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Old 08-10-2017, 11:03 AM   #566
Fozzie_DeBear
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The cover of the Economist this week

Over cover this week considers the death of the internal combustion engine. It has had a good run, but as batteries improve and regulators tighten rules on emissions, the end of the road is in sight. The transition to electric cars should be welcomed, but it will be a bumpy ride

...

And then there is oil. Roughly two-thirds of oil consumption in America is on the roads, and a fair amount of the rest uses up the by-products of refining crude oil to make petrol and diesel. The oil industry is divided about when to expect peak demand; Royal Dutch Shell says that it could be little more than a decade away. The prospect will weigh on prices long before then. Because nobody wants to be left with useless oil in the ground, there will be a dearth of new investment, especially in new, high-cost areas such as the Arctic. By contrast, producers such as Saudi Arabia, with vast reserves that can be tapped cheaply, will be under pressure to get pumping before it is too late: the Middle East will still matter, but a lot less than it did. Although there will still be a market for natural gas, which will help generate power for all those electric cars, volatile oil prices will strain countries that depend on hydrocarbon revenues to fill the national coffers. When volumes fall, the adjustment will be fraught, particularly where the struggle for power has long been about controlling oil wealth. In countries such as Angola and Nigeria where oil has often been a curse, the diffusion of economic clout may bring immense benefits.
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Last edited by Fozzie_DeBear; 08-10-2017 at 11:13 AM.
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