May 21, 2011, according to a loosely-organized apocalyptic Christian movement, will be the “end of days.”
On or about that same date, the price of oil in the United States will begin to climb to $4 a gallon, according to two savants of the oil industry.
The former is highly unlikely but the latter is very probable.
The escalation in the price of oil is predicted by the legendary oil man T. Boone Pickens, known for his financial acuity as well as his oil expertise, and John Hofmeister, who retired as president of Shell Oil Company, to sound the alarm about the rate of U.S. consumption of oil.
In an interview with a trade publication, Hofmeister predicted that oil would rise to $4 a gallon this year and to $5 a gallon in the election year 2012. Separately, Pickens—who has been leaning on Congress to enact an energy policy that would switch large trucks and other commercial vehicles from imported oil to domestic natural gas—predicts that oil currently selling for just over $90 a barrel will go to $120 a barrel, with a concomitant price per gallon of $4 or more.
The Obama administration appears to have been slow to grasp the political implications of an escalation in the price of oil. When asked about it, outgoing White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs referred the questioner to the Department of Energy.
Not everyone is alarmed by the incipient rise in the price oil. Republicans, who are especially close to the oil industry and its Washington lobby, orchestrated by the American Petroleum Institute, think that a great deal of hay can be made while this particular sun shines. They plan to attack the administration for spending too many resources on alternative fuels, over-regulating the industry, and keeping too many federal lands away from oil prospecting. They also accuse the administration of being too frugal with its release of drilling areas in the Gulf of Mexico and on the two coasts, as well as Alaska.
The Republicans have unlikely bedfellows in their quest to politicize the price of oil. They are joined by environmentalists who have long believed that only high prices will break America’s passion for the automobile.
Environmentalists have long advocated European-style taxation to drive motorists out of their cars and onto buses and trains.
A third interest group that will take some pleasure in rising oil prices are those who are invested in alternatives such as ethanol, oil from algae and electric vehicles.
Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund is keeping an eye on the price of oil, according to Caroline Atkinson, director of external relations at the IMF. She told a Washington press briefing that the IMF is particularly concerned with food and other commodities that are directly affected by the price of oil.
Hofmeister, who now heads the non-profit Citizens for Affordable Energy that advocates energy development in all forms, believes that the United States could increase oil production from the current 7 million barrels per day to 10 million, half of its consumption. He told an interviewer from Platt’s, an energy publisher and broadcaster, that we were “essentially frittering at the edges of renewable energy, stifling production in hydrocarbon energy,” which he said could lead to blackouts, brownouts, gas lines and rationing.
There are already signs that the Republican-controlled House of Representatives is planning a big push for hydrocarbon energy. An indication of this comes from Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), a one-time global-warming believer who has dropped that issue from his agenda. He is the new chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
In periods of high gasoline prices in the past, presidents have found there is very little that they can do. Their options are to reduce the tax on gasoline, sell oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve or the Naval Petroleum Reserve. President George W. Bush went a step further: He went to Saudi Arabia twice to ask the Saudis to increase their rate of production. Twice he came back empty-handed.
All of this would be good news for the oil producers and especially those troublesome players, Russia and Venezuela.
Of course, if you believe the human endeavor ends on May 21, better fuel the SUV and hit the road.
Fred says
Daniel 12:
8 And I heard, but I understood not: then said I, O my Lord, what shall be the end of these things?
9 And he said, Go thy way, Daniel: for the words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end.
10 Many shall be purified, and made white, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly: and none of the wicked shall understand; but the wise shall understand.
Nicholas Pohl says
Hello,
I enjoyed your recent predictions for gasoline prices to rise in 2011.
As a resident of the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands (CNMI) the island chain north of Guam, USA.
We as a USA Protectorate are already faced with gasoline prices today of $4.54 for Premium Unleaded, and $4.21 for Regular unleaded per gallon.
Shell Oil, and Mobil Oil, have warned island residents that they are trying there best to control prices, however they predict by mid-summer or Fall that gasoline prices will be over $5.00 per gallon for Saipan, USA.
It seems like the Obama Administration is trying to do its best to stop Domestic Production of Petroleum Products. The time is now for our Federal Government to collectively band together from both Houses and agree that Domestic Fuel Production is the Number ONE Priority for the United States. Brazil did this years ago just as their economy was about to crash, and now they have been using Liquid Propane Gas and Sugar Cane to make Ethanol for years.
I just wish that our Federal Officials that use Federal Vehicles had to personally fuel them up each day and each week from money out of their own wallet. Maybe then, they would pull their head out of the sand and wake up to the fact that we need to become independent from the OPEC producers of Oil and Natural Gas.
Thank you for your time!
Best regards,
Captain Nicolas Pohl
Boeing 767 Airline Pilot
jeffrey says
I think the people setting these prices dont worry about it becuse they own the company and can affored it , I think there not american and the price of gas should go down to 99 cents, what about the poor single man that cant make ends meet , should he turn to a life of crime , these companies like exxon and opec should be ashamed of them selves . theres oil fo every one im sure. if u read the news thers already been deaths becuse of the protesting of gas in chile , this is not right what s going to happen when the companies cant affored to buy it fro there source, the mid east ows us they need to give us the same amout of iol for cheeper or for free , its not more we need its just we need the same at a lower price
Russell Hicks says
Have you looked into “ambient resonant magnetic flux”, or “radiant energy”, or “zero point energy”, or “space energy”, or “background energy”, or “energy from the vacuum”? They may all be the same, but I’m thinking they could be the Apollo project we really need, for the world’s well being – humanity and the planet.
Russell Hicks says
Additional immoderate comment: I forgot “aetheric energy”, and if you want a good place to begin study, try “www.28an.com/altenergypro” . Excellent theory by a former petroleum geologist. The trillion dollar question is, do his generators work, or can they or such be made to work? They could make the smart grid obsolete. Energy everywhere in great abundance.
Russell Hicks says
This energy could also be called “atomic”, simply because it involves the movement of a lot of electrons, which are everywhere. For a second opinion on Don Smith’s generators, I recommend the British website “www.free-energy-info.co.uk (chapter 3). Distributed electricity without cost, except for the equipment. What would that do for the economy?