Russia's Declining Oil Capacity and the Deeper Problems of Cartel Politics

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At the beginning of March, Russia announced that it would be cutting oil output as a part of a broader OPEC+ plan to reduce raise global prices. However, there are two reasons that this may be happening. First, as a consequence of the war, it could be that Russia has lost the capacity to produce the same level of oil. Second, it could be that Russia is taking steps to ensure that the cartel pricing scheme does not fall apart. This video examines the evidence for both, using some deep cuts into bargaining theory to help us understand what is happening.
0:00 Russia's Oil Cuts
2:11 Recent Oil Politics
4:31 Is Russia Losing Its Oil Capacity?
9:58 The Case for Voluntary Russian Cuts
13:24 Why Impatience Is a Virtue in Cartel Collusion
17:45 The Meta Problem with Uncertain Capacity
19:23 The Main Implications for the War
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Пікірлер: 950

  • @benestantial3367
    @benestantial3367Ай бұрын

    I am always amazed at how William Spaniel manages to put lines on maps, even if the subject doesn't require it. We love you mr Lines on Maps guy

  • @scoldingwhisper

    @scoldingwhisper

    Ай бұрын

    its like Joe Rogan talking about bears... i think its a troll at this point

  • @williamcase426

    @williamcase426

    Ай бұрын

    Lines must go on maps. 🗺

  • @gideonmele1556

    @gideonmele1556

    Ай бұрын

    There are always lines on maps, we just don’t always see it

  • @hackhenk

    @hackhenk

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@gideonmele1556There's always bears in the woods, we just don't always see them

  • @george2113

    @george2113

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@hackhenkoccasionally there's a Pope in the woods

  • @robertandromo
    @robertandromoАй бұрын

    Grew up in the oil industry and can say that seeing how Russia is putting out these fires tells you all you need to know. They are short on expertise and resources. Their oil industry is experiencing death by a thousand cuts. Ukraine is hitting the exact weak spots now and making it difficult to a) put out the fires, and b) get the capacity back on line. Looking at 2 years of this war minimum, infrastructure damage will reduce output by at least 30%-40%.

  • @TonyHobbs

    @TonyHobbs

    Ай бұрын

    Redadare must be laughing 😊

  • @zibbitybibbitybop

    @zibbitybibbitybop

    Ай бұрын

    Perun agrees with this point, he noted that the fire at the major facility near St. Petersburg took way longer to put out and did more damage than it should have, most likely because of a lack of competent oil techs on site. This will only keep happening, there's nothing to stop Ukraine from inflicting more such paper cuts.

  • @fukuu7998

    @fukuu7998

    Ай бұрын

    People dont see how this is going to fuck the world economy like the 70s.

  • @hugoguerreiro1078

    @hugoguerreiro1078

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@fukuu7998people see it but there isn't much that they can do about it.

  • @S1551

    @S1551

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@zibbitybibbitybop Which video was that? Gotta rewatch that part

  • @HatBilly2008
    @HatBilly2008Ай бұрын

    Oil,production, takes a lot of maintenance, if you don’t do it the production will show down, the oil well need to run, if the oil pipes in the ground is not moving the pipes will be subject to scale growth and erosion because of the oil holes up acid , salt out of the ground. This is a nightmare for Russia. Just look at Venezuela oil production.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Depends of what material the pipe is made of for example there are russian pipes which has "suhlon" inserts which are very anti corrusion more than gold actually and they are perfect for insulation from acidic materials its mind blowing

  • @HatBilly2008

    @HatBilly2008

    Ай бұрын

    @@u2beuser714 yes, scale growth is another problem. The pipes quality we know soon enough about them. Drilling same well twice is very expensive.

  • @misterqiu-zic3d162

    @misterqiu-zic3d162

    Ай бұрын

    but the Americans have much more problem with their fragmentation system to get their oil out...and the access price ,, the problem....you will have to pay much more for your gasoline for your car and commercial transport, Biden has already warned the Clown of Ukraine to be careful,,, what's more, Russia can last almost 2 years of war without producing no weapons in its factories...and Russia produces as much ammunition in one month as the USA and Europe in 1 year...NATO is the mafia, they create insecurity to sell security....They create threats to sell protection....NATO and Europe are warmongers at the beck and call of the USA....BRICS+ is the best for the world

  • @dave7830

    @dave7830

    Ай бұрын

    With the loss of external engineering and production experts, Russian employees have had to step into new rolls. Even if they knew how to do the job, I'm sure the ever pervasive corruption in Russian society has moved in without the foreign oversight. Money allocated for preventive maintenance goes into somebodies pocket - "if it it isn't broke, don't spend money to fix it"

  • @HatBilly2008

    @HatBilly2008

    Ай бұрын

    @@dave7830 , the tools, chemicals, electrical equipment, they can not buy this stuff, it is tracked. The oil tool companies lease this to Russia. My point is many things Russia will have to change things back to old parts, meaning lower production

  • @marcdc6809
    @marcdc6809Ай бұрын

    Putin is like a cat that just fell off a table and now looks at you with this 'I meant to do that' look of disdain...

  • @wazaagbreak-head6039

    @wazaagbreak-head6039

    Ай бұрын

    This is a solid analogy

  • @sunkntreasure

    @sunkntreasure

    Ай бұрын

    Cats usually land on their feet though - not their face

  • @marcdc6809

    @marcdc6809

    Ай бұрын

    @@sunkntreasure to us here it looks like he fell on his face, but back there in Russia he managed to blame his own failures on sabotage from the west, I do hope people in Europe realise that even if the US is no long paying the bill somebody needs to pick it up and keep Russian ambitions in check...

  • @signoguns8501

    @signoguns8501

    Ай бұрын

    According to putin, this is all going to plan lol.

  • @whiskizyo2067

    @whiskizyo2067

    Ай бұрын

    r/oddlyspecific

  • @carlfromtheoc1788
    @carlfromtheoc1788Ай бұрын

    With any cartel, there is always an incentive to cheat, which eventually destroys the cartel’s scheme to restrict supply.

  • @andrewallen9993

    @andrewallen9993

    Ай бұрын

    As universal as the law of supply and demand 😁

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@worldoftancraftsometimes yes, in usa there are known anti-trust was enacted. Sometimes it's just how market works and the cartel ends up splitting by itself. It depends very much on the tipe of industry and market.

  • @carlfromtheoc1788

    @carlfromtheoc1788

    Ай бұрын

    @@worldoftancraft A cartel is not a monopoly. Monopolies can be broken up, but it takes good laws, and dynamic administration to bust up monopolies.

  • @davidc2838

    @davidc2838

    Ай бұрын

    @@carlfromtheoc1788 Yes, it's a Cartel...just like the name implies...however a Cartel can behave monopolistically if they all agree...of course that rarely happens in the long run.

  • @almarn
    @almarnАй бұрын

    Cutting diesel export was really a bad sign. Infrastructures maintenance problems, enormous usage for the war, problems to keep the price in Russia low...for transportation, farming and so on. There is secondary sanctions also and they are really starting to bite. All of India's refineries are rejecting Russian crude that was shipped on Sovcomflot tankers, Bloomberg reported. The state-run shipping firm has been the target of a number of US sanctions since December. Previously Sovcomflot accounted for around 15% of Urals crude shipped to India. India has switched to Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries again. Russia has also now too much crude to sold easily to nobody and buyers can not use the US dollar also. China is using the yuan, after refusing to use the rubble and India was using UAE dirham....after Moscow refused the rupee...

  • @jaypatelz

    @jaypatelz

    Ай бұрын

    shipping problems will be solved and they have alredy new companies with uae insurance, your cope is surreal, bloomerg reports with unnamed sources lol. they also said india won't breach procecap lol how did that turned out also notice how g7 never sanction china!!!!, very afraid

  • @MrRedsjack

    @MrRedsjack

    Ай бұрын

    The dhiram Is effectively US dollar. 😂 It's completely pegged at a fixed US dollars rate.

  • @jaypatelz

    @jaypatelz

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrRedsjack we're not talking about currency here, uae is also a tax haven & hosts russian bank, nice place for them to bust these phony sanctions

  • @corbeau-_-

    @corbeau-_-

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrRedsjacksssh

  • @stephenthomas3085

    @stephenthomas3085

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrRedsjack Not much good if you're not buying anything..!!

  • @Prometheus-Unbound
    @Prometheus-UnboundАй бұрын

    Couple of points: 1. the need to distinguish production (and crude export) and refining (and refined product/distribution). From the information I have seen Ukrainian strikes have been on the later (St. Petersburg LNG export facility excepted). So crude production and export shouldn't have been affected by Ukrainian action. 2. Nature of Russian crude production - there are a lot of old fields which usually means enhanced recover methods to extract crude. The machinery and chemical necessary for this are probably very vulnerable to sanctions (and depleted technical staff). Many fields are in very harsh conditions requiring technologically superior equipment - again sanction may well have curtailed new wells and well maintenance necessary to maintain and/or expand production. I suspect the inability of Russia to produce or import western equipment is a key factor in declining production (and no, China doesn't make this sort of stuff). Another excellent analysis!

  • @almarn

    @almarn

    Ай бұрын

    Good point fro China..heavily dependent also on western technologies. China is always an argument with the people telling us..sanctions are NOTHING...China is here..well NO.

  • @macmcleod1188

    @macmcleod1188

    Ай бұрын

    The reason that loss of the refineries affects raw production is that storage is already full. This means when refining capacity is lost there's no place to put produced oil. And turning off oil production results in oil freezing in the pipes and pumps. It takes a lot of effort and time to restore production after a stoppage like that. In some cases production is never restored. The nice thing is when gasoline prices rise $1, they give a 1000.00 annual savings to every Electric car that drives 15,000 mi per year. And as other petrochemical products increase in price, the encourage the development of Alternatives and the reduction of Reliance on oil by-products. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has put us three years ahead of schedule for dealing with climate change. It's still not enough and anyone under 50 is going to see misery and hard times but we are still 3 years ahead.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Whats your proof that china couldnt make such technology? Its not hi-tech by any means

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Whats your proof that china cant produce the machines necessary for russia? We know china can produce 7nm chips so why not this which is far less hi tech ?

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    China can produce 7nm chip why cant they make an easy equipment such as the ones you are referring to?

  • @darex0827
    @darex0827Ай бұрын

    OPEC cuts, degrading infrastructure that is difficult to repair (sanctions / loss of skilled labor) and Ukrainian strikes are causing tremendous difficulties for the Russia state. I see this continuing for the foreseeable future.

  • @luisg.ontoriaalvarez2334

    @luisg.ontoriaalvarez2334

    Ай бұрын

    I keep reading this very same headlines every few months, oil is a problem for Russia. What about reality?

  • @SnorriTheLlama

    @SnorriTheLlama

    Ай бұрын

    @@luisg.ontoriaalvarez2334My hot take is that most of these could be overcome, apart from exploding oil infrastructure which would be expected to have a significant effect.

  • @skywillfindyou

    @skywillfindyou

    Ай бұрын

    Infrustructure isn't fegrading. EU signals they're getting problem in this filed without Russian tech, cause Russia invested much in it's advancement. Most results of strikes are being repaired in several days. Vastly it is almost unnoticable. It could have been more impactful if there were much more strikes, which Kiev plans to do. But US tells them not to, as to strike is rather easy, then to defend, and all sides could do this. Meaning Russian will strike such american infrustructure in Africa and Middle East. Which will skyrocket oil price. Which is key weakness for states.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Loss of skilled labour ? As far as i know the oil rig workers didnt flee russia since the demand for them is high so saying "loss of skilled labour" is blatantly false

  • @biomerl

    @biomerl

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@skywillfindyoulol, go home shill.

  • @skogsjarvenab7958
    @skogsjarvenab7958Ай бұрын

    Russian miscalculations invading Ukraine is mind-blowing.@William Spaniel: Your work makes international politics make sense, or not, thank you.

  • @chadhaire1711

    @chadhaire1711

    Ай бұрын

    miscalculations? Russia is winning Ukraine has lost--lost 4 million in Crimea who voted to join Russia, lost 8 million in Donbass who voted in a new government, and lost another 14 million who fled to E.U., and 700,000 military age men who refuse to report for the draft while 1.3 million Russian troops advance day after day.....this Spaniel has been wrong every day for 2 years and biggest liar out there..like fake news CNN or MSNBC.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    That itself would not be that bad. If Putin would actually do 5D chess move and pull from war with Ukraine agreeing on they demands. What actually almost did happen. Problem is that Putin clearly believe in own propaganda, with everyone lying to him about state of the war. As result they make mind blowing decision of unwinnable scenario.

  • @dominicvg051
    @dominicvg051Ай бұрын

    The subtle Avatar reference was nice touch. Great video as always.

  • @armintargaryen9216

    @armintargaryen9216

    Ай бұрын

    Haven't seen the video yet, I wonder whether it's about Avatar the good or Avatar the meh Edit: it was the good 🔥💦💨🪨

  • @AlexandruVoda

    @AlexandruVoda

    Ай бұрын

    @@armintargaryen9216 I never get tired of that reference. It can so seamlessly be integrated.

  • @h8GW

    @h8GW

    Ай бұрын

    Timestamps save lives

  • @AlexandruVoda

    @AlexandruVoda

    Ай бұрын

    @@h8GW8:50

  • @Badco1948
    @Badco1948Ай бұрын

    One unacknowledged player (by the video) in the global oil market. USA is producing 14 MBD of light, sweet crude. The Saudi's aggressively moved to shut American shale production in during 2014, by flooding the market. They may be itching to do it again, which would bury Russia's production.

  • @duckduckgoismuchbetter

    @duckduckgoismuchbetter

    Ай бұрын

    I agree, except for the fact that OPEC can no longer do that. American fracking costs per barrel are far too low now for that to ever work again. And getting lower by the year. The newest fields are below $30 per barrel. We're getting close to the Saudi actual production cost, and will be there, and below it, in a number of years. Meanwhile, every OPEC nation is absolutely dependent, for the cost of their own bloated governments and social services, on the price of oil being at least ~$70 to ~$90. And although some are trying to cut this cost a bit, they won't succeed in cutting it by much, due to their systemic inefficiency and systemic corruption. So they are ABSOLUTELY stuck...and we are not. Our fracking costs will continue to go down every cycle, while theirs either stays the same (or maybe drops a little, temporarily, from time to time), but mainly goes up. Oil is here to stay. At least for decades. Wind and solar are permanently FAR more expensive than hydrocarbon energy sources. No amount of technology will ever improve their costs versus conventional power. Eventually, something else WILL come along (nuclear fusion/thorium/improved fission, and who knows what else) to replace hydrocarbon energy. But it isn't, and never will be, solar or wind. Slava Ukraini and MAGA Forever!

  • @javanava8925

    @javanava8925

    Ай бұрын

    @@duckduckgoismuchbetter Slava Ukraini and MAGA don't go together. Trump's closest friend is that sociopath Putler. Vote for Trump is vote for Russia. Ukraine will be in deeper shit than now if Trump wins. I wish Trump would support Ukraine, in that case I would probably support him publicly, I can't vote, I'm not US citizen.

  • @Garcea_linking
    @Garcea_linkingАй бұрын

    So India can buy OPEC oil but not Russian oil. Demand for Russian oil drops. Most countries want dollars for oil, certainly not Rubles. If no one is buying Russian oil there is no dollar input flow. Russia wants to buy technical contraband but sellers want dollars. Russia has a dollar crunch. Perhaps this is all about dollars rather than selling oil. Anyone that takes Rubles or Yuans for oil will get stuck with worthless money

  • @Iamwolf134

    @Iamwolf134

    Ай бұрын

    I heard one particular case where India forced Russia to sell its oil, not for Rubles, or Dollars, or even in Yuan, but in Indian Rupees.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Iamwolf134 But you probably never heard of tje fact that the rupees are fonverted in indian banks and sold back in rubles to russia , right?

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    @@u2beuser714 And how it make even sense? Ruble have low value. What you say, mean that India clean its stacks of worthless Russian money.

  • @tedstewart114

    @tedstewart114

    Ай бұрын

    India's oil purchases from Russia have risen sharply, despite efforts by Ukraine and its allies to persuade countries around the world to distance themselves from Russia. BBC , the Indians have gone from 2% to buying 20% of their oil from Russia, China also gets 800,000 barrels a day Seaborne imports of Russian oil Urals and ESP crude, millions of barrels per-day, this doesn't include the millions of barrels that escape sanctions by going through 3rd parties. and dont forget Europe is still importing large quantities of Russian gas.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    @@tedstewart114 You are aware that India work with the West? Whole game is not about closing Russian supply, but cutting them from profits. West simply wait for Russian oil industry to fail, doe to lack of maintenance.

  • @Kevin-mk6jo
    @Kevin-mk6joАй бұрын

    Kings and Generals and this channel... LEGIT!

  • @williamcase426

    @williamcase426

    Ай бұрын

    Well met fellow king. 👑

  • @alexbarry5288

    @alexbarry5288

    Ай бұрын

    You are a man of good taste sir

  • @unoriginalname4321

    @unoriginalname4321

    Ай бұрын

    Don't forget Perun and Anders Puck Nielsen

  • @ReichLife

    @ReichLife

    Ай бұрын

    Given how mid both are, quite solid comparison.

  • @allemagneproducer

    @allemagneproducer

    Ай бұрын

    jake broe and william for the ukraine content serpentza and chris chappell for the china content !!♥

  • @larrygj4764
    @larrygj4764Ай бұрын

    Missing in this otherwise excellent discussion is the fact that the principal demand for Russian oil and derivative products is from India and China, both of which will not be in a position to continue buying Russian gas and oil for much longer. India, because it fears sanctions from the US, and China, because its economy is imploding. Without demand for Russian oil, the Russians are going to be stuck with having to dramatically reduce production because they have no storage facilities great enough to hold all that unsold oil.

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Why would india be sanctioned ? The last thing they want is an alienated india no? And even if thats the case, why wouldnt they sanction india from the beginning?

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    I dont see the connection here if chinas economy is imploding wouldnt they need MORE energy from russia not less? Im struggling to see the connection here

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    So you are telling me the west is willing to burn its bridges with india yet agein? What makes the west assume that india wont double down on its alliance with russia?

  • @u2beuser714

    @u2beuser714

    Ай бұрын

    Please stop the peter zaihan esque "doomsday" predictions he said germany would totally collapse economically which turned out to be completely and utterly wrong

  • @davidgraham4807

    @davidgraham4807

    Ай бұрын

    @@u2beuser714 Simple economics. Keep up.

  • @keith2366
    @keith2366Ай бұрын

    Shale oil production in the US is expected to continue to increase for at least the next 20 years. OPEC better plan on making cuts every year to keep the price of oil up.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    There is a wisper in the air that saudi wants that, cause their easy to drill oil is ending and thus selling less is their intended goal. Don't forget that a) countries like uae have invested in alrlternative energy stocks and b) have had too good of a relationship with refining corporation (research lead refining case study to understand how dangerous they are) and c) arabian peninsula countries depend on usa for security, they play on an uneven position.

  • @geofflepper3207

    @geofflepper3207

    Ай бұрын

    And other western countries such as Canada, Brazil, Venezuela and Guyana are increasing production. It's not easy for Russia, Saudi Arabia and other OPEC countries to keep playing their game of curtailing oil supplies when western countries refuse to play by those rules. If OPEC keeps losing market share eventually some OPEC countries with a smaller share of the market might decide that it is not in their interest to stick to OPEC rules regarding curtailing their production. They may think that whether they stay in OPEC and follow its rules or not won't make much difference to what OPEC does or to the international price of oil.

  • @stephenthomas3085

    @stephenthomas3085

    Ай бұрын

    Unfortunately shale oil is also the dirtiest, foulest and most polluting fossil fuel with the highest carbon footprint. In twenty years we could be 2 degrees above the pre industrial average - or significantly above this, this is quite possible now. I don't even want to think about the consequences I really don't.

  • @ianrau6373

    @ianrau6373

    Ай бұрын

    Should’ve switched to nuclear when we had the chance. The public is scared about a failure in SOVIET nuclear technology, massively worsened by scientific and administrative incompetence. If we had gone ahead and done the logical thing, and built plants with modern technology, we wouldn’t be worrying about the environmental impact of oil or what OPEC gets up to.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    @@ianrau6373 only the regions/ places who aren't seismic which there aren't that many. Also, only the countries who can maintain security which some absolutely can't. So ur "we" is a very small "we".

  • @MrScientifictutor
    @MrScientifictutorАй бұрын

    Hard to believe Russia is cutting voluntary.

  • @niklasnorberg5071

    @niklasnorberg5071

    Ай бұрын

    If the raise in prize is bigger then the cut it is a brilliant idea. Anything they don`t sell now is left in the earth for the future.😉

  • @IIII-vz6yc

    @IIII-vz6yc

    Ай бұрын

    what does it look like? 1.salaries and prices in Russia in rubles 2.the more rubles a dollar costs, the cheaper it is to pay for the “war” 3.the “civilized” West trades with the shadow fleet(the US buys oil and sells it to Europe with a markup of 350-400%) 4.before each large exchange, the ruble depreciates

  • @Sir_Godz

    @Sir_Godz

    Ай бұрын

    protesting production with fingers crossed

  • @cubiss1273

    @cubiss1273

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@niklasnorberg5071 This would make sense if the cuts were coordinated with the rest of OPEC. Otherwise you're just cutting production without significant raise in prices. Keeping oil in ground might not be desirable if projected oil consumption stops before you run out of oil. This could or could not be a thing depending on the "green deal".

  • @niklasnorberg5071

    @niklasnorberg5071

    Ай бұрын

    @@cubiss1273 Them and Saudi together have effect. And the hits on refineries does most damage to the once bying wich incudes the west.

  • @Urgelt
    @UrgeltАй бұрын

    Peter Zeihan predicted that Russia would be unable to sustain its oil output. Its reliance on foreign companies ended when those companies left in 2022. Especially in Siberian fields on permafrost, expertise is critical to operate those fields. Zeihan observes that even before the USSR collapsed, technical schools in Russia closed. Qualified native workers are growing scarce, and the specialized equipment from Western companies can't be maintained without support from those companies. I expect more cuts from Russia, even if Ukraine mounts no further attacks. But of course Ukraine will mount more attacks if they can.

  • @mjl1966y

    @mjl1966y

    Ай бұрын

    With the ability to launch drones up to 1000 km, Ukraine can maintain these attacks indefinitely. Drones are cheap. The air defense against them is not.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    @@mjl1966y It is not exactly true. But it is one of those cases where Russian size work against them.

  • @Gjudxdkjyzddhjnr7091

    @Gjudxdkjyzddhjnr7091

    Ай бұрын

    @@mjl1966y Or until Ukraine is defeated on the battlefield...

  • @enriqueperezarce5485

    @enriqueperezarce5485

    Ай бұрын

    @@Gjudxdkjyzddhjnr7091Highly unlikely in the short term or for the seeable long term. Ukraine is going to make this into their own Great Patriotic War, like it’s the 1940s again

  • @SLOWLYdoesit1

    @SLOWLYdoesit1

    Ай бұрын

    @@mjl1966ylast night a Ukrainian drone traveled 1300+km!

  • @fdk7014
    @fdk7014Ай бұрын

    Ukraine needs to continue to 'improve' Russian oil refineries.

  • @xelaxander
    @xelaxanderАй бұрын

    WTF is this Baldy the eagle allegory!? „Russia is closer to Baldies daddy“ - I really needed that sentence in my life.

  • @TonyHobbs

    @TonyHobbs

    Ай бұрын

    Perfect humour 😅

  • @terjeoseberg990
    @terjeoseberg990Ай бұрын

    The more OPEC cuts, the more the United States increases production.

  • @savvasgamingchannel5062

    @savvasgamingchannel5062

    Ай бұрын

    US has depleted its reserves.

  • @ValleysOfRain

    @ValleysOfRain

    Ай бұрын

    To a limit. The US does not want to deplete its reserves in response to an OPEC race to the bottom. It's not great for the US if it maxes out its capacity trying to depress fuel prices, because then the profit motive for its companies (which are not government controlled) disappears.

  • @enriqueperezarce5485

    @enriqueperezarce5485

    Ай бұрын

    ⁠@@ValleysOfRainThe US has a lot of oil my dude and the most recent discovery (shale revolution of the 2010s) just added to it. Trust the limit is super high that I won’t think they will reach it. Your right though they wouldn’t do that, their is a reason why the US is the top producer of oil but not the top exporter

  • @markb8468
    @markb8468Ай бұрын

    Excellent info and analysis as always. Thanks!

  • @headoverheels88
    @headoverheels88Ай бұрын

    I'm glad SOMEONE is finally talking about the technical expertise needed to run these crazy complicated machines. People focus so much on the "sexy" stuff, but the boring stuff... the boring stuff always come to bite you in the ass.

  • @apurvd6177

    @apurvd6177

    Ай бұрын

    And to think the Russians don't have the technical expertise to run "these stuff" 😂😂

  • @sababugs1125

    @sababugs1125

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@apurvd6177well the cuts speak otherwise

  • @Treklovful
    @TreklovfulАй бұрын

    The crude oil export is not affected by Ukrainian drone attacks. It's the capacity to convert crude oil into diesel, kerosine and gasoline that's affected. Unless there's a pipeline constraint for crude oil exports (unlikely). The drone attacks at crude distillers therefore hardly drive the crude oil price up. But will lead to problems to provide these products for civilian purposes. I hope: rationing or extremely high prices for Russian civilians.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    It pressures russia to export more crude to be able to buy it refined (increse cost and less eficient) but it also creates a botle neck as it increse the necessity of crude storage, this in turn affects the crude demand on site, something u can't stop, only delay, cause the wells need to keep on pumping no matter what or they break.

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    Cruse drop is most likely related to collapse of infrastructure, rather then Ukrainian attacks.

  • @Chuck_Hooks
    @Chuck_HooksАй бұрын

    Appreciate Ukraine's contributions to making all this a problem

  • @deadwingdomain

    @deadwingdomain

    Ай бұрын

    It's all Putin. But sure, blame the victims.

  • @Chuck_Hooks

    @Chuck_Hooks

    Ай бұрын

    ​@deadwingdomain I mean Russia's problems. Have to be cryptic to not get auto-deleted.

  • @flowpipe

    @flowpipe

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Chuck_HooksWhy does the auto delete seem to protect Russia from negative comments? It happens a lot

  • @davidgraham4807

    @davidgraham4807

    Ай бұрын

    @@flowpipe KZread my friend

  • @GeraldBeagan-ee6se

    @GeraldBeagan-ee6se

    Ай бұрын

    It might upset trump

  • @Revenge221
    @Revenge221Ай бұрын

    Ah, the ATLA/Fire Nation reference. Brief, but got a chuckle out of me. Good stuff.

  • @KapitainZino
    @KapitainZinoАй бұрын

    Great video as always on a hot topic! Great job William. This thread is precious in getting insider information on the topic! Keep the good work going!

  • @W_Bin
    @W_BinАй бұрын

    This is the best you have done.

  • @morganmccauley1687
    @morganmccauley1687Ай бұрын

    Good show 🎉

  • @bencesipos1142
    @bencesipos1142Ай бұрын

    Those avatar jokes in an otherwise serious topic... Nice touch!

  • @buzzyhardwood2949
    @buzzyhardwood2949Ай бұрын

    Great analysis, William. Thanks.

  • @luminyam6145
    @luminyam6145Ай бұрын

    That was fascinating, thank you.

  • @jorgecaballerocastillo2435
    @jorgecaballerocastillo2435Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the lines on map

  • @nathanhoffman20000
    @nathanhoffman20000Ай бұрын

    Outstanding thought exercise

  • @caylynmillard76
    @caylynmillard76Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all the vids.

  • @xman933
    @xman933Ай бұрын

    Prolix! Russia’s post USSR oil industry is heavily dependent on Western technology and personnel and is falling apart just like Venezuela’s. Soviet trained personnel are past retirement age and talented young Russians who can help have either fled the country because of mobilization or are dying in Ukraine

  • @davidgraham4807

    @davidgraham4807

    Ай бұрын

    So true. But, nobody wants to address this. But, for us in the oil patch in the GOM know better.

  • @nospamallowed4890
    @nospamallowed4890Ай бұрын

    Why are any western nations objecting to strikes on Russian oil? Since OPEC Plus has excess capacity, aren't the other countries simply raise production and smile all the way to the bank?

  • @advancetotabletop5328

    @advancetotabletop5328

    Ай бұрын

    Because, in the end there are no allies, just common interests. Western countries are more interested in their domestic problems than Ukraine.

  • @joeyjojojrshabadoo7462

    @joeyjojojrshabadoo7462

    Ай бұрын

    @@advancetotabletop5328 Quite frankly if they keep if up we should start refocusing our interests and threats.

  • @nicolasolton

    @nicolasolton

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@joeyjojojrshabadoo7462what do u mean?

  • @contentsdiffer5958

    @contentsdiffer5958

    Ай бұрын

    OPEC cut their production, you silly goose. They have extended and re-extended those cuts. It's almost as though OPEC work together to pressure other countries. Wow.

  • @barryfleming8488

    @barryfleming8488

    Ай бұрын

    But I gotta get re-elected

  • @13lueBomber
    @13lueBomberАй бұрын

    Russian population: “The West wants our resources!” Putin: “Yeah, that’s true!” 😉

  • @Alexandragon1
    @Alexandragon1Ай бұрын

    Thx for the video!

  • @pappafritto
    @pappafrittoАй бұрын

    Great job! Thank you I enjoyed the video

  • @oldgreybeard2507
    @oldgreybeard2507Ай бұрын

    Thank you for your perception

  • @asan1050
    @asan1050Ай бұрын

    William Spaniel, ThanksMuch for posting !

  • @LegaliseFinland
    @LegaliseFinlandАй бұрын

    Very informative, thank you. I suspect the truth is somewhere in the middle of the two theories.

  • @timberwolfe1645
    @timberwolfe164526 күн бұрын

    Enjoyed this video. It makes so much sense.

  • @jacklu8752
    @jacklu8752Ай бұрын

    Professor Spaniel is the best.

  • @victoriahigman6802
    @victoriahigman6802Ай бұрын

    Thanks

  • @Gametheory101

    @Gametheory101

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @emmanuelnava6582
    @emmanuelnava6582Ай бұрын

    Bro this was such a great video!! Thank you.

  • @RodicaMihutArmando
    @RodicaMihutArmandoАй бұрын

    Thank you for this information.

  • @juriteller3688
    @juriteller3688Ай бұрын

    The output reduction is generally to keep the prices high, because non OPEC states massively increase their own output. Especially african and south american countries need the money and therefore try everything to get as much oil out as possible. And the US had an immense increase in production over the last 10 years also. In short, OPEC is losing it status as a monopoly.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    It's the factor called guyana. This is why maduro (venezuela dictator) is menacing to invade guyana.

  • @nicolasolton

    @nicolasolton

    Ай бұрын

    Great news👍

  • @ShanGamer1981
    @ShanGamer1981Ай бұрын

    I enjoy your videos sir

  • @davidavery3182
    @davidavery3182Ай бұрын

    love the sneaky avatar line there :D

  • @louisgiokas2206
    @louisgiokas2206Ай бұрын

    Your auto buying example is right on point. My mother-in-law was out to buy a new car. She was a good negotiator in general. The salesperson at the dealership actually told her that if she did not buy the car that day from him, the chance that she would be back later to buy were miniscule. She was also not under any type of pressure and had bought from the dealership before. So, she got a great deal. I have seen this in other cases. Her daughter was also good at such negotiating. I am not, at least for consumer purchases. On the other hand, in my professional life I am great at large multi-million-dollar negotiations with experiences working for large companies and for my own companies. Go figure.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    Because of the pressure effect. They have the time that u don't have as u are busy in an extremely demanding career. When u have personal time u need to use it fast for ur personal needs, no time to check every week for the good car deal.

  • @louisgiokas2206

    @louisgiokas2206

    Ай бұрын

    @@puraLusa That has not been my experience, or that of anyone I know. This is especially true in the Internet age, where all car buying research can be done online.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    @@louisgiokas2206 does ur line of work allows u stay focus on internet websites unrelated to tasks set up for the growth of ur business? Time is a big part of the equasion on buying/ selling something. The internet age only increases the pressure cause it also oppens up to more potencial buyers.

  • @mebibyte9347
    @mebibyte9347Ай бұрын

    The avatar bit got me so good. I had to watch it twice. 😂❤

  • @karolykiszely300
    @karolykiszely300Ай бұрын

    There's a mistake with the iron curtain at 6:52. Yugoslavia was bot a part of the easter block in the seventies, and therefore wasn't behind the iron curtain

  • @user-hv7kt9zc3m
    @user-hv7kt9zc3mАй бұрын

    Well done Ukraine after 2 years of Sanctions nothing you attack there oil within a few weeks and it makes a massive difference keep it up the usa has been withholding funds dont listen to them

  • @AppendixVermiformis

    @AppendixVermiformis

    Ай бұрын

    hehe drones go brrrrrr

  • @staticfanatic

    @staticfanatic

    Ай бұрын

    vatnik

  • @TheRezro

    @TheRezro

    Ай бұрын

    What you say don't even make logical sense.

  • @nusub2222

    @nusub2222

    Ай бұрын

    By attacking Russian oil production or refining the Ukrainians may be shooting themselves in the foot. By increasing the price of gas they are decreasing the chances of Biden getting reelected. A Trump presidency would be a disaster for everyone - everyone, that is, except Russia and fossil fuel producers in general, but especially disastrous for Ukraine.

  • @jordandoerksen6167
    @jordandoerksen6167Ай бұрын

    I will purchase every book of yours that you narrate and publish as an audio book!

  • @philipb2134
    @philipb2134Ай бұрын

    Another possibility is that Russia no longer is capable of shipping such volumes.

  • @seanmellows1348
    @seanmellows1348Ай бұрын

    Great stuff here. The big question is: lines or no lines? Or both?

  • @root_pierre
    @root_pierreАй бұрын

    Intelligence services on both sides know that influencing the wider world is a cheap way to fight a war whilst their governments limit or lack in material support. Thank you for the Meta part of my daily diet❤

  • @AnnabelleBeaudoin
    @AnnabelleBeaudoinАй бұрын

    Great video ❤

  • @daniellarson3068
    @daniellarson3068Ай бұрын

    Good video - no lines on maps

  • @kenithandry5093
    @kenithandry5093Ай бұрын

    Thanks for this video! It’s helpful.

  • @skywillfindyou
    @skywillfindyouАй бұрын

    Copium. Copium must flow.

  • @Naomi_dreamz
    @Naomi_dreamzАй бұрын

    Beautiful video 😍

  • @3punctero
    @3puncteroАй бұрын

    Russia is closer to Baldy's daddy. 😂😂😂 10 / 10, I absolutely died.

  • @texasmario11
    @texasmario11Ай бұрын

    Great analysis as usual. One topic that was not addressed that in my opinion is going to have very dramatic affects on the price of oil and gas and definitely geo politics is the blazing fast speed of EV adoption, especially in China and the EU. William, can do you a video to talk about that??

  • @michaelgross7724

    @michaelgross7724

    Ай бұрын

    Bloomberg ran an article last autumn where they projected electric vehicles reducedoil demand globally by about 1.5 million barrels, increasing to 5 million barrels per day by 2030 and 20 million barrels per day by 2040. They also project oil demand peaking in 2027. Note tha global oil demand is about 102 million barrels per day, and that about 60% of it is used for producing transportation fuels.

  • @jackthatmonkey8994

    @jackthatmonkey8994

    Ай бұрын

    Germany is switching back to diesel and is backtracking its goal of phasing out the combustion engine in 2035. Resource availability is pressing. Especially since China has been taking control of a large part of the lithium supply. I wonder if my fantastical and idealistic idea of large scale nuclear power used to power an energy intensive yet carbon neutral way to synthesize liquid fuel is not more realistic than electric cars lol

  • @randalsaladbar
    @randalsaladbarАй бұрын

    Great overview. Makes good food for thought for when oil, coal, gas, is looked at like asbestos. A paradigm shift is visually present in battery storage is cheaper, and more economically sustainable as the most profitable than any other energy source. Every becomes independent, and that power of leverage is gone forever

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    Battery tech isn't that good at the moment. It doesn't a good longevity, it's very pollutant to produce, etc. Maybe this whole ordeal will put political pressure to invest in more research and better batteries in the future.

  • @randalsaladbar

    @randalsaladbar

    Ай бұрын

    @@puraLusa the battery storage trend is S curved, and ahead of what's previously hypothesized. Exponential, profitable, and residual income are key words to corporations bottom line, because that's all they care about. So, battery storage for electrical grids is inevitable because of the profit margins. Solar farms are popping up everywhere in anticipation of its storage application. TSLA is dirt cheap at the bottom of the S curve 🔵🇺🇲✌️

  • @manserizawa2327
    @manserizawa2327Ай бұрын

    The answer is that the US has imposed a price cap on Russian oil of 60 USD/barrel. This caused cheap Russian oil to flood the market, lowering the market's overall price, and thus challenging OPEC nation's profit. This led to the initial voluntary production cut by OPEC in June 2023. Later more cut was announced and extended the duration to the end of 2024. Well for Russia it's just the war economy demanding more and more money to keep going since the war has transformed into a painful war of attrition. Either way, it's supply-side inflation at this point. Oil prices will keep getting higher and higher if world leaders can't play nice with each other. What's more the US just announced they are targeting to get their oil reserve back to the previous level. This means more oil will divert away from everyday consumers like you and me. Guess the non-oil-producing nation can expect inflation to spike because everything from production and transportation depends on oil to operate.

  • @bigolboomerbelly4348

    @bigolboomerbelly4348

    Ай бұрын

    Depends on how much USA produces and what they do with it They can sell and store oil simultaneously and if they produce enough the reserves can be restored while selling enough on the market to keep prices at a slow rise, in stasis or even in decline. As for reserves, these are kept precisely so they can keep prices down in the future. So stocking reserves need not lead to high prices.

  • @kevinsips3658
    @kevinsips3658Ай бұрын

    “Damage”, aka lower gas prices? Love the Avatar references btw.

  • @catharinawestermark5792
    @catharinawestermark5792Ай бұрын

    Kiitos!

  • @Gametheory101

    @Gametheory101

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @jameswyre6480
    @jameswyre6480Ай бұрын

    This top notch professor employs impeccable logic with excellent examples. Yet, somehow, the presentation is still eminently listenable. Even the long episodes don’t drag and feel shorter than they are. The generals sat and the lines on the map mooooooved from side toooooo side….

  • @GrzegorzBrzeczyszczykiewicz420
    @GrzegorzBrzeczyszczykiewicz420Ай бұрын

    I love the Avatar the last Airbender refference "But that all changed when the Russian nation attacked" "The western response consistet of 4 elements: Sanctions, Sanctions, Sanctions & Sanctions" :D

  • @christopherboudreau2451
    @christopherboudreau2451Ай бұрын

    The last dude who did an episode on Russian oil, found his account hacked.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    Joe blogs - he has a financial/ economical analisis based on graphs and charta, harder to dismiss his conclusions by propaganda bots.

  • @GNMbg

    @GNMbg

    Ай бұрын

    @@puraLusa yeah and this dude draws lines on maps, so its even harder to counter his videos

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    @@GNMbg lol, it's just intern economics general logic and math. It isn't charts and graphs whose source is russia gov itself. That's what makes joe blogs such a pain for rus propagandists, as these count on people ignorance when it comes to economics, they spread "russia is strong, europe is freezing" kind of bs.

  • @morstyrannis1951

    @morstyrannis1951

    Ай бұрын

    @@puraLusawhat, you mean the Germans aren’t eating their kids’ hamsters?

  • @mukkah
    @mukkahАй бұрын

    Subtle double avatar reference lol nice ^^

  • @UncleJoeLITE
    @UncleJoeLITEАй бұрын

    Thank-you from Australia. Yes, I reckon it's 'and/or', with the current emphasis being cartel pus the squeeze on Russia. With Russian facilities widely dispersed & Ukrainian equipment frankly 'meh' atm,, UA must have identified the weak link to go after. Whether this can succeed we don't yet know.

  • @ttttttttt744
    @ttttttttt744Ай бұрын

    love the ATLA reference

  • @HiggsBosom
    @HiggsBosomАй бұрын

    Spaniel! Be Honest. Soviets have lost the oceanic Pipe-lines, Eastern Soviets have had many Refineries Blown-up by Kiev. India & CCP have stopped buying much of their Crude, and the Ruble currency is not desired much. Never thought Spaniel would be Spinning a bunch of B.S.! You might as well add that Genius Kiev, hit the Moscow Venue & not ISIS.

  • @ShotKalTank
    @ShotKalTankАй бұрын

    8:51 love that reference

  • @Steve-cv7qv
    @Steve-cv7qvАй бұрын

    I love it when you say "vis-a-vis"!

  • @Khal_Rheg0
    @Khal_Rheg0Ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @jamesclaytonbowman5977
    @jamesclaytonbowman5977Ай бұрын

    As a result of the refinery strikes, Russia has already become a net importer of refined product, now having to bring in gasoline, and I think diesel too, from Belarus. It gets worse: Belarus only has 2 refineries (compared to Russia's over 50), so if Ukraine keeps hitting those refineries at the some pace it has been in recent weeks, Belarus won't have the capacity to supplement Russia's internal gas & diesel needs. They will have some tough choices to make: 1) divert all refined fuel toward the war effort at the expense of consumer gasoline supplies, severely spiking gas prices internally (also, it's about to be planting season on the farms - demand for diesel is about to spike), OR, 2) ration fuel evenly between military & consumer needs to avoid the worst of the sticker shock at the pump for consumers, hindering their ability to prosecute mechanized war. They will likely start looking for places they can buy refined gas & diesel from once they've tapped out Belarus, and having to pay market prices for refined fuel will burn through their cash reserves VERY quickly. Also: who's gonna sell it to them? The sanctions are tightening once again. India and Turkey have pretty much stopped buying Russian crude in the last couple weeks now that the West has ratcheted up pressure on companies taking shipments from Russian oil tankers, which will put strain on supplies elsewhere. I don't see these countries having a whole lot of extra lying around to sell to Russia, and they're probably wary of running afoul of further sanctions. Virtually overnight, it appears gasoline & diesel for Russia will have gone from a value-added profit center to a cash hemorrhage.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    Albeit it's possible for turkiye and india to sell via black market, countries like companies are profit driven. But there is one more to add to the list: the conundrum of controling inflation or buying refined stuff at overprice, cause u if can't control both of these - ur inflation control is equal to zero.

  • @user-nr8zj5nm4d

    @user-nr8zj5nm4d

    Ай бұрын

    In the second half of 1943 Allied Forces bombed Ploesti oil fields [Romania], Germany's main supply zone of fuel. It kept the Luftwaffe largely grounded and strongly impaired Panzer divisions and other units in their operations. Some Nazi top officials later estimated that it shortened Germany's resistance with a year. The combined fuel demand from civil Russia may turn out to be incompatible with maintaning the [intensity of the] war in Ukraine.

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-nr8zj5nm4d yes, and usa knows that (pentagon is full of people who dedicate themselves knowing such things). Usa oficially said it hadn't discorage or encouraged - in political speak this translates to "we will for now not admit to have spoken about oil with ukraine". Why? Cause usa needs to keep line of comunication with russia (nukes) so it doesn't admit to have agreed with the strategy. It's basic common sense, politicians are profesional liers, and the statement fall into lie by omission, which is very common. Peeps are making this more than it is. The problem lies on congress that doesn't aprove the bill of military aid - this is just a distraction from the main issue.

  • @nusub2222

    @nusub2222

    Ай бұрын

    @@puraLusa - you are forgetting that the more Russian oil refining capacity the Ukrainians destroy, the higher the price of gas and pretty much everything else and the less likely Biden gets reelected.

  • @williamwells1862
    @williamwells1862Ай бұрын

    Right on.

  • @kennethferland5579
    @kennethferland5579Ай бұрын

    Changing the split of Cartel profits is not really an option to massage members into compliance. Production allocations are set via reserves (which everyone cheated at ofcourse but SLOWLY), this precludes anyone from briging/threatening their way into a differnt percentage of the total pie and thus acts to keep the cartel together by cutting off this avenue of infighting. Given the unavoidable reality of damage to Russian oil production I think the question is betwee 1) Russia is covering up production losses and they are againt the wall right now, or 2) Russia is preemptivly lowering production so that it regains surplus capacity. The point of having surplus capacity is to have manuver room in OPEC negotiations, and to give doubt to all other nations as to the true capacity, if Russia ever fails to meet it's own production target then this would be a clear sign that they are maxed out and everyone would be able to use that knowlege against them. If the later is the case Russia would very likely to soon demonstrate a production surge to visibly SHOW that they had surplus capacity.

  • @portmoneul
    @portmoneulАй бұрын

    You are a awsome teacher.

  • @liberatesweden2404
    @liberatesweden2404Ай бұрын

    Yes! 🎉❤

  • @dmuth
    @dmuthАй бұрын

    20:51 I think your next book should be called "Lines on Maps"!

  • @timmommens901
    @timmommens901Ай бұрын

    Burn the Oil refineries 😑😊 "pas de bras pas de chocolat": Les Intouchables. No money no war. 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦✌🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦

  • @carahiggs7157

    @carahiggs7157

    Ай бұрын

    😄😄😄😄😄😄💩💩💩💩Ukraine is toast KAPUT 😂😂😂

  • @timmommens901

    @timmommens901

    Ай бұрын

    @@worldoftancraft You assume alot Try harder 😊

  • @LePhil79

    @LePhil79

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@worldoftancraft You're aware that not only people from France can speak french?

  • @timmommens901

    @timmommens901

    Ай бұрын

    @@worldoftancraft Are you mental ? Cause you seem to double down. Not even getting a clue.

  • @LePhil79

    @LePhil79

    Ай бұрын

    @@worldoftancraft There are native french-speaking people outside of France, buddy ... Switzerland, Belgium, Québec and some other places in Canada, etc ... Also, what your "Chinese / Japanese" thing has to do with the subject? You should consult a specialist...

  • @Yezpahr
    @YezpahrАй бұрын

    William, upgrade your account security and click no links at all. Joe Blogs got hacked.

  • @16252
    @16252Ай бұрын

    interesting, thanks

  • @terryberard1355
    @terryberard1355Ай бұрын

    My first though went to reducing the number of production site to ensure enough protection for each

  • @kauffner
    @kauffnerАй бұрын

    Russia was selling the oil to India in exchange for rupees. There comes a time when you have enough rupees.

  • @josephahner3031

    @josephahner3031

    Ай бұрын

    Yet I keep smashing jars and cutting grass anyway.

  • @Welgeldiguniekalias
    @WelgeldiguniekaliasАй бұрын

    The 70s were not particularly prosperous for the Soviet Union - it was the "Era of Stagnation".

  • @neutralevil1917

    @neutralevil1917

    Ай бұрын

    Actually the 70's were the most prosperous decade in the entire previous Russian history

  • @seneca983

    @seneca983

    Ай бұрын

    Prosperous compared to the following period of low oil prices.

  • @4grammaton

    @4grammaton

    Ай бұрын

    "Stagnation" referred to political stagnation, not economic. Like neutralevil said, it was the most prosperous decade of Russian history hitherto.

  • @RobinTheBot

    @RobinTheBot

    Ай бұрын

    They stagnated specifically because they were prosperous. That's why the political body settled on "the good times will never end" as a solution.

  • @neutralevil1917

    @neutralevil1917

    Ай бұрын

    @@RobinTheBot It was a bit more complicated, but you get it right, this was the main reason, so kudos to you

  • @theconqueringram5295
    @theconqueringram5295Ай бұрын

    And I am all for it!

  • @ralphmtsu
    @ralphmtsuАй бұрын

    Sounds like an old grad school class I took called the Political Economy. Still have it somewhere in my library.

  • @tonep3168
    @tonep3168Ай бұрын

    It’s a shame that oil has (mostly) to come from such evil places.

  • @robbiekop7

    @robbiekop7

    Ай бұрын

    Yea Underground

  • @deadwingdomain

    @deadwingdomain

    Ай бұрын

    It's all about power an politics

  • @paulbrowne6087

    @paulbrowne6087

    Ай бұрын

    That's why I've and EV and solar. Screw these petrostates.

  • @manserizawa2327

    @manserizawa2327

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@paulbrowne6087not to ruin your fun but the rare earth metals to produce EVs and solar panels came from China

  • @davidjernigan8161
    @davidjernigan8161Ай бұрын

    All the production and refining equipment requires maintenance, and Russia may not have access to the parts and skill needed to perform the upkeep.

  • @TheRezro
    @TheRezroАй бұрын

    Interesting question? We do know that due to immense costs of war, Russia was undercutting cost of maintenance of they oil industry. What also was heavily dependent on the western imported hardware. So it was only matter of time when they industry start collapsing. On top of that OPEC manipulation would demand participation of other OPEC countries. Russia can't really on its own manipulate the prices, especially as they desperately need the money. On top of that India and China stack up massive quantities of oil under the cost, exactly because Russia was needing the money. And they can resell it, if prices would skyrocket. So from two scenarios, only one seams to be valid option.

  • @lp9280
    @lp9280Ай бұрын

    I think we also need to add extra layer of complexity here for ruzzia. Saudi Arabia or OPEC in general can increase their output without losing much of the profits, because oil from Saudi Arabia is not sanctioned. Meaning that Riyad can sell more oil, but ruzzia can't easily sell more oil even if they wanted to. Also knowing ruzzian problems OPEC can simply "throw them under the bus", like they did in good old day of US shale oil boom. Simply said OPEC knows what ruzzia had issues with oil extraction and the price of the extraction, as such they know that if they let oil drop below $40 a barrel, ruzzia goes bust, their oil production goes bust and there will be one less competitor... at which point they can cut exports again. In short - cartel logic does not work so when when some members are constrained in their extractions and export capacity and are facing increasing cost of extraction.

  • @britishskeleton777
    @britishskeleton777Ай бұрын

    the only complaint i have with your vids is how at the end i feel like i learned something wilst not knowing it. also i don't like a book thrown into my face every vid :)

  • @EEX97623
    @EEX97623Ай бұрын

    Belarus supply to Putin isn’t going to last long

  • @puraLusa

    @puraLusa

    Ай бұрын

    Belarus production was for internal consumption and a nominal portion for export (profit to pay up for internal consumption costs), but it can't produce in quantity to supply a russian size economy of war, not enough refineries or capacity at all.

  • @bigolboomerbelly4348

    @bigolboomerbelly4348

    Ай бұрын

    Belarus isn't giving russia oil per se. They are giving Russian crude access to refineries that Ukraine won't target. russia exports crude but refines their own oil for domestic consumption so in this instance the crude is extracted in Russia sent to Belarus and then sent back to russia for domestic consumption.

  • @Syndr1
    @Syndr1Ай бұрын

    Hi Will, not sure I like that bald eagle analogy in your story lol

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