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Pickens: $300 Oil is Still On Its Way

By Kirsten Korosec | Nov 13, 2009

T. Boone Pickens, the Texas billionaire investor turned-wind turbine and natural gas champion, said Thursday he expects the price of oil will hit $100 in 2010. Within 10 years, he thinks crude will make it to $300 a barrel.

Pickens, who was attending a conference in Washington, said the world had maxed out at 85 million barrels a day of production, reported Bloomberg News.

Pickens isn’t alone in his prognostication.

Morgan Downey of Scarce Whales, noted quite a few December 2015 New York Mercantile Exchange West Texas Intermediate crude oil $500 strike call options have been purchased since the beginning of October this year. He has a handy chart, to boot.

And Pickens has said it before. 

Pickens threw out similar figures last summer when oil had surpassed the $140 per barrel level. During testimony before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee in July 2008, Pickens said prices would reach $300 in 10 years if the U.S. did not reduce its dependence on foreign imports.

In the months since his testimony, prices dropped as low as $32 a barrel and then rose back up to over $75 a barrel.

But now, after logging a little global-recession time, which included a slackening demand for fuel, Pickens is still throwing out the $300 number. Meaning, weak demand or not, Pickens believes world oil production has peaked.

And demand is expected to pick up. The International Energy Agency’s 2009 World Energy Outlook expects demand to resume an upward trend and increase 40 percent higher than 2007 levels by 2030.

The Paris-based agency said conventional oil production in countries not belonging to the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries — OPEC — will peak in 2010. So, most output is going to have to come from OPEC countries, placing even more pressure on that supply.

Kirsten Korosec has been a print and online journalist for more than 10 years covering education, politics and business.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Pickens Increasing Oil and Natural Gas Exposure

    New York Times - 45 days 5 hours 41 minutes ago

    Texas oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens said Tuesday he had increased his long oil and natural gas position in recent weeks

  • Pickens turning attention to natural gas

    UPI - 131 days 1 hour 28 minutes ago

    Two years ago Pickens, a Texan who became a billionaire in the oil business and now runs the BP Capital Management hedge fund, announced that he planned to erect the largest wind farm in the world in the Texas Panhandle. He foresaw a farm of more than 400,000 acres on land that is constantly buffeted by stiff winds. Turbines 400 feet tall would...

  • Pickens says increasing oil, natural gas exposure

    Reuters - 45 days 18 hours 9 minutes ago

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Texas oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens said on Tuesday he has increased his long oil and natural gas position in recent weeks. "It's not my personality to be short," said the billionaire who has made his fortune investing in the oil sector. Oil prices are likely to be around $75 a barrel by the end of 2009 and $85 by the end of...

  • Pickens backs off wind farm project: report

    Reuters - 136 days 9 hours 38 minutes ago

    (Reuters) - Texas oil billionaire T. Boone Pickens has called off plans to build the world's biggest wind farm in the Texas Panhandle, the Wall Street Journal said. Pickens said the wind farm project was scuttled partly because of the lack of adequate transmission lines to carry the electricity from remote locations to cities, according to the...

  • Bill would aim to boost production of natural gas

    The Detroit News - 135 days 16 hours 27 minutes ago

    Washington -- Senate leaders, joined by Texas oil billionaire T. Boone Pickens, unveiled a bill Wednesday to jumpstart the production of vehicles that run on natural gas. The legislation, dubbed the NAT-GAS bill, was introduced by Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah and Robert Menendez, D-N.J. It would increase...

 
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    verycold

    11/16/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Pickens: $300 Oil is Still On Its Way

    I personally would not trust Pickens as far as I can throw my house. After all, he has a horse in the race. However as long as population growth is out of control, which it is, at some point demand will outstrip supply unless more supply comes online. If you look at countries that have used wind source as energy, it still is only less than 10 percent of their energy solutions. Wind needs a back-up energy source as well and thus a double cost. Also many locations are just not feasible just like sun energy is not feasible everywhere either. As an example, my co-op electric doesn't support either wind or solar and instead wants more nuclear. However that is very costly and many still have fears and thus the reason one hasn't been built here in the US for many years. There are few in the US with nuclear energy education as well. We just let that technology pretty much die here in the US. I realize that France did not.

    For the life of me I just cannot understand why conservative measures are the the immediate choice while other technologies come on board which will take many years. There are so many people that live so far from their workplace. I remember when I lived in Chicago a few years back, that many traveled from Racine, WI to Chicago every single day. That is utterly crazy. Same thing in Dallas, TX. When I lived in Garland, TX some years ago, it took me 15 min. to get to downtown Dallas. When I moved, it was nearly 1 1/4 hrs to do the same loop. It is commuters that refuse to use transit because it is inconvenient to their lifestyle.

    I currently live rural. My 2000 truck has 50,000 miles on it most of it put on when I was taking long trips south. My other truck is 12 years old with over 100,000 miles and was used my various family members for work. You can see I don't drive much. Truth is I don't waste my trips.

    Instead of reinventing the wheel, how about we sit down hard on this nation and start to conserve our energy and natural resources before it is too late.

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