From $0 to $120 in 2 years — and the price of oil could climb higher
CBC
With so much pain at the gas pumps these days and the extraordinary price of oil around the globe, it's almost unfathomable to think a barrel of crude was worthless two years ago.
The price of oil even briefly turned negative in the spring of 2020 after the pandemic hit and travel activity by air, land and sea ground to a near halt.
Oil remains close to multi-year highs and any sign of weakness or a dip in value has been brief before a rebound in price.
The oilpatch is now in a period of record revenue and awash in cash after a punishing string of years during the last decade — a period that included stubbornly low prices, widespread layoffs and costly pipeline bottlenecks.
"People that have survived and waited out the tougher times are getting rewarded now," said Travis Sperling, industrial sales and operations manager with Winters Instruments, which specializes in manufacturing pressure and temperature gauges.
Prices spiked after Russian President Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine in February sent the market into turmoil. Initially, many expected the exorbitant prices wouldn't last, but sanctions on Russia and recovering economies are offering crude prices staying power.
"This is a long way from the downturn," said Hayden Binde, marketing associate with Montana-based BioSqueeze, which focuses on sealing leaks from oil and gas wells.
Binde was one of hundreds of people in Calgary last week for the Global Energy Show, a conference and trade show. Morale is high, to say the least.
"A lot of businesses that I've talked to [are] busier. Things have been picking up, so companies are a lot more optimistic," said Rod Craven, a manager with Pumps and Pressure, based in Red Deer, Alta.
It's not just oil; natural gas prices too are at multi-year highs. The commodity prices provide an extra bounce in people's step at the convention.
Higher prices won't erase the scrutiny by governments over carbon emissions or climate change. And many at the conference are also keenly aware that energy prices are too high and causing affordability and inflation problems across the country.
Sherry Martin wasn't sure if her fuel bill for attending the event from Saskatchewan was worth it, but in the end she was happy with how many business leads she was able to pick up.
"If the fuel prices keep going up, it's going to hurt. It's going to really hurt," said Martin, part of the sales team at AGI Envirotank, which sells steel storage tanks.
After hovering around $120 US per barrel this week, there is plenty of speculation about where oil prices could go from here. Soaring to $150 or beyond isn't out of question.