
on peut mettre le fichier excel en accès public et organiser un concours du meilleur film !

Modérateurs : Rod, Modérateurs
Mercidiogene a écrit :Pour Gilles et SylvainBanzai
Sans Windows ça aide...Sylvain a écrit :J'ai pu réaliser cette animation grâce à un logiciel libre, nommé The Gimp, et mon ordinateur n'est pas équipé de Windows.
Une période prolongée avec des températures inférieures à la normale cet hiver pourrait peser sur l'approvisionnement du marché en fioul domestique et faire monter les prix des produits pétroliers aux États-Unis, mais le baril ne risque pas d'atteindre prochainement les 70 dollars, a déclaré mercredi l'Administration fédérale d'information sur l'énergie.
"Sauf perturbation dans l'offre de brut, toute hausse des prix sera probablement d'une magnitude inférieure à ce que nous avons vu plus tôt dans l'année, et le prix du pétrole brut West Texas Intermediate (WTI) ne devrait pas atteindre 70 dollars le baril (...) dans un avenir proche", a indiqué l'EIA, le bras statistique du département américain de l'énergie, dans son rapport hebdomadaire sur l'état du marché.
Le brut léger US se négocie mercredi autour de 62 dollars le baril.
Traduction :Under EIA’s latest forecast for 2007 world oil supply and demand, released yesterday in the December 2006 issue of the Short-Term Energy Outlook, the call on OPEC crude oil during 2007 is expected to be close to OPEC producers’ 2006 average production level. Since OPEC members’ production is currently running about 0.5 million barrels per day below the 2006 annual average rate, our forecast suggests the need for increases rather than decreases in OPEC members’ production over the coming year.
EIA projections regarding the call on OPEC reflect our assessment of world oil demand and net supply changes from non-OPEC producers. Projected world oil demand grows by 1.5 million barrels per day in 2007. New supplies from non-OPEC countries, in addition to expected growth in OPEC non-crude oil supplies, should meet most, but not all, of this anticipated demand growth. Non-OPEC supply is expected to rise by 1.3 million barrels per day in 2007, as new projects in the Caspian Region, Africa, and Brazil add more than 0.8 million barrels per day of production. This forecast also includes production from Russia’s Sakhalin I Project and the United Kingdom’s Buzzard field, both of which should begin adding new supply over the next two months, although production from these fields will be limited initially. Key components that may lower growth in non-OPEC supply during 2007 would include weather-related events, steeper rates of production decline at already mature fields, and continuing new project slippage.
There is a wide range of opinion regarding the outlook for both demand and supply. Some forecasters expect demand to increase by about 2 million barrels per day, while non-OPEC supply only increases by a little more than 1 million barrels per day. If you believe this will be the picture for 2007, you would envision the need for a much larger increase in OPEC production to keep inventories from falling precipitously and putting upward pressure on oil prices. Conversely, some other analysts expect non-OPEC supply to increase by nearly 2 million barrels per day, far surpassing expected growth in world oil demand. Under this view of the global oil balance in 2007, OPEC would need to cut production to keep inventories from rising substantially and putting downward pressure on oil prices.
le Fameux GillesH38....What a surprise to find here a post of the famous (on Oleocene.org french site at least) GillesH38 ! It would be so nice to have a french site of the quality of TOD.
The blindness of EIA is incredible, good job man