Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › What will happen if oil goes over $200 a barrel and dollar tanks to zero?
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May 18, 2008 at 11:08 AM #12778May 18, 2008 at 11:15 AM #206851capemanParticipant
If the dollar goes to zero then the price of oil goes to infinity. Neither are possible.
May 18, 2008 at 11:15 AM #206906capemanParticipantIf the dollar goes to zero then the price of oil goes to infinity. Neither are possible.
May 18, 2008 at 11:15 AM #206935capemanParticipantIf the dollar goes to zero then the price of oil goes to infinity. Neither are possible.
May 18, 2008 at 11:15 AM #206959capemanParticipantIf the dollar goes to zero then the price of oil goes to infinity. Neither are possible.
May 18, 2008 at 11:15 AM #206990capemanParticipantIf the dollar goes to zero then the price of oil goes to infinity. Neither are possible.
May 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM #206892HarryBoschParticipantWe Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis
I just watched this last night on CNN. I didn’t know that Brazil is completely independent of oil from other nations. They use “E85” and produce all of their own “sugar-cane ethanol”. The world production of oil could stop completely and Brazil would go on as if everything were normal. Besides Rio there’s another reason to move there :)(http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/03/10/brazil.ethanol.example.ap/index.html)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/14/cnnpce.we.were.warned/index.html
Program Overview
It is September 2009. A Category 5 hurricane roars through Houston, destroying oil refineries, drilling platforms and pipelines–the complex system that provides a quarter of our nation’s daily fuel supply. Three days later, terrorists attack two key oil installations in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest supplier. In the days and weeks that follow, gasoline prices hit record highs, food prices soar as trucks cannot afford to make deliveries, and Americans begin to realize that their very way of life is in peril.
In We Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis, CNN’s Frank Sesno explores the potential ripple effects of this frightening scenario. The events depicted are hypothetical, but oil experts believe the scenario is entirely plausible. His interviews with energy experts reveal that we are nearing the point at which the world, led by the U.S. and China, will begin to consume more oil than can be pumped from the ground and the oceans. Tracking the global race to find new pools of oil, Sesno also considers the viability of alternative fuels, such as ethanol, which is used as fuel for 40% of cars in Brazil. Throughout his investigation, Sesno tries to find out whether any of these ventures can solve our looming energy crisis or whether we are already too late.
May 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM #206944HarryBoschParticipantWe Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis
I just watched this last night on CNN. I didn’t know that Brazil is completely independent of oil from other nations. They use “E85” and produce all of their own “sugar-cane ethanol”. The world production of oil could stop completely and Brazil would go on as if everything were normal. Besides Rio there’s another reason to move there :)(http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/03/10/brazil.ethanol.example.ap/index.html)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/14/cnnpce.we.were.warned/index.html
Program Overview
It is September 2009. A Category 5 hurricane roars through Houston, destroying oil refineries, drilling platforms and pipelines–the complex system that provides a quarter of our nation’s daily fuel supply. Three days later, terrorists attack two key oil installations in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest supplier. In the days and weeks that follow, gasoline prices hit record highs, food prices soar as trucks cannot afford to make deliveries, and Americans begin to realize that their very way of life is in peril.
In We Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis, CNN’s Frank Sesno explores the potential ripple effects of this frightening scenario. The events depicted are hypothetical, but oil experts believe the scenario is entirely plausible. His interviews with energy experts reveal that we are nearing the point at which the world, led by the U.S. and China, will begin to consume more oil than can be pumped from the ground and the oceans. Tracking the global race to find new pools of oil, Sesno also considers the viability of alternative fuels, such as ethanol, which is used as fuel for 40% of cars in Brazil. Throughout his investigation, Sesno tries to find out whether any of these ventures can solve our looming energy crisis or whether we are already too late.
May 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM #206974HarryBoschParticipantWe Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis
I just watched this last night on CNN. I didn’t know that Brazil is completely independent of oil from other nations. They use “E85” and produce all of their own “sugar-cane ethanol”. The world production of oil could stop completely and Brazil would go on as if everything were normal. Besides Rio there’s another reason to move there :)(http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/03/10/brazil.ethanol.example.ap/index.html)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/14/cnnpce.we.were.warned/index.html
Program Overview
It is September 2009. A Category 5 hurricane roars through Houston, destroying oil refineries, drilling platforms and pipelines–the complex system that provides a quarter of our nation’s daily fuel supply. Three days later, terrorists attack two key oil installations in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest supplier. In the days and weeks that follow, gasoline prices hit record highs, food prices soar as trucks cannot afford to make deliveries, and Americans begin to realize that their very way of life is in peril.
In We Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis, CNN’s Frank Sesno explores the potential ripple effects of this frightening scenario. The events depicted are hypothetical, but oil experts believe the scenario is entirely plausible. His interviews with energy experts reveal that we are nearing the point at which the world, led by the U.S. and China, will begin to consume more oil than can be pumped from the ground and the oceans. Tracking the global race to find new pools of oil, Sesno also considers the viability of alternative fuels, such as ethanol, which is used as fuel for 40% of cars in Brazil. Throughout his investigation, Sesno tries to find out whether any of these ventures can solve our looming energy crisis or whether we are already too late.
May 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM #206999HarryBoschParticipantWe Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis
I just watched this last night on CNN. I didn’t know that Brazil is completely independent of oil from other nations. They use “E85” and produce all of their own “sugar-cane ethanol”. The world production of oil could stop completely and Brazil would go on as if everything were normal. Besides Rio there’s another reason to move there :)(http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/03/10/brazil.ethanol.example.ap/index.html)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/14/cnnpce.we.were.warned/index.html
Program Overview
It is September 2009. A Category 5 hurricane roars through Houston, destroying oil refineries, drilling platforms and pipelines–the complex system that provides a quarter of our nation’s daily fuel supply. Three days later, terrorists attack two key oil installations in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest supplier. In the days and weeks that follow, gasoline prices hit record highs, food prices soar as trucks cannot afford to make deliveries, and Americans begin to realize that their very way of life is in peril.
In We Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis, CNN’s Frank Sesno explores the potential ripple effects of this frightening scenario. The events depicted are hypothetical, but oil experts believe the scenario is entirely plausible. His interviews with energy experts reveal that we are nearing the point at which the world, led by the U.S. and China, will begin to consume more oil than can be pumped from the ground and the oceans. Tracking the global race to find new pools of oil, Sesno also considers the viability of alternative fuels, such as ethanol, which is used as fuel for 40% of cars in Brazil. Throughout his investigation, Sesno tries to find out whether any of these ventures can solve our looming energy crisis or whether we are already too late.
May 18, 2008 at 11:54 AM #207029HarryBoschParticipantWe Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis
I just watched this last night on CNN. I didn’t know that Brazil is completely independent of oil from other nations. They use “E85” and produce all of their own “sugar-cane ethanol”. The world production of oil could stop completely and Brazil would go on as if everything were normal. Besides Rio there’s another reason to move there :)(http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/03/10/brazil.ethanol.example.ap/index.html)
http://www.cnn.com/2006/EDUCATION/03/14/cnnpce.we.were.warned/index.html
Program Overview
It is September 2009. A Category 5 hurricane roars through Houston, destroying oil refineries, drilling platforms and pipelines–the complex system that provides a quarter of our nation’s daily fuel supply. Three days later, terrorists attack two key oil installations in Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest supplier. In the days and weeks that follow, gasoline prices hit record highs, food prices soar as trucks cannot afford to make deliveries, and Americans begin to realize that their very way of life is in peril.
In We Were Warned: Tomorrow’s Oil Crisis, CNN’s Frank Sesno explores the potential ripple effects of this frightening scenario. The events depicted are hypothetical, but oil experts believe the scenario is entirely plausible. His interviews with energy experts reveal that we are nearing the point at which the world, led by the U.S. and China, will begin to consume more oil than can be pumped from the ground and the oceans. Tracking the global race to find new pools of oil, Sesno also considers the viability of alternative fuels, such as ethanol, which is used as fuel for 40% of cars in Brazil. Throughout his investigation, Sesno tries to find out whether any of these ventures can solve our looming energy crisis or whether we are already too late.
May 18, 2008 at 12:43 PM #206912AnonymousGuestSo, if this scenario comes to pass, should we go to ethanol and let the countries that depends on our corn starve?
May 18, 2008 at 12:43 PM #206963AnonymousGuestSo, if this scenario comes to pass, should we go to ethanol and let the countries that depends on our corn starve?
May 18, 2008 at 12:43 PM #206993AnonymousGuestSo, if this scenario comes to pass, should we go to ethanol and let the countries that depends on our corn starve?
May 18, 2008 at 12:43 PM #207020AnonymousGuestSo, if this scenario comes to pass, should we go to ethanol and let the countries that depends on our corn starve?
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