Friday, April 21, 2006

Just in Time for Earth Day

Perhaps some impetus to taking the bus or reconsidering that new SUV purchase; from MSNBC:
Crude-oil prices broke through $75 a barrel to hit a new record Friday, fueled by concerns about Iran’s nuclear ambitions and tight U.S. gasoline supplies.

Christopher Dickey over at Newsweek lays the blame on the doorstep of Iran:
[W]hile oil industry analysts and the Bush administration will make the reasons sound very complicated, throwing in every market variable from refinery capacities to inventories to Nigerian guerrillas, I’ll sum it up for you in one word: “Iran.”

Although Tehran has yet to use “the oil weapon” by cutting supplies—far from it—saber-rattling President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is learning fast that he can shake up the nervous global energy market with just a calculated remark here or there. In economic language so measured it sounded vaguely Greenspanian, the Iranian president told Tehran Radio this week that “the global oil price has not reached its real value yet.” At that, the cost of a barrel went splashing over the unprecedented $72 mark. “Every time there's an issue with Iran, the oil market freaks out," as one New York analyst told the Associated Press.

[...]

I’m not sure there’s a quick way out of this spiral. But I do know this: if global oil consumption goes down—and the United States accounts for 25 percent of that—then so will the price of oil. And history suggests that if oil prices fall, so will the ambition and intransigence of any Iranian regime. So if you want to force the mullahs to make a deal, talk peace, not war. And think about trading in that SUV before you end up in the line on the wrong side of the “last car” sign.


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