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New MiddleEast Pipe line...

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    New MiddleEast Pipe line...

    UAE Starts Pipeline to Bypass Strait 07/15 16:04

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- The United Arab Emirates on Sunday
    inaugurated a much-anticipated overland oil pipeline that bypasses the Strait
    of Hormuz, giving the OPEC member insurance against Iranian threats to block
    the strategic waterway.

    The 380-kilometer (236-mile) Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline snakes across
    western desert dunes and over the craggy Hajar mountains to the city of
    Fujairah on the UAE's Indian Ocean coast, south of the strait.

    Until now, all Emirati exports were loaded in the Gulf and then sailed out
    through Hormuz. Once it is running at full capacity, the pipeline could allow
    the country, OPEC's third biggest exporter, to ship as much as two-thirds of
    its peak production through the eastern port city.

    It is designed to carry at least 1.5 million barrels a day of crude, though
    capacity is expected to eventually rise to 1.8 million barrels daily.

    Efforts to bring the long-awaited export route online have gained increased
    urgency in recent months because of repeated threats by Iranian officials to
    close Hormuz if the country's own exports are blocked.

    The narrow strait is patrolled by Iranian warships as well as by the U.S.
    Navy and its allies. It is the export route for about 17 million barrels of oil
    a day, or a fifth of the world's oil supply.

    The chairman of Iran's Joint Chiefs of Staff said Sunday that Tehran has a
    contingency plan to close the key route, though any decision to shut it rests
    with the country's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    Gen. Hasan Firouzabadi's comments come two weeks after the European Union
    enforced a total oil embargo against Iran. The move is part of a series of
    sanctions meant to force Tehran to halt its uranium enrichment program. The
    West suspects Iran is aiming to build nuclear weapons. Iran denies the charge.

    Emirati officials quietly began filling the new pipeline with oil on June
    30, according to the UAE embassy in Washington. A statement from the embassy
    said the project underscores the U.S. ally's "commitment to ensuring the
    reliable and safe delivery of crude oil ... to global markets."

    Officials including the Emirates' energy minister gathered in Fujairah for
    the formal inauguration of the pipeline, said Mohammed Saif al-Afkham, the
    director general of Fujairah municipality.

    The International Petroleum Investment Co., the state-run company behind the
    project, confirmed that the pipeline became operational with the first
    commercial shipment being loaded onto a tanker for export.

    The U.S. ambassador to the UAE attended the inauguration, underscoring the
    project's strategic significance. Ambassador Michael H. Corbin called the
    launch "a historic step in establishing multiple routes for the vital flow of
    oil from the Arabian Peninsula."

    Although several Gulf Arab oil and gas producers fear a shutdown of the
    strait could block exports, only the UAE and Oman have coastlines on the Indian
    Ocean side of the strait. Saudi Arabia also can avoid Hormuz by shipping its
    Gulf fields' oil output through ports on the Red Sea, but it would have to
    significantly improve its transport infrastructure to get its full production
    out.


    (KA)

    http://www.midwestfertilizerinc.com/index.cfmshow=801&cat=43&id=070035C9&sort=6

    #2
    Who gives a rats ace?

    Comment


      #3
      Burb,

      Less volitility in black oil... means lower oil prices... and could mean lower fuel and grain prices.

      Comment


        #4
        Lower crude prices have made very little change to the retail price of gasoline or diesel in these parts. !@#$% snakes are still gouging us. Have to wait until Oct./Nov. before they come down "a bit".

        Comment


          #5
          If these cement heads get us in a shooting war, we might think prices now are a sweet heart deal?
          Be very afraid when you have neo-liberals like Hillary, Obama, and Harper running the show?
          Three dickheads who never worked a day in their lives.

          Comment


            #6
            Its the other guys who start the shooting
            wars. Gun totin, redneck, ignorant
            texicans, last time I checked.......

            Comment


              #7
              Libyia? Maybe Syria and Iran?

              Let the Arabs solve their own problems. Canada shouldn't be involved in America's imperial adventures.

              It's not our problem.

              Comment


                #8
                If its not our problem then why are we buying all these tanks, troop carriers, fighter planes, ships and helicopters?

                What are they for? Toys for the "big boys" as they say?

                Comment


                  #9
                  F#$K IT, Pump er' All Downa Hole To Chine!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                  Comment

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