Blockline And Associate Ltd Blog
Blockline and Associate Ltd are sellers of light crude oil and other petroleum products. We also sell and lease out marine equipments, construction machinery and other equipments.
We sell Crude Oil, D2, AGO and other Petroleum product such as:
Nigeria Bonny Light Crude Oil (BLCO, FLCO and ALCO, etc): We sell mostly on FOB, CIF, TTO and TTT/STS Basis.
Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) and D2: We sell mostly on CIF and TTT/STS.
Bitumen: We sell on CIF and FOB Basis
Marine Equipments/Machines:
We sell and lease all kinds of marine equipments/machines.
Well sell and lease all kinds of vessel e.g. oil tanker, cargo vessel, crew vessel etc.
We sell and lease tug-boats of all kinds.
We sell and lease barges and sea going barges.
We sell and lease dredgers, swamp-buggy, cranes of all kinds, tug-boats of all kinds bulldozers, etc.
Crushing machine of all kinds and screening plant: We sell on CIF and FOB Basis.
Steel and Metal:
We sell steel pipes and tubes of all kinds
We sell metals of all kinds.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS:
We are also into real estate, transportation, communications and more.
Friday, 4 April 2014
Oil Production May Be At Its Peak
While most people understand that we are facing a worldwide shortage of one of our most precious commodities, the reasons behind the deficiency remain somewhat vague.
According to Mammoth Resource Partners, Inc., a Kentucky-based oil and gas exploration company, major media coverage has largely ignored the underlying reasons for the relentless march toward ever-higher oil and natural gas prices. Experts report that the reasons are rooted not only in Middle East chaos and Asia's booming economies, but they also predict that it's in the possibility that the world's oil production may be peaking.
By definition, peak oil is the name geologists have given to a proven fact of oil exploration and development: When half of an oil field's reserves have been extracted, the field will begin to progressively yield less oil with every passing year until it yields zero.
"As peak is approached, what is left in the major fields is becoming harder to extract, reducing the growth of oil supply, thus increasing its price," said Dr. Roger L. Cory, President of Mammoth Resource Partners, Inc.
In short, the world has been consuming more oil while it has been drilling and extracting about the same amount of oil. These two trends cannot continue without some long-lasting effects.
"The supply and demand lines are crossing, leading to huge increases in the price of oil and oil-related petroleum products," Cory predicts.
Cory said there will always be oil in the ground, but the questions that producers need to ask themselves are, how hard will it be to get out, and thus how much will it cost? And how high will the going rate per barrel have to be to make it worth my while?
"We have recently seen crude sold for more than $70 per barrel. Is this a temporary price spike, or part of a major, permanent upward price trend?" Cory said. "It's anyone's guess how high the price of crude will go, but triple digits per barrel certainly do not seem out of the question."
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