presidential term and its ratification by the Supreme Court of Justice-TSJ, both without showing the voting minutes or any other support.
10/02 Closing Prices  / revised 10/03/2024 07:51 GMT | 10/02   OPEC Basket  $74.62 +$3.28 cents | 10/02    Mexico Basket (MME)  $65.27 +$0.70 cents 08/31 Venezuela Basket (Merey)  $62 15   +$1.66 cents 10/02 NYMEX Light Sweet Crude $70.10 +$0.27 cents | 10/02 ICE Brent Sept $73.90 +$0.34 cents | 10/02 Gasoline RBOB NYC Harbor $1.9859 +0.0193 cents | 10/02 Heating oil NY Harbor  $2.1621 +0.0079 cents | 10/02 NYMEX Natural Gas $2.886 -0.010 cents | 09/27 Active U.S. Rig Count (Oil & Gas) 587 -1 | 10/03 USD/MXN Mexican Peso 19.4474 (data live) 10/03 EUR/USD  1.1030 (data live) | 10/03 US/Bs. (Bolivar)  $36.98120000 (data BCV) | Source: WTRG/MSN/Bloomberg/MarketWatch

IP Week: London’s Oil Party Week Is Back With Talk of a Coming Rally – Bloomberg

Skyscrapers and buildings on the City of London skyline at dusk.(Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg) International Energy Week 2023 is the global conference focused on transitioning out of the geopolitical and environmental crises facing energy.
Skyscrapers and buildings on the City of London skyline at dusk.(Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg) International Energy Week 2023 is the global conference focused on transitioning out of the geopolitical and environmental crises facing energy.

Alex Longley and Grant Smith, Bloomberg News

LONDON
EnergiesNet.com 02 27 2023

The oil industry’s biggest party is properly returning to London for the first time since the pandemic, and the hottest topic will be whether prices are gearing up for a major rally.  

As traders congregate in the glitzy cocktail bars and luxury hotels of Mayfair for International Energy Week, two issues will top the agenda: whether China’s economic reopening can bolster demand, and if sanctions on Russia will finally slash the energy giant’s supply.  

Oil prices have been stuck in a torpor so far in 2023, with Brent futures hovering near $85 a barrel. Yet as China rekindles economic activity and the world’s travel habits increasingly get back to normal, trading giants like Trafigura and Mercuria Energy Group see scope for a rebound. 

“Russian cuts and Chinese demand will be the two biggest talking points,” said Amrita Sen, chief oil analyst at London-based consultant Energy Aspects Ltd. “I am expecting a pretty strong east-versus-west divide in terms of views of the world” as Asia leads the demand surge.

After a low-key gathering last year, bars in Shepherd Market, sandwiched between two of London’s Royal Parks, will once again be packed with traders and brokers from across the globe. State oil companies from the Middle East are hiring out five-star hotels along Park Lane for evening events.

But while hydrocarbons will dominate conversations at social events in the evenings, their presence at the formal conference during the day is diminishing. 

Many traders still call the event by its former name, IP Week — with the initials standing for International Petroleum — but its organizers, the Energy Institute, rebranded the conference a few years ago as International Energy Week.   

Where panels were once dominated by oil executives and traders, there has more recently been a growing focus on the energy transition and sustainable finance. BP Plc chief executive Bernard Looney, one of the few oil CEOs scheduled to speak, has been at the forefront of reorienting away from fossil fuels.

Still, BP shied away from some of its green aspirations this month and back towards oil and gas as consumption bounces back from the pandemic and an investment-deprived industry struggles to keep pace. It’s that mismatch which is stirring the hopes of bulls for return to $100 oil later this year. 

The global Brent benchmark has traded in a range of a little more than $10 a barrel for much of the year, as swelling US inventories push crude away from the bumper volatility that defined 2022, when Brent spiked to near-record $139.

China Impetus

That could be about to change, as a recovery in consumption by China, the world’s largest crude imports, propels global demand to record levels by the end of the year. Chinese demand for jet fuel alone is expected to jump almost 30% between now and August to 908,000 barrels a day, according to BloombergNEF. 

Alongside the revival, traders will also be trying to gauge how sanctions on Russia’s exports of refined fuels and crude oil are unfolding. Two false dawns emerged in recent months when expected price spikes failed to materialize with the onset of sanctions on both. 

Moscow has said it plans to cut shipments from next month in retaliation for western-led sanctions, and there have been some signs of flows dropping off lately. It’s expected that there will be a smaller-than-usual Russian contingent in Mayfair this year. 

“People are traveling from all over the world to attend this,” said Keshav Lohiya, founder of Oilytics Ltd. in London. “I think the theme will be long-term structural issues. Yes, the markets are weak right now, but are commodities in a position to live without Russia for the long-term.”

bloomberg.com 02 26 2023

Share this news

Support EnergiesNet.com

By Elio Ohep · Launched in 1999 under Petroleumworld.com

Information & News on Latin America’s Energy, Oil, Gas, Renewables, Climate, Technology, Politics and Social issues

Contact : editor@petroleuworld.com


CopyRight©1999-2021, EnergiesNet.com™  / Elio Ohep – All rights reserved
 

This site is a public free site and it contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of business, environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have chosen to view the included information for research, information, and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission fromPetroleumworld or the copyright owner of the material.