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Genoil Inc GNOLF

Genoil Inc. is technology-based company engaged in the development of technologies relating to the oil and gas industry. The Company specializes in heavy-to-light oil technology, oil field development and exploration and production. It is a provider of hydro conversion fixed-bed technology for the upstream and downstream oil and gas industry. It is also working with Chinese policy banks and Chinese companies to provide, project financing, drilling, production, and processing services to the oil and gas industry. Its technology consists of Genoil Hydroconversion Upgrader (GHU), which converts sour (high sulfur), heavy hydrocarbon feed stocks into lighter oil with higher quality distillates for conventional refining. The Company is also engaged in other technologies, such as oil upgrading and recycling, water purification port technologies, well testing, and sand cleaning. The Company markets its technology to customers in the Middle East, Russia and China.


OTCPK:GNOLF - Post by User

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Post by peterap2001on Sep 26, 2017 6:51am
161 Views
Post# 26741091

End of Low Oil Article

End of Low Oil Article
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/oil-trader-trafigura-heralds-end-055632283.html

Oil Trader Trafigura Heralds End of 'Lower for Longer' Crude Era
[Bloomberg]
Dan Murtaugh, Javier Blas, Heesu Lee
BloombergSeptember 26, 2017

Oil Trader Trafigura Heralds End of 'Lower for Longer' Crude Era

The age of persistently weak oil prices is nearing its end, with demand booming and a supply squeeze in the offing, according to Trafigura Group.

The global market could face a shortage by 2019, Ben Luckock, co-head of Group Market Risk at the third-largest independent oil trader, said at the S&P Global Platts APPEC conference on Tuesday. As much as 9 million barrels a day of supply could be lost to crude-well declines by 2019, and the company is bullish on demand, he said, especially in India, the world’s fastest growing oil consumer.

“We are nearing the end of ‘lower for longer’ oil,” Luckock said, referring to a term used as far back as April 2015 by BP Plc boss Bob Dudley as a global glut wreaked havoc on crude prices worldwide.

Trafigura’s view that demand is set to outstrip supply mirrors Citigroup Inc., whose global head of commodities said that a market squeeze may emerge as early as 2018. It also echoes tentatively bullish oil traders who have gathered in Singapore for APPEC, an annual event that’s typically a good barometer to judge the outlook for oil the coming year. Strong economic growth is boosting oil consumption well above historical levels, according to BP, while OPEC and its allies curb output.

A surge in U.S. shale production that spurred the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to pump at will to defend its market share exacerbated a market oversupply over the past three years, driving the biggest price crash in a generation. OPEC has this year changed tack by curbing output in a bid to shrink the glut.
Crude Crash

When BP’s Dudley referred to ‘lower for longer’ prices in April 2015, global benchmark Brent crude was trading near $63 a barrel. By the following January, it had dropped to below $30 and hasn’t made it back above $60 since. Futures are still trading more than 50 percent lower than mid-2014 levels.

The weaker oil prices have boosted sales of low-efficiency sports utility vehicles in the U.S. and China, potentially boosting fuel demand, according to Trafigura’s Luckock. He sees the growth in electric vehicles occurring too late to ease coming oil supply problems.

Even if all new U.S. vehicles were EVs, it would still take more than 12 years to replace fleets, he said. Meanwhile, in the American shale oil patch, productivity is diminishing. The Permian region’s productivity is falling steadily after reaching a peak, according to Luckock.
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