Aside from our "structural" observation that President Obama's perceptible "indifference" to the Gulf oil spill disaster is all too reminiscent
of what we called last fall his consistent and disturbing reliance on "middlemen" with a direct interest in the outcome to carry out policies that SHOULD be the responsibility of the Federal government,
we haven't said too much about the unfolding disaster, simply because everybody else is talking about it, and, aside from our own observation, we really don't have too much more to add.
But we DID see this piece from energy investment analyst Cumberland Advisors in the US, and thought it might be of interest to our readers,
even though it was written FOR this past three-day Memorial Day weekend in the US, which still does SOME things right - like making pretty much every holiday a three-day weekend ... ;-) ...
So without further ado, here's a piece on Oil Slickonomics - which is actually Part VI of a series ... ;-) ...
May 31, 2010, David Kotok, Chairman and Chief Investment Officer
“The fact that neither the government nor the public sector was prepared for the blowout of the British Petroleum rig indicates a profound failure of planning, execution and regulation.
While Congress and others look for individual causes and scapegoats, the truth is that this was a systemic failure with profound consequences for America’s economy and energy policy.
But it is also another indication of broader flaws in how we manage our affairs and think about complex problems.”
This is excerpted from the HCM Market Letter, June 1, 2010, author Michael Lewitt, GIC member and speaker at GIC meeting in Paris on June 17,
superb writer and analyst and author of his new book, The Death of Capital, essential reading for any serious investor.
“Top Kill Fails” screamed the headline as Americans awoke to the news on Sunday morning.
For many in the five-state Gulf of Mexico (GOM) region and for many others around the US,
this holiday weekend started out with the feeling that the nation had just been kicked hard in the stomach.
The truth is that it has.
In our series entitled “Oil Slickonomics” www.cumber.com, we have offered three scenarios: “bad, worse and ugliest.”
With the failure to cap the well, we have now clearly gone from bad to worse.
Whether or not the ugliest scenario can be averted remains to be seen.
To get to this third outcome the oil slick will have to reach the Gulfstream and start to threaten the Atlantic Ocean and the East Coast of the United States.
http://www.theledger.com/article/20100603/NEWS/6035046/1410?Title=Oil-Begins-Washing-Ashore-in-North-Florida ]
For perspective we must now consider that between 20 and 40 million gallons of oil have spewed into the GOM and the rate continues between 500,000 and 800,000 gallons a day.
Dispersant usage is intensified and fully resumed.
Remember that dispersants are a tradeoff.
They help break down the oil while adding their own form of toxicity instead.
There is no precedent in history for the amount of dispersants being used in the GOM.
Right now about 25% of the Gulf’s federal waters (60,000 square miles) are off limits for fishing industry use.
A moratorium is now in place for deepwater drilling in all US waters.
Offshore drilling has stopped.
If the top kill had succeeded, there would have been an attempt made to lift the moratorium on existing leases and on shallow-water activity.
With the top kill’s failure, the likely outcome is an extension of the moratorium.
We expect that moratorium extensions will be sequentially continued until the well is finally sealed and until the November elections are concluded, whichever comes later.
...
Force majeure clauses in contracts are being invoked in disputes between oil companies and drilling rig operators.
The pricing of rigs is now highly volatile and unpredictable
It is fair to say that the oil exploration and service industry is in turmoil.
We expect that to continue throughout the next few months and until the relief well is firmly in place and the leak has stopped.
Then there will be the round of new regulations and massive litigation, with its revelations about alleged negligence and mismanagement.