GOV/MIL Main "Great Reset" Thread

marsh

On TB every waking moment
GOLD Broker

Game Over, They’re Pulling the Plug – Bill Holter
40:42 min

Game Over, They’re Pulling the Plug – Bill Holter
Greg Hunter's USAWatchdog.com Published June 14, 2022

By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com
Precious metals expert and financial writer Bill Holter said in early April that he thought we did not have much time until the financial meltdown started. He gave it 60 days. Two months later, the meltdown started in earnest right on time. The world is at debt levels never seen before, and Holter contends rising interest rates are the key driver here and now. Holter explains, “Interest rates are the key to the whole collapse. Mortgage rates, as of right now, are about 6.15%. Mortgage rates started the year just over 3%. In the fourth quarter of last year, we had mortgage rates as low as 2.75%. What that tells you is if you qualified for a $1 million mortgage at the end of last year, you only qualify for a $500,000 mortgage now. If you are a property owner, that means the pool of potential buyers is far less than 6 months ago, simply because interest rates have basically doubled. Holter also says that means property values are dramatically cut.

Interest rates have been on a more than 40-year downward trend since Fed Head Paul Volker raised a key rate to 20% in the early 1980’s. Holter points out, “We basically just went through a 40-year bull market on bonds where interest rates did nothing but go downward for 40 years . . . . That 40-year trend is now broken, and rates are headed higher. It just so happens the system is more indebted than it has ever been on any ratio or any basis you want to look at.

What I am getting at is these higher interest rates are blowing up the debt bubble.”

Don’t expect the Fed to come in and save the day like it did in the last financial meltdown back in 2008 and 2009. The Fed bailed out the economy when it started printing money like crazy and never stopped. Holter says, “The bottom line is the world’s financial system and, thus, real economies have been on life support since 2008. What people should understand is when the Fed says they are going to raise interest rates and they are going to shrink their balance sheet, that says they are pulling the plug out of the wall. They are taking the system off life support.

The bottom line is the system cannot live without life support. The Ponzi scheme cannot continue without new capital coming into the system. They are pulling the plug is what they are doing. . . . It’s game over.”

Holter also talks about gold and silver and why you should hold them in hand. Holter thinks a “Mad Max” scenario is a real possibility and says we have not seen the peak on inflation. There is a lot more in the 44-minute interview.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
'Globalist Predators and Major Bankers Control Governments Around the World' (Exclusive Interview) 16:56 min

'Globalist Predators and Major Bankers Control Governments Around the World' (Exclusive Interview)
RAIRFoundationUSA Published June 14, 2022

A shadowy cabal of bankers are controlling world affairs through supranational organizations that dictate globalist policies to leaders across the world.
Read the full article at RAIR Foundation USA:
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
3:30 min

A gas station owner tells Tucker Carlson why he is closing
The Post Millennial Clips Published June 14, 2022

A gas station owner tells Tucker Carlson: "The reason why I'm ready to close is because of the high prices of gas that I refuse to pass on to my consumers."
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Dave Walsh: We're Heading Towards 'Price Controls' Before The Election 4:14 min

Dave Walsh: We're Heading Towards 'Price Controls' Before The Election
Bannons War Room Published June 14, 2022

( Walsh: What sense does it make for Biden to go beg oil from the Saudis when the US has the world's dominant supply of oil and gas in N. America. During the past 8-10 years, with massive fracking developments, we figured out how to get out even more cost effectively. But now, we need to get Saudi Arabia, despite a monarchy very much aligned with the Russians in cross-collaboration to boost the price up drastically since February of last year. As we said 80% of the price hike had been accomplished by them in late December of last year when this invasion began to be discussed.

It's lunacy when we have the capacity to control our destiny internally. As bad as that is, another signal is the New York times claiming all this is due to corporate greed. The corporations are behind the inflation; they're bootstrapping on it; they're taking egregious advantage of it; they're benefitting from it; they're profiteering from it. His concern is where this is heading - similar to the Carter Admin. Dip into the toolkit and try to bring out government mandated price controls as a way forward.

When you talk about killing production, killing the supply of anything - any commodity - oil and gas or food, and start to impose price controls, (and he believes we are going to be headed there on oil and gas before the midterms,) you're going to kill production - disincentivize exploration and development even further.

Bannon: Underpinning the inflation crisis and the economic crisis today is an energy crisis. Is that correct?

Walsh: Yes, sir, totally.

Bannon: Food and everything. Petroleum is at the basis of transportation, plastics, fertilizer - all of it. Have you heard any Democrat in Congress or the Biden Admin. step forward and walk you through a genuine plan to turn this around?

Walsh: No, no plan. Intimation, yes, talking with third world or radical nations about becoming dependent upon them for oil, by the way who happen to be members of OPEC, which is all the more senseless. No, no strategy set forth what so ever such as lets look at the long run and start building nuclear power plants. If your "all over" clean energy, and you want long term, sustainable - meaning accessible energy to the millions, cost effective and continuous to supply baseload - nuclear would be good. How about a plan to begin to incentivize and re-invigorate that industry? The Sierra Club, the Green movement ended that years ago regulatorily. How about a few coal plants? Baseload, continuous flow options - nothing being discussed and continuous frustrations on the major oil producers not to produce.

Bannon: And the Windfall Profits Tax is coming)
 
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marsh

On TB every waking moment
Agenda 2030: The Transformation of the WHO into the CDC of the Entire Planet 2:33 min

Agenda 2030: The Transformation of the WHO into the CDC of the Entire Planet
Red Voice Media Published June 14, 2022

Alex Newman: "One of the things that keeps coming up over and over [that] I think really helps show the scope of this is [that] they're calling everything a public health emergency. Now they're saying that racism is a public health crisis. They're saying that climate change is a public health crisis. They're saying that gun violence is a public health crisis. And so if everything is a public health crisis, and the WHO is the primary mechanism for dealing with health crises, then pretty much everything comes under the jurisdiction of the WHO."

Full Video: Agenda 2030 and the World Economic Forum Plan to Remake the World: Alex Newman
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Another US Food Processing Plant Erupts In Flames

TUESDAY, JUN 14, 2022 - 08:45 PM

Another food processing plant went up in flames. According to local news Stevens Point Journal, a fire ripped through a pizza-making plant in Wisconsin on Monday.

More than 70 firefighters from multiple fire departments battled a massive fire at Festive Foods in eastern Portage County that began around 0900 local time. The American Red Cross arrived on the scene shortly after to provide food and water to firefighters. They snapped two pictures of the blaze, showing flames erupting from the facility's roof and a column of thick dark smoke pouring into the air.

Firefighters were able to get the blaze under control in the early evening, and damage to the food processing plant has yet to be fully assessed. However, Festive Foods' Facebook page indicates the plant is "temporarily closed."
"Today festive foods experienced a heartbreaking event. As many of you have seen in the news we have had a terrible fire run through our plant," a post on Festive Foods' Facebook read.
Festive Foods manufactures frozen pizzas for supermarkets in a 120,000 sq. feet facility and considers itself a "leading co-packer of USDA-certified frozen-topped pizza, sandwiches, dough products, and stuffed appetizers." The company sells its products to supermarkets nationwide.


Walmart is a seller of at least one of the company's brands.


While the fire seems insignificant, it's part of a much larger issue of a spate of "accidental fires," one by one, taking out America's food supply chain over the past year (source of the list via The Gateway Pundit):
  1. 1/11/21 A fire that destroyed 75,000-square-foot processing plant in Fayetteville
  2. 4/30/21 A fire ignited inside the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant in Monmouth, IL
  3. 7/25/21 Three-alarm fire at Kellogg plant in Memphis, 170 emergency personnel responded to the call
  4. 7/30/21 Firefighters on Friday battled a large fire at Tyson's River Valley Ingredients plant in Hanceville, Alabama
  5. 8/23/21 Fire crews were called to the Patak Meat Production company on Ewing Road in Austell
  6. 9/13/21 A fire at the JBS beef plant in Grand Island, Neb., on Sunday night forced a halt to slaughter and fabrication lines
  7. 10/13/21 A five-alarm fire ripped through the Darigold butter production plant in Caldwell, ID
  8. 11/15/21 A woman is in custody following a fire at the Garrard County Food Pantry
  9. 11/29/21 A fire broke out around 5:30 p.m. at the Maid-Rite Steak Company meat processing plant
  10. 12/13/21 West Side food processing plant in San Antonio left with smoke damage after a fire
  11. 1/7/22 Damage to a poultry processing plant on Hamilton's Mountain following an overnight fire
  12. 1/13/22 Firefighters worked for 12 hours to put a fire out at the Cargill-Nutrena plant in Lecompte, LA
  13. 1/31/22 a fertilizer plant with 600 tons of ammonium nitrate inside caught on fire on Cherry Street in Winston-Salem
  14. 2/3/22 A massive fire swept through Wisconsin River Meats in Mauston
  15. 2/3/22 At least 130 cows were killed in a fire at Percy Farm in Stowe
  16. 2/15/22 Bonanza Meat Company goes up in flames in El Paso, Texas
  17. 2/15/22 Nearly a week after the fire destroyed most of the Shearer's Foods plant in Hermiston
  18. 2/16/22 A fire had broken at US largest soybean processing and biodiesel plant in Claypool, Indiana
  19. 2/18/22 An early morning fire tore through the milk parlor at Bess View Farm
  20. 2/19/22 Three people were injured, and one was hospitalized, after an ammonia leak at Lincoln Premium Poultry in Fremont
  21. 2/22/22 The Shearer's Foods plant in Hermiston caught fire after a propane boiler exploded
  22. 2/28/22 A smoldering pile of sulfur quickly became a raging chemical fire at Nutrien Ag Solutions
  23. 2/28/22 A man was hurt after a fire broke out at the Shadow Brook Farm and Dutch Girl Creamery
  24. 3/4/22 294,800 chickens destroyed at farm in Stoddard, Missouri
  25. 3/4/22 644,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland
  26. 3/8/22 243,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in New Castle, Delaware
  27. 3/10/22 663,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, MD
  28. 3/10/22 915,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Taylor, IA
  29. 3/14/22 The blaze at 244 Meadow Drive was discovered shortly after 5 p.m. by farm owner Wayne Hoover
  30. 3/14/22 2,750,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Jefferson, Wisconsin
  31. 3/16/22 A fire at a Walmart warehouse distribution center has cast a large plume of smoke visible throughout Indianapolis.
  32. 3/16/22 Nestle Food Plant extensively damaged in fire and new production destroyed Jonesboro, Arkansas
  33. 3/17/22 5,347,500 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Buena Vista, Iowa
  34. 3/17/22 147,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Kent, Delaware
  35. 3/18/22 315,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland
  36. 3/22/22 172,000 Turkeys destroyed on farms in South Dakota
  37. 3/22/22 570,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska
  38. 3/24/22 Fire fighters from numerous towns are battling a major fire at the McCrum potato processing facility in Belfast.
  39. 3/24/22 418,500 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska
  40. 3/25/22 250,300 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Franklin, Iowa
  41. 3/26/22 311,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  42. 3/27/22 126,300 Turkeys destroyed in South Dakota
  43. 3/28/22 1,460,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Guthrie, Iowa
  44. 3/29/22 A massive fire burned 40,000 pounds of food meant to feed people in a food desert near Maricopa
  45. 3/31/22 A structure fire caused significant damage to a large portion of key fresh onion packing facilities in south Texas
  46. 3/31/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Osceola, Iowa
  47. 3/31/22 5,011,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Osceola, Iowa
  48. 4/6/22 281,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Wayne, North Carolina
  49. 4/9/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  50. 4/9/22 208,900 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  51. 4/12/22 89,700 chickens destroyed at farm in Wayne, North Carolina
  52. 4/12/22 1,746,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Dixon, Nebraska
  53. 4/12/22 259,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Minnesota
  54. 4/13/22 fire destroys East Conway Beef & Pork Meat Market in Conway, New Hampshire
  55. 4/13/22 Plane crashes into Gem State Processing, Idaho potato and food processing plant
  56. 4/13/22 77,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  57. 4/14/22 Taylor Farms Food Processing plant burns down Salinas, California.
  58. 4/14/22 99,600 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  59. 4/15/22 1,380,500 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Lancaster, Minnesota
  60. 4/19/22 Azure Standard nation's premier independent distributor of organic and healthy food, was destroyed by fire in Dufur, Oregon
  61. 4/19/22 339,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  62. 4/19/22 58,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Montrose, Color
  63. 4/20/22 2,000,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Minnesota
  64. 4/21/22 A small plane crashed in the lot of a General Mills plant in Georgia
  65. 4/22/22 197,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  66. 4/23/22 200,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  67. 4/25/22 1,501,200 chickens destroyed at egg farm Cache, Utah
  68. 4/26/22 307,400 chickens destroyed at farm Lancaster Pennsylvania
  69. 4/27/22 2,118,000 chickens destroyed at farm Knox, Nebraska
  70. 4/28/22 Egg-laying facility in Iowa kills 5.3 million chickens, fires 200-plus workers
  71. 4/28/22 Allen Harim Foods processing plant killed nearly 2M chickens in Delaware
  72. 4/2822 110,700 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  73. 4/29/22 1,366,200 chickens destroyed at farm Weld Colorado
  74. 4/30/22 13,800 chickens destroyed at farm Sequoia Oklahoma
  75. 5/3/22 58,000 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  76. 5/3/22 118,900 Turkeys destroyed Beadle S Dakota
  77. 5/3/22 114,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  78. 5/3/22 118,900 Turkeys destroyed Lyon Minnesota
  79. 5/7/22 20,100 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  80. 5/10/22 72,300 chickens destroyed at farm Lancaster Pennsylvania
  81. 5/10/22 61,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  82. 5/10/22 35,100 Turkeys destroyed Muskegon, Michigan
  83. 5/13/22 10,500 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  84. 5/14/22 83,400 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  85. 5/17/22 79,00 chickens destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  86. 5/18/22 7,200 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  87. 5/19/22 Train carrying limestone derailed Jensen Beach FL
  88. 5/21/22 57,000 Turkeys destroyed on farm in Dakota Minnesota
  89. 5/23/22 4,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  90. 5/29/22 A Saturday night fire destroyed a poultry building at Forsman Farms
  91. 5/31/22 3,000,000 chickens destroyed by fire at Forsman facility in Stockholm Township, Minnesota
  92. 6/2/22 30,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  93. 6/7/22 A fire occurred Tuesday evening at the JBS meat packing plant in Green Bay.
  94. 6/8/22 Firefighters from Tangipahoa Fire District 1 respond to a fire at the Purina Feed Mill in Arcola
  95. 6/9/22 Irrigation water was canceled in California (the #1 producer of food in the US) and storage water flushed directly out to the delta.
  96. 6/12/22 Largest Pork Company in the US Shuts Down California Plant Due to High Costs
  97. 6/13/22 Fire Breaks Out at a Food Processing Plant West of Waupaca County in Wisconsin
(COMMENT: After the closure of Smithfield in the West and the fact that the Chinese are buying up farms in the midwest, I think this is all a part of a CCP strategy to weaken food supply chains in the US as they prepare to take Taiwan. I wouldn't be surprised if China was using weather modification to cause drought and flooding in our agricultural areas.)
 
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marsh

On TB every waking moment

The Economic Meltdown Has Roots In Lockdown

TUESDAY, JUN 14, 2022 - 07:05 PM
Authored by Jeffrey Tucker via The Brownstone Institute,

American’s capacity for denial is truly a thing to behold.

For at least 27 months, it should have been obvious that we were headed for a grave crisis. Not only that: the crisis was already here in March 2020.



For weird reasons, some people, many people, imagined that governments could just shut down an economy and turn it back on without consequence. And yet here we are.

Historians of the future, if there are any intelligent ones among them, will surely be aghast at our astounding ignorance. Congress enacted decades of spending in just two years and figured it would be fine. The printing presses at the Fed ran at full tilt. No one cared to do anything about the trade snarls or supply-chain breakages. And here we are.

Our elites had two years to fix this unfolding disaster. They did nothing. Now we face terrible, grim, grueling, exploitative inflation, at the same time we are plunging into recession again, and people sit around wondering what the heck happened.

I will tell you what happened: the ruling class destroyed the world we knew. It happened right before our eyes. And here we are.

Last week, the stock market reeled on the news that the European Central Bank will attempt to do something about the inflation wrecking markets. So of course the financial markets panicked like an addict who can’t find his next hit of heroin. This week already began with more of the same, for fear that the Fed will be forced to rein in its easy-money policy event further. Maybe, maybe not; but recession appears impending regardless.

The bad news is everywhere. Even in the midst of very tight labor markets and very low unemployment (mostly mythical when you consider labor force participation), companies have started to lay off workers. Why? To prepare for recession and the prospect of more economic chaos ahead.

High-flying tech giants are curbing their enthusiasm too. Facebook apparently got tricked into paying big-time news outlets to let FB users have free access to articles — no doubt to those that reinforced government propaganda, since Mark Zuckerberg volunteered his entire company to be messengers for the regime back in 2020. FB got robbed and is now rethinking.

No more freebies.

This might as well be the theme of American life. No more charity. No more kindness. No more doing something for nothing. In inflationary times, everyone becomes more grasping. Morality takes a back seat and generosity is no more. It’s every man for himself. This can only get more brutal.

There was something of a psychological break last Friday on the news of the CPI. It was not better than last month. It was not the same as last month. It was worse: 8.6% year-over-year, the worst it has been in 40 years. Honestly, everyone sort of knew this already in their heart of hearts but there is something about the official announcement that codified it.

But let’s say we stack the data at two years rather than one year. What does it look like? It comes in at 13.6%. We have never seen anything like that. And it is truly starting to hurt as never before. Gas is above $5 and rents are more than $2,000 a month on average. The raises at work have stopped coming too. On the contrary, employers are expecting more productivity for ever less money in real terms.

Prices have a very long way to go to wash out the paper sloshing around the world economy.

Here is the wave of printing compared with current price trends. No way is this getting better before it gets much worse.



Put it all together, especially with declining financials, along with supply-chain breakages and other economic dislocations, and this is why it feels like the walls are closing in. It’s because they are. And there truly is no way out for anyone at this point.

No one should be shocked by any of this. It was all in the cards, an outcome guaranteed by ghastly policy over two presidential administrations, all enacted by a government that knows nothing about economics and cares nothing for basic commercial and human rights. You dispense with these things and you court disaster.

And this is how you get the worst consumer confidence rating ever recorded.


What makes today different from the 1970s is the pace at which this has all unfolded. Even a year ago, administration officials were claiming that everything would be just fine. Many people believed them, despite every bit of data pointing to exactly the opposite.

Truly it feels like our lords and masters believe that their fantasies are more reality than reality itself. They say it and it somehow becomes true.

Can you imagine that only last month, the Biden administration concocted the idea of establishing a “Disinformation Governance Board”? It was designed to script the truth to all social media and mainstream media outlets, censoring all dissent. The plan blew up only because it was too overtly Orwellian for public consumption. What matters here is the intent, which is nothing short of totalitarian.

Politics is good fun for many people, a real sport and a good distraction from real life. But politics becomes a very serious business once personal finance makes the good life ever less viable. Right now everyone is searching for someone to blame and most people have hit on the old guy in the White House, who they somehow believe should do something about all these problems despite a lifelong career of knowing nothing and doing nothing about anything.

What an astounding thing to see unfold before our eyes, and so quickly! The “malaise” of 1979 was a long time coming but the meltdown of 2022 has hit many people like a hurricane that somehow evaded detection from the radar. And yet it might be far from over.

In 2020 and following, money appeared like magic in bank accounts all over the country. A third of the workforce had gotten used to languishing at home, pretending to work. Students started Zooming instead of learning. Adults who had spent a lifetime embracing the normal disutilities of labor gained for the first time a vision of a life of luxury without work.

One result was a huge boom in personal savings, if only for a brief time. Some of the money was spent on Amazon, streaming services, and food delivery but also much of it landed in bank accounts as people started saving money as never before, most likely because the opportunities to spend on entertainment and travel dried up. Personal savings soared to over 30 percent. It felt like we were all rich!

That feeling could not last. Once the economy opened up again, and people were ready to get out and spend their new riches, a strange new reality presented itself. The money they thought they had was worth far less. Also there were strange shortages in goods they once took for granted. Their new riches turned into vapor in a matter of months, with each month worse than the previous month.

As a result, people had to deplete their savings and turn to debt finance just to keep up with the decline in purchasing power, even as their income in real terms turned dramatically south. In other words, government took away what it gave.



The long period of denial seems suddenly over. People of all political persuasions are fuming in anger. The crime everywhere these days is not incidental or accidental. It is a mark of civilizational decline. Something has to give and will give at some point. The ruling class in this country and their friends around the world have caused tremendous wreckage.

Here is the purchasing power of the dollar since 2018. Behold what our rulers have done!



And yet, what do our rulers have to say to us? They tell us to rely more on wind and sun — Janet Yellen’s exact words to the Senate last week. I used to think she was a smart cookie but I guess power turns even good minds to mush. Mush is exactly what they have created out of a once prosperous and hopeful nation.

The most frustrating aspect of all of this is the rampant failure to connect cause and effect. The cause should be clear: this was all kicked off by the most egregious, arrogant, irresponsible, foolhardy, and brutal policies ever perpetrated on the whole of American life, all in the name of disease control. I’ve yet to see evidence that any of the people and agencies who did this to us are willing to reassess their decisions. Quite the contrary.

There must be a reckoning.

It was not the poor, the working classes, or the person on the street who did this. These policies were not an act of nature. They were never even voted upon by legislatures.

They were imposed by men and women with unchecked administrative power under the mistaken belief that they had it all under control. They never did and they do not now.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Cass: Freight Shipments Bounce Back In May, Expenditures Dip From Record Highs

TUESDAY, JUN 14, 2022 - 05:05 PM
By Todd Maiden of FreightWaves

Freight shipments bounced back in May as transportation costs retreated from record highs, according to a report from Cass Information Systems.



The shipments component of the Cass Freight Index increased 5.4% from April (4% higher on a seasonally adjusted basis), which more than recouped April’s 2.6% decline. Compared to 2021, shipments were 2.7% lower “on a tough comparison.”

“After a nearly two-year cycle of surging freight volumes, two key drivers of growth for the freight cycle — goods consumption and inventory restocking — are faltering,” ACT Research’s Tim Denoyer commented.

The shipments index is now on par with the 2019 downturn, up only 0.6% compared to May of that year. If normal seasonality holds, the index will be 2% higher year-over-year in June and flat to up 1% for all of 2022.

“The news from the retail sector and in the oil markets suggest that’s probably optimistic, but at this point, it’s a pretty stable environment, no major downturn,” Denoyer said.

Last month, retail heavyweights Walmart and Target both warned they were holding too much inventory, which would likely weigh on margins. Last Tuesday, Target cut expectations further for its fiscal second quarter as the company looks to “right-size its inventory.”

Increasing markdowns, culling excess inventory and canceling orders forced Target to cut its operating margin forecast by more than half for the period that will conclude at the end of July.

The company still expects to perform at a level better than pre-pandemic averages in the back half of its fiscal year.


Table: Cass Information Systems. SA (seasonally adjusted)

Cass’ expenditures subindex fell 4.9% (down 5.9% seasonally adjusted) from the record set in April. The index measures the total amount spent on freight. With shipments up more than 5%, that means rates were down 10%. However, the month-over-month “noise on rates is largely mix, with more LTL and less TL in the data set.”

Compared to 2021, May expenditures were up 27.5%. That was the lowest year-over-year increase in the subindex since March 2021. Tough comps to the prior year are in store for the rest of the 2022, which “will naturally slow these y/y increases.” For instance, the index was 56.4% higher year-over-year in June 2021.

Assuming normal seasonality the remainder of the year, the index would increase 19% year-over-year for 2022, versus an expected 24% full-year increase just a month ago.



Inferred rates, or expenditures divided by shipments, were up 31% year-over-year during the month but down 9.8% from April.

“It’s tempting to see this as a sign that freight costs have peaked, and on a y/y basis that is true, as inferred rates will slow all the way to 13% y/y in June on normal seasonality. Supply/demand fundamentals have certainly turned looser this year, so it wouldn’t be an unreasonable conclusion,” Denoyer said. “However, the drop was largely due to mix, and with fuel prices still adding upward pressure, the descent is not straightforward.”

He did say the recent decline in spot rates, excluding fuel, “portends a downcycle on the horizon.”

“2022 has featured a big improvement in driver availability and a flattening of freight demand.

This is a deflationary combination, though it will take several months to filter from the spot market into contract rates.”

Inferred rates have also been propped up by incremental miles as freight has been forced onto the road due to a congested rail complex. However, with intermodal volumes “uniquely poised” to grow year-over-year in the second half of 2022, excess freight miles will be reduced, placing additional downward pressure on the inferred rates, Denoyer said.

Cass’ Truckload Linehaul Index increased 0.9% sequentially in May and 13.2% year-over-year.

The linehaul index excludes fuel and accessorial charges.

Commenting on bid season and the correlation between spot and contract rates, Denoyer said, “With the large declines in spot rates coming just ahead of the big spring contract season, the lead time between spot and contract may be compressed somewhat.

“Growing evidence of weaker goods consumption, rising services substitution and rebuilt inventories, with some categories now overstocked, was perhaps the most impactful news in freight this month.”

He also noted that capacity is continuing to step higher as the industry has added 27,300 new trucking jobs over the last two months.

Data used in the Cass indexes is derived from freight bills paid by Cass, a provider of payment management solutions. Cass processes $37 billion in freight payables annually on behalf of customers.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Jun 14, 2022 at 1:24pm​
Turning out the Lights​
14 June 2022
Texas

The lights are being turned off in front of our eyes. Energy methodically shut down, food, death-vaxxes, and more. A genocide is unfolding. For those who study the past and today, this is flatly obvious.

Fewer people will need less energy. And fuel-control means the people cannot move far, or organize.​
 

raven

TB Fanatic
Jun 14, 2022 at 1:24pm​
Turning out the Lights​
14 June 2022
Texas

The lights are being turned off in front of our eyes. Energy methodically shut down, food, death-vaxxes, and more. A genocide is unfolding. For those who study the past and today, this is flatly obvious.

Fewer people will need less energy. And fuel-control means the people cannot move far, or organize.​
you cannot organize . . .
without fuel, food, electricty, free speech
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiQRTNBzG8U
10:32 min

WATCH: Biden reveals his TRUE belief on our FAILING economy


Glenn Beck


Joe Biden and his administration are ‘changing lives,’ he told the world on Tuesday. ‘I don't want to hear any more of these lies about reckless spending,’ the president said in a speech to America’s largest federation of unions, AFL-CIO. ‘We're changing people's lives!’ Glenn says this comment may have been an HONEST moment from Joe in which he shared his TRUE belief on our current, failing economy: that the pain felt by Americans now IS worth the clean energy future Biden and his powerful colleagues dream of…
 

Tigerlily

Senior Member

Another US Food Processing Plant Erupts In Flames

TUESDAY, JUN 14, 2022 - 08:45 PM

Another food processing plant went up in flames. According to local news Stevens Point Journal, a fire ripped through a pizza-making plant in Wisconsin on Monday.

More than 70 firefighters from multiple fire departments battled a massive fire at Festive Foods in eastern Portage County that began around 0900 local time. The American Red Cross arrived on the scene shortly after to provide food and water to firefighters. They snapped two pictures of the blaze, showing flames erupting from the facility's roof and a column of thick dark smoke pouring into the air.

Firefighters were able to get the blaze under control in the early evening, and damage to the food processing plant has yet to be fully assessed. However, Festive Foods' Facebook page indicates the plant is "temporarily closed."

Festive Foods manufactures frozen pizzas for supermarkets in a 120,000 sq. feet facility and considers itself a "leading co-packer of USDA-certified frozen-topped pizza, sandwiches, dough products, and stuffed appetizers." The company sells its products to supermarkets nationwide.


Walmart is a seller of at least one of the company's brands.


While the fire seems insignificant, it's part of a much larger issue of a spate of "accidental fires," one by one, taking out America's food supply chain over the past year (source of the list via The Gateway Pundit):
  1. 1/11/21 A fire that destroyed 75,000-square-foot processing plant in Fayetteville
  2. 4/30/21 A fire ignited inside the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant in Monmouth, IL
  3. 7/25/21 Three-alarm fire at Kellogg plant in Memphis, 170 emergency personnel responded to the call
  4. 7/30/21 Firefighters on Friday battled a large fire at Tyson's River Valley Ingredients plant in Hanceville, Alabama
  5. 8/23/21 Fire crews were called to the Patak Meat Production company on Ewing Road in Austell
  6. 9/13/21 A fire at the JBS beef plant in Grand Island, Neb., on Sunday night forced a halt to slaughter and fabrication lines
  7. 10/13/21 A five-alarm fire ripped through the Darigold butter production plant in Caldwell, ID
  8. 11/15/21 A woman is in custody following a fire at the Garrard County Food Pantry
  9. 11/29/21 A fire broke out around 5:30 p.m. at the Maid-Rite Steak Company meat processing plant
  10. 12/13/21 West Side food processing plant in San Antonio left with smoke damage after a fire
  11. 1/7/22 Damage to a poultry processing plant on Hamilton's Mountain following an overnight fire
  12. 1/13/22 Firefighters worked for 12 hours to put a fire out at the Cargill-Nutrena plant in Lecompte, LA
  13. 1/31/22 a fertilizer plant with 600 tons of ammonium nitrate inside caught on fire on Cherry Street in Winston-Salem
  14. 2/3/22 A massive fire swept through Wisconsin River Meats in Mauston
  15. 2/3/22 At least 130 cows were killed in a fire at Percy Farm in Stowe
  16. 2/15/22 Bonanza Meat Company goes up in flames in El Paso, Texas
  17. 2/15/22 Nearly a week after the fire destroyed most of the Shearer's Foods plant in Hermiston
  18. 2/16/22 A fire had broken at US largest soybean processing and biodiesel plant in Claypool, Indiana
  19. 2/18/22 An early morning fire tore through the milk parlor at Bess View Farm
  20. 2/19/22 Three people were injured, and one was hospitalized, after an ammonia leak at Lincoln Premium Poultry in Fremont
  21. 2/22/22 The Shearer's Foods plant in Hermiston caught fire after a propane boiler exploded
  22. 2/28/22 A smoldering pile of sulfur quickly became a raging chemical fire at Nutrien Ag Solutions
  23. 2/28/22 A man was hurt after a fire broke out at the Shadow Brook Farm and Dutch Girl Creamery
  24. 3/4/22 294,800 chickens destroyed at farm in Stoddard, Missouri
  25. 3/4/22 644,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland
  26. 3/8/22 243,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in New Castle, Delaware
  27. 3/10/22 663,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, MD
  28. 3/10/22 915,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Taylor, IA
  29. 3/14/22 The blaze at 244 Meadow Drive was discovered shortly after 5 p.m. by farm owner Wayne Hoover
  30. 3/14/22 2,750,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Jefferson, Wisconsin
  31. 3/16/22 A fire at a Walmart warehouse distribution center has cast a large plume of smoke visible throughout Indianapolis.
  32. 3/16/22 Nestle Food Plant extensively damaged in fire and new production destroyed Jonesboro, Arkansas
  33. 3/17/22 5,347,500 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Buena Vista, Iowa
  34. 3/17/22 147,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Kent, Delaware
  35. 3/18/22 315,400 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Cecil, Maryland
  36. 3/22/22 172,000 Turkeys destroyed on farms in South Dakota
  37. 3/22/22 570,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska
  38. 3/24/22 Fire fighters from numerous towns are battling a major fire at the McCrum potato processing facility in Belfast.
  39. 3/24/22 418,500 chickens destroyed at farm in Butler, Nebraska
  40. 3/25/22 250,300 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Franklin, Iowa
  41. 3/26/22 311,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  42. 3/27/22 126,300 Turkeys destroyed in South Dakota
  43. 3/28/22 1,460,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Guthrie, Iowa
  44. 3/29/22 A massive fire burned 40,000 pounds of food meant to feed people in a food desert near Maricopa
  45. 3/31/22 A structure fire caused significant damage to a large portion of key fresh onion packing facilities in south Texas
  46. 3/31/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Osceola, Iowa
  47. 3/31/22 5,011,700 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Osceola, Iowa
  48. 4/6/22 281,600 chickens destroyed at farm in Wayne, North Carolina
  49. 4/9/22 76,400 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  50. 4/9/22 208,900 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  51. 4/12/22 89,700 chickens destroyed at farm in Wayne, North Carolina
  52. 4/12/22 1,746,900 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Dixon, Nebraska
  53. 4/12/22 259,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Minnesota
  54. 4/13/22 fire destroys East Conway Beef & Pork Meat Market in Conway, New Hampshire
  55. 4/13/22 Plane crashes into Gem State Processing, Idaho potato and food processing plant
  56. 4/13/22 77,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  57. 4/14/22 Taylor Farms Food Processing plant burns down Salinas, California.
  58. 4/14/22 99,600 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  59. 4/15/22 1,380,500 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Lancaster, Minnesota
  60. 4/19/22 Azure Standard nation's premier independent distributor of organic and healthy food, was destroyed by fire in Dufur, Oregon
  61. 4/19/22 339,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  62. 4/19/22 58,000 chickens destroyed at farm in Montrose, Color
  63. 4/20/22 2,000,000 chickens destroyed at egg farm in Minnesota
  64. 4/21/22 A small plane crashed in the lot of a General Mills plant in Georgia
  65. 4/22/22 197,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  66. 4/23/22 200,000 Turkeys destroyed in Minnesota
  67. 4/25/22 1,501,200 chickens destroyed at egg farm Cache, Utah
  68. 4/26/22 307,400 chickens destroyed at farm Lancaster Pennsylvania
  69. 4/27/22 2,118,000 chickens destroyed at farm Knox, Nebraska
  70. 4/28/22 Egg-laying facility in Iowa kills 5.3 million chickens, fires 200-plus workers
  71. 4/28/22 Allen Harim Foods processing plant killed nearly 2M chickens in Delaware
  72. 4/2822 110,700 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  73. 4/29/22 1,366,200 chickens destroyed at farm Weld Colorado
  74. 4/30/22 13,800 chickens destroyed at farm Sequoia Oklahoma
  75. 5/3/22 58,000 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  76. 5/3/22 118,900 Turkeys destroyed Beadle S Dakota
  77. 5/3/22 114,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  78. 5/3/22 118,900 Turkeys destroyed Lyon Minnesota
  79. 5/7/22 20,100 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  80. 5/10/22 72,300 chickens destroyed at farm Lancaster Pennsylvania
  81. 5/10/22 61,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  82. 5/10/22 35,100 Turkeys destroyed Muskegon, Michigan
  83. 5/13/22 10,500 Turkeys destroyed Barron Wisconsin
  84. 5/14/22 83,400 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  85. 5/17/22 79,00 chickens destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  86. 5/18/22 7,200 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  87. 5/19/22 Train carrying limestone derailed Jensen Beach FL
  88. 5/21/22 57,000 Turkeys destroyed on farm in Dakota Minnesota
  89. 5/23/22 4,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  90. 5/29/22 A Saturday night fire destroyed a poultry building at Forsman Farms
  91. 5/31/22 3,000,000 chickens destroyed by fire at Forsman facility in Stockholm Township, Minnesota
  92. 6/2/22 30,000 ducks destroyed at Duck farm Berks Pennsylvania
  93. 6/7/22 A fire occurred Tuesday evening at the JBS meat packing plant in Green Bay.
  94. 6/8/22 Firefighters from Tangipahoa Fire District 1 respond to a fire at the Purina Feed Mill in Arcola
  95. 6/9/22 Irrigation water was canceled in California (the #1 producer of food in the US) and storage water flushed directly out to the delta.
  96. 6/12/22 Largest Pork Company in the US Shuts Down California Plant Due to High Costs
  97. 6/13/22 Fire Breaks Out at a Food Processing Plant West of Waupaca County in Wisconsin
(COMMENT: After the closure of Smithfield in the West and the fact that the Chinese are buying up farms in the midwest, I think this is all a part of a CCP strategy to weaken food supply chains in the US as they prepare to take Taiwan. I wouldn't be surprised if China was using weather modification to cause drought and flooding in our agricultural areas.)
When are folks going to take stock of the food production plants in their neighborhoods, and set guards around it? This has to stop.
 

marsh

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marsh

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Targeted Depopulation of Africa? "Hundreds of Millions of People in Poorer Countries Are Gonna Die" 5:03 min

Targeted Depopulation of Africa? "Hundreds of Millions of People in Poorer Countries Are Gonna Die"
Red Voice Media Published June 15, 2022

A Surge of Strange 'Coincidences' Has Disrupted the Food Supply

Edward Dowd: "Whether it's our own government or Chinese agents doing it, someone's doing it, and it seems to be a plan. And food prices are probably going to double within the next 12 months."

"If you live in an area like Africa, where the population is big and you have to import a lot of food, you will have a problem."

Robin Monotti: "We should all oppose anyone who talks about the population problem because they're really talking about Africa."

"[They are] now disrupting the supply chains by placing sanctions on certain exports from certain countries, you know who I'm talking about, in order to prevent certain food staples [from] reaching the African continent."

Edward Dowd Interview: Global Economic Collapse, Recession, Food Shortages, Lockdowns, Monkeypox, & Preparing With Edward Dowd & Maria Zeee
 

marsh

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Is It Any Surprise? The Companies Censoring Speech Are Benefitting Each Step of the Way 3:11 min

Is It Any Surprise? The Companies Censoring Speech Are Benefitting Each Step of the Way
Red Voice Media Published June 15, 2022

Dr. Naomi Wolf: "Google is invested in the vaccines. Gates, of course, is invested in the vaccines. Zuckerberg, through his nonprofit, is invested in the vaccines, and they're invested in the vaccine passports. And they're invested in the testing, they harvest the data, and they also benefit. They're all up like 20 to 25% net revenue in the last two years."

Full Video: Dr. Naomi Wolf: The New York Times Manipulated Best Seller List To Suppress ‘The Bodies Of Others’ [VIDEO]
 

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Mexican Governor Blocks Members Of 15,000 Person Caravan From Entering The United States 1:27 min

Mexican Governor Blocks Members Of 15,000 Person Caravan From Entering The United States
Prime Time with Dr. Gina Published June 15, 2022

Todd Bensman reports that TX Gov. Greg Abbott’s increased truck inspections earlier this year, that effectively shut down multiple ports of entry, are now bearing fruit as the Mexican Governor of Coahuila is now blocking migrants from the 15,000 person caravan from moving forward into the United States.
 

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Gas Thefts on the Rise as Biden Gas Prices Continue to Hit All-Time Record Highs 1:49 min

Gas Thefts on the Rise as Biden Gas Prices Continue to Hit All-Time Record Highs
The Gateway Pundit Published June 15, 2022

^^^^^

Fuel Thefts on the Rise as Biden Gas Prices Continue to Hit All-Time Record Highs
By Jim Hoft
Published June 15, 2022 at 8:35pm

fuel-thefts-rise.jpg


Fuel thefts are on the rise as Biden gas prices continue to hit all-time record highs on a daily basis.

Gas prices are now over $5 a gallon in the United States for a gallon of regular gasoline.

This is unheard of in US history — until Joe Biden and Democrats took over.

gas-wednesday-504.jpg


Gas prices were around $2.3o a gallon when Joe Biden took office.

And now gas prices are so high that there is an increase in fuel thefts.

Vandals stole over 1,000 gallons of fuel this week from a Florida gas station.

FOX News reported.
(see video above)
 
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How to Prosecute Fauci and Other Covid Criminals: International Law Professor Boyle 20:27 min

How to Prosecute Fauci and Other Covid Criminals: International Law Professor Boyle
The New American Published June 15, 2022

The ringleaders behind the Covid tyranny that began in 2020 must be prosecuted and held accountable for their numerous crimes against humanity including murder, explained International Law Professor Dr. Francis Boyle in this interview with The New American magazine's Alex Newman on Conversations That Matter. Dr. Boyle, author of the new book Resisting Medical Tyranny: Why the Covid-19 Mandates Are Criminal, said he had already discussed impaneling a grand jury with various top state and local prosecutors to indict criminals involved in these crimes. Aside from murder and conspiracy to commit murder, the dangerous "frankenshots," as Professor Boyle refers to the Covid vaccines, clearly violate the Nuremberg code on medical experimentation, he said. "It must be done," he said, noting that if just one prosecutor would bring charges the whole "house of cards" would come crashing down. He pointed to NIH leaders such as Dr. Anthony Fauci, Dr. Francis Collins, and Big Pharma bigwigs as potential targets for prosecution, noting that the evidence against them is clear and overwhelming. Boyle, who wrote the legislation to implement the biological weapons convention in the United States, also called for the WHO and its top leaders to be held accountable as well.
 

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Jerome Powell: "We at the Fed understand the hardship that high inflation is causing. We're strongly committed to bringing inflation back down..." .36 min

Jerome Powell: "We at the Fed understand the hardship that high inflation is causing. We're strongly committed to bringing inflation back down..."
The Post Millennial Clips Published June 15, 2022

Jerome Powell: "We at the Fed understand the hardship that high inflation is causing. We're strongly committed to bringing inflation back down..."
 

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Not just people, freedom of speech is also facing 'Sudden Death Syndrome'

How I got locked out of my Twitter account for talking about 'Sudden Adult Death Syndrome'.

Eva Vlaardingerbroek
5 hr ago

Anybody who has been on social media over the past couple of months has seen the endless reports about young and seemingly healthy people suddenly dropping dead without a clear reason. Most of us who aren’t afraid to put 2 and 2 together have probably had the same thought as to what the cause of all of these ‘unexpected deaths’ could be. And even if many of us didn’t dare to voice that thought yet, it was quite clear that something had started to boil underneath the surface. People were starting to ask questions.

And you know what happens when things are starting to become too obvious: the screws on freedom of thought and expression are tightened and the narrative is taken back and controlled.

And that’s exactly what happened. Suddenly, the mainstream media came forth with an answer as to why so many young and healthy people were dying. “Sudden Adult Death Syndrome baffles doctor” the Spectator Australia reported. “Doctors trying to determine why many young people are suddenly dying”, The Daily Mail posted. And so on and so forth.

As I was reading these headlines, I laughed and thought ‘‘You’ve got to be kidding me… Do they really think we’re that stupid?’’ But soon, I stopped laughing because honestly nobody really seemed to be going against it all that much. So when Mark Steyn - one of the very few TV hosts who does not shy away from the truth - asked me to talk about it on his show on GBnews, I was very happy to give my two cents on the matter.

View: https://youtu.be/o1OLtK0sc04
8:22 min

In a nutshell, I told Mark that it’s very strange how they say they don’t know why all of these young people are dying, but they do know that it most certainly has nothing to do with the covid vaccine. It doesn't add up. And that’s not surprising. There are too many powerful institutions and stakeholders at play here that all want the truth to be hidden from us. Big Pharma, the Governments and also just ordinary people who suffer from cognitive dissonance, don’t want the truth to come out.

After the segment I posted a short edit of it, summing up what I had said to both my Instagram and Twitter:

Twitter avatar for @LozzaFox Laurence Fox @LozzaFox
We will remember the truth seekers and the truth tellers. The brave ones like @MarkSteynOnline
June 10th 2022



And well, just like the title of this post already gave away: The overlords of Twitter did not like what I said very much. They deleted my original tweet - hence why I’m sharing Laurence Fox’ post which weirdly enough did not get deleted - and then they decided to lock my account.

'

In line with the name of this blog, I resisted much and obeyed little and I decided to appeal their decision, which leaves me locked out of my account for as long as they take to answer. And even when they do answer, I am obviously not very hopeful that they’ll admit to their ‘mistake’; meaning I’ll most likely have to delete the tweet in order to get my account back.

Although I’m not surprised that this happened, it really does bother me. Till this point I seemed to be quite successful at escaping the Twitter overlords. I’d never been banned or locked for anything I said - and as you know I take it ‘quite far’ in the eyes of many. But this time I was able to feel first hand how easily they can shut you down the moment you get too close to the truth. Because if this whole ordeal tells me one thing, it’s that this really is about hiding the truth from people. Just take a look at what Twitter classifies as ‘dangerous misinformation regarding covid-19’ and you know all you need to know. It’s pretty much anything that doesn’t align with the government and/or the WHO narrative. Any type of real opposition simply is not allowed.

Oh, but what about Elon Musk, the man who was supposed to come and save us all? Well, he has gone real quiet after threatening to back out of the deal last week, hasn’t he? I guess the moral of the story here is that you can’t trust anyone to come and save you. That’s why I’m so thankful for all of you who follow and support my work here on Substack. And as long as I can’t share this post on Twitter, I’d really appreciate it if you’d do it for me. Because the more they try to silence us, the more we should take it as a sign that we’re on the right path.
- Eva
 

marsh

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Cattle Losses Reported Due to Heat Stress

Cattle Losses In Heat 061522
By MICHELLE ROOK June 15, 2022

Video on website 2:03 min

With heat indices climbing into the triple digits in cattle feeding areas, there have been some accounts of death losses. Unconfirmed reports have an estimated 10,000 head in Kansas and an undetermined amount in Nebraska. Those losses are attributed to heat stress and concerns will continue to grow as the heat wave persists.

Cattle losses like these are devastating for producers and happen even though they do everything in their power to manage heat stress in their operations. Dr. Dan Thomson of Iowa State University is a veterinarian and leading animal health and well-being expert. He says the heat and humidity combined to raise the thermal heat index for those cattle and created the perfect storm.

"During these bouts of extreme heat the cattle can’t dissipate the heat at night because there’s not night cooling and so this perfect storm hits. No different than a tornado hitting a cattle feeding facility or a derecho or whatever and we have these natural disasters," Thomson explains.

The heat wave is expected to continue for several days. Thomson says producers will need to continue to be on high alert to try to manage that heat stress.

“There’s mitigation strategies that we place, whether its nutrition, strategies for increasing water tank space and decreasing movement of cattle, all these things we’re doing on a day to day basis.” Thomson says. Feedlot managers and their crews have been putting themselves in danger to save cattle in the extreme weather conditions, hauling water and providing bedding for the cattle, he adds. If not, there could have been higher mortality rates.

Cattle producers work hard to keep cattle comfortable so they perform at their highest level, but most importantly, for their well-being.

^^^^

This Week's High Heat Brought On By Ridge of High Pressure, Is It a Warning Sign of What's to Come?
The ridge of high pressure is also bringing record night-time temperatures, but it's the ring of fire on the edge of the ridge that's sparking severe storms that come with high winds and hail.


The ridge of high pressure is also bringing record night-time temperatures, but it's the ring of fire on the edge of the ridge that's sparking severe storms that come with high winds and hail.(File Photo on AgWeb)

By TYNE MORGAN June 15, 2022
Record-breaking heat across the South and Midwest. Unprecedented flooding that shuttered Yellowstone National Park this week. Hail that proved to be devastating to corn fields in Kansas. The extreme weather can all be attributed to a ridge of high pressure parked over the country.
USDA meteorologist Brad Rippey says while the ridge of high pressure is parked over the country, it has been shape shifting the past few days.

“This year, 2022, it does appear that we have a rather intense ridge of high pressure,” says Rippey.

Video on website 10:02 min

Rippey says nearly every year the U.S. sees a ridge of high pressure developing across the country, but where this particular ridge is located, and how pronounced it ends up being, is what changes from year to year.

“You've got years like 1988, 1995, or 2012, where that ridge intensifies, moves across the Midwest and causes huge implications for corn and soybeans,” says Rippey. “Other years like 2011, we've got a powerful Ridge, but it stays parked over Texas and Oklahoma and New Mexico. Other years, we don't have much of a ridge at all, it's weaker, and it doesn't really have major impacts on any major agricultural areas.”

This year, he says there were early signs the ridge would be severe, as Texas saw triple digit heat earlier this year.

“We saw it become established over the desert southwest, it's made a run across the great plains now more recently into the Midwest, the mid-South, and even the Southeast with early triple digit heat, that in fact is maybe a bit of a warning sign ,” explains Rippey.
Read more: How Will High Temperatures Impact Crop Conditions and the Grain Markets?

While the heat isn’t entering the Corn Belt at key pollination time for the area, it’s a different story farther south.

“We've got a lot of corn silking across the south, that's not going to have a big impact on the national number. But for these regional and state producers, it's a big deal to see temperatures like 102 or 103 degrees when corn is silking, that is going to have an impact on that crop,” Rippey adds.

The high pressure ridge is also bringing record night-time temperatures, as well as severe storms.

“One of the keys with these strong ridges of high pressure is that a around the periphery of these systems around the west, the north and the east sides of these ridges, they do tend to be very active in terms of thunderstorm activity, it's often referred to as a ring of fire,” he explains.

The edge of the ridge is what has brought on high winds, heavy rains and damaging hail.

“That's not going to change,” says Rippey. “Now, as this ridge shifts westward later this week, it'll take some of the rain with it. And we'll get more the showers and thunderstorms back across the northern Plains and Northwest.”

Rippey does think the high heat this week will cause some areas of the country to start experiencing flash drought. But will that drought continue to creep into the Midwest and intensify over the summer months? He says it all depends on how the ridge of high pressure shifts a month from now. .

“In about a month from now, we're going to be looking at where that high is parked. Is it going to affect production in the 2022 season? And all of that depends on how that strong ridge of high pressure plays out where it is parked in early to late July when all that corn will be moving through reproduction,” says Rippey.
 
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As Americans Fight Inflation, Top House Republicans Urge Biden to Change Approach to Agricultural And Energy Policies
In the letter, top Republicans claim despite impending crises, the Biden administration has neglected to take serious action to increase American production, and instead, implemented a regulatory agenda that would further limit American farmers’ ability to meet global food demand.
In the letter, top Republicans claim despite impending crises, the Biden administration has neglected to take serious action to increase American production, and instead, implemented a regulatory agenda that would further limit American farmers’ ability to meet global food demand.(File Photo )

By TYNE MORGAN June 14, 2022

Top Republicans in the House are urging the Biden administration to change its approach on energy and agricultural policies. In a letter sent to President Joe Biden this week, the elected officials argue the situation started long before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and claim the current administration has failed to take serious action to increase American agricultural production, which in turn, is now costing consumers.

The letter is signed by Rep. G.T. Thompson (R- Pa.), the top Republican on the House Ag Committee, House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-Ca.), Minority Whip Rep. Steve Scalise, (R-La.) and Elise Stefanik who serves as the Republican Conference Chair.

The elected officials outline in the letter administrative actions the group says would immediately provide near-term solutions to address the ongoing crisis in the U.S., including:
  • Addressing farm input costs
  • Halting changes to "Waters of the United States" (WOTUS)
  • Ensuring the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) refocuses on sound science
  • Ending onerous climate rules
The Republican leaders also pointed out the impact of inflation, citing the latest U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) that showed the largest price increase in nearly 40 years with food costs up 9.4% year-over-year. That includes USDA data that shows the cost of eggs are up 22%, beef up 14% and dairy products seeing an increase of 9%.

Biden Addresses Inflation
During a recent speech by Biden at the Port of Los Angeles, the president said his administration is already taking actions to lower prices and address supply chain challenges, and will do everything it can to lower prices for Americans.

“Today, I’d like to speak about my top economic priority: fighting inflation,” said Biden during a speech on June 10, 2022. “ I understand Americans are anxious, and they’re anxious with good reason. I was raised in a household when the price of gasoline rose precipitously; it was the discussion at the table. It made a difference when food prices went up, but we’ve never seen anything like Putin’s tax on both food and gas.”

However, the letter sent to Biden this week refutes that claim, saying prices were on the increase before the crisis in Ukraine.

“Long before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, America's farm families and consumers were struggling with fractured supply chains, skyrocketing input costs, and historic levels of inflation, each of which continue to contribute to increased food prices and diminished inventories,” the letter states.

While Biden has called on Congress to do more, the group of Republicans urge the Biden administration to remove some of the regulations recently proposed and put into place.

“Despite these impending crises, your administration has neglected to take serious action to increase American production. In fact, you have proposed massive new tax liabilities for farmers, and your regulatory agenda would further limit American farmers’ ability to meet global food demand,” the letter goes on to say.

The White House’s environmental policies were also called into question by the Republican leaders, with claims recently that policies have reduced energy independence in the U.S.

“America's energy independence is compromised, which sends additional shockwaves through our already fractured supply chain. Producers are paying 115 percent more for diesel, while natural gas is up 202 percent. Fertilizer inputs such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium increased 125 percent in cost from January 2021 to January 2022 and an additional 17 percent in the first three months of 2022,” states the letter.

Suggested Steps to Address the Energy and Fertilizer Crisis
Even with the recent discussion, the Republican leaders called on President Biden to “provide immediate relief from the energy and fertilizer crisis plaguing the agriculture industry” by taking the following steps:
  • Withdraw recently proposed revisions to the National Environment Policy Act (NEPA). Allow phosphogypsum (PG) to be safely recycled in road construction or other uses (which eliminates hundreds of millions of dollars in compliance costs);
  • Update the definition of critical minerals to include potash and phosphate; and
  • Take immediate steps to increase domestic energy exploration, production, and transport, including increasing oil and gas leasing on federal lands and waters, expediting pipeline permitting, and abandoning rulemakings designed to discourage investment in American energy.

According to Pro Farmer, House Democrats are touting legislation that would create a special investigator for agricultural competition and permanently allow year-round sales of E15 fuel as inflation-fighting tools in a package to be considered on the floor later this week.

Pro Farmer reports that according to House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.), “The House will consider the Lower Food and Fuel Costs Act from the Committee on Agriculture and the Committee on Energy and Commerce to address food prices and help bring down the cost of fertilizer for farmers while providing more affordable options at the gas pump for Americans."

Hearing Gets Heated
In a hearing just last week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen testified in front of the House Ways and Means Committee. During the heated hearing, Yellen defended Biden’s policies, saying the administration has gone to extreme measures to help Americans feeling the price pain at the pump, including “a historic release of 1 million barrels a day from strategic oil reserves.”

"I guess the bottom-line question is, 'Is this increase in fuel prices intentional on the Biden administration? Because it seems to me that it is irrefutable. It is an enormous burden on American households," Rep. Tom Rice (R-SC) said during the hearing. "I think it's an intentional effort."

"The president is authorized a million-barrel-a-day release from the strategic," said Yellen.

"Which is a drop in the bucket. It's a showpiece," interrupted Rice.

After Rice was asked to allow Yellen to answer his question, Yellen said, "There are 9,000 permits that have been issued that the oil and gas sector can take advantage of in 20 million acres of public lands under lease right now that are not being produced on."

Yellen says Russia's war in Ukraine has impacted energy and food prices on a global scale, and pointed out virtually every developed country is also experiencing inflation. She also said the U.S. needs to become more dependent on solar and wind energy instead of oil, which is vulnerable to global markets.

In April, Biden announced the suspension of the ban on summertime sales of E15. The White House said the move was aimed at reducing gas prices but that energy, experts predicted, would have only a marginal impact at the pump. The White House estimated that approximately 2,300 stations in the country offer the blend and cast the decision as a move toward “energy independence.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Farmers Are Now Paying Above $5 For Off-Road Diesel, And It's More Than Just Russia to Blame

While prices at the pump for both gas and diesel climbed this week, it’s a similar story for off-road diesel prices. Farmers reported off-road diesel at $4.13 in the northern Corn Belt, while off-road diesel is now above $5 for those further east and in western states like Montana.


While prices at the pump for both gas and diesel climbed this week, it’s a similar story for off-road diesel prices. Farmers reported off-road diesel at $4.13 in the northern Corn Belt, while off-road diesel is now above $5 for those further east and in western states like Montana.(Lori Hayes )

By TYNE MORGAN June 13, 2022
Gas prices keep crushing records in the U.S., but diesel prices are posting even more sticker shock as fears of a possible diesel shortage this year are also causing concerns. It’s not just retail diesel prices that are rapidly rising. There are now reports of farmers booking off-road diesel for farm use trending above the $5 mark, too.

diesel prices


It’s an issue facing the trucking industry from coast to coast. AAA reports the national average diesel price is now $5.77 a gallon. A year ago, it was $3.21.

“It's almost like every five minutes, I see the little live indicator tick up on our GasBuddy data,” Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis, GasBuddy, told U.S. Farm Report two weeks ago.

GasBuddy tracks both diesel and gas prices in real time. And while the pain at the pump is something drivers are seeing across the country, it’s also an issue plaguing agricultural producers across the U.S.

“We had some farm diesel delivered yesterday, and it cost us $4.85 or $4.89 a gallon delivered.

Two years ago, we bought fuel for just over $1,” Craig Moss, a farmer in Hull, Iowa, told Farm Journal’s Michelle Rook.

Video on website 7:02 min

The rapid rise in input prices is eating into outlooks this year, even with high livestock and grain prices.

“It's a challenging market, no doubt, buying $8 corn and $5.50 diesel; it’s a tremendous challenge for producers,” says David Newman, a pork producer in Myrtle, Mo.

While prices at the pump for both gas and diesel climbed this week, it’s a similar story for off-road diesel prices. A survey of farmers on Twitter drew a wide range of responses regarding the prices they are currently seeing. Farmers reported off-road diesel at $4.13 in the northern Corn Belt, while off-road diesel is now above $5 for those further east and in western states like Montana.

Research by Texas A&M Agricultural and Food Policy Center (AFPC) shows farmers are seeing nearly every input cost on their farm rise this year. Nitrogen prices produced the biggest increase, up more than 133% per acre year-over-year. Phosphorus and potassium fertilizer were up nearly 93% during that time. That was followed by fuel and lube, which jumped more than 86% compared to last year.

Texas A&M Input costs
Graphic Courtesy of Lindsey Pound

The latest baseline projections from the University of Missouri Food and Policy Research Institute (FAPRI) also shows the sharp rise in fuels costs today.

“A 57% increase may or may not capture what's happening right now throughout the whole calendar year of 2022, but it is capturing at least the part that we're seeing right now,” says Bob Maltsbarger, a senior research economist with FAPRI.

FAPRI’s baseline projection shows even if fuel prices retreat the second half of this year, higher overall production costs will continue to sway balance sheets. Maltsbarger points out diesel prices vary by not only geography, but also by farm, especially considering crops like corn typically require more fuel use.

“It will vary quite a bit on the dollars-per-acre impact, but if you have about an equal increase on a percentage change basis, you will see those dollars per acre be more expensive in this calendar year,” he says.

Why Are Diesel Prices So High?
Why have diesel prices raced higher this year? It’s largely due to a shortage of refining capacity, not a shortage of oil, but the prices started to climb higher long before Russia invaded Ukraine.

“The nation is dealing with about a million barrels a day less of capacity than we had just three years ago. That's the equivalent of about 5%,” De Haan explains. “So, not only is oil a problem with sanctions on Russia’s oil, but turning that oil into something like gasoline and diesel is also now a choke point.”

“Refineries have less capacity; we have about 1.2 million barrels a day of less capacity because of shutdowns that occurred prior to the pandemic,” says Debnil Chowdhury, vice president, head of Americas Refining, S&P Global Commodity Insights. “Also during the pandemic, we've had some convergence to biofuels' facilities as well as a refinery that was hit by a hurricane and damaged to the point where it can't really be run anymore.”

S&P Global Commodities is also watching the situation. At a time when the U.S. is typically building inventory, the opposite is occurring, which is also heightening concerns about a possible shortage.

“This is the year we're running very low on inventory entering the summertime, and any type of impact on refining capacity is really going to increase the chance of the shortage,” says Chowdhury.

One Hurricane Away from a Diesel Shortage?
With supplies already tight, De Haan says the U.S. can’t afford to lose any refining capacity, which is a major risk considering NOAA is projecting an above-normal hurricane season.
“We're probably one Category 3 storm away [from a shortage], and that Category 3 storm would have to take aim for an area roughly from the Mississippi River to Houston,” says De Haan. “That's the really sensitive area. Not only could it affect refining, but it could affect offshore oil production.”

One of the reasons inventories are already tight is due to Hurricane Ida making a direct hit along the Gulf Coast. Refineries located near New Orleans went offline last fall, with some still not back online today. That major hurricane, and the devastation it caused, was one of the initial dominoes to fall for diesel prices.

“This all actually started before the war. It began in October of last year, when natural gas prices in Europe started to rise,” Chowdhury says. “The cost of natural gas increased substantially in Europe, and why that’s important to a Midwest farmer is because the cost of producing that diesel increased with it.”

Searching for Solutions
While the financial incentive is there today to pump more oil and increase refining capacity, one worker in the oil industry told U.S. Farm Report that the push to electric has investors concerned about the risk of such an investment. And considering it takes years for refining capacity to come online, that's also not a solution today.

There’s talk of the Biden administration tapping into diesel reserves to help ease supply concerns, but De Haan says not only will that move have a minimal impact, it’s also a question of timing.

“It's only a million barrels, so it's not a infinite amount of supply,” he says. “The worry is that if we release those barrels of diesel now from areas in the Northeast, we're also in the start of hurricane season. Now we do have some tropical activity. So when do you use the inventories?

Do you use them now because of high prices? Or, do you wait for a bigger potential issue later this summer?”

Lori Hayes Diesel Globe


In order to relieve the tight diesel supply situation, Chowdhury points out the other option is for the government to wave the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, otherwise known as the Jones Act.

“The U.S. refiner now has to decide do we send product to Europe? We can send it via pipeline easily, but because of the Jones Act, which is a regulation that mandates U.S. flagged vessels from port to port, it's not something that we could do now. And that's something that the government could look at waving if we do face a shortage,” says Chowdhury.

The Jones Act is a federal statute that was established more than 100 years ago. It requires all vessels carrying good between two U.S. points be American-built, owned, crewed and flagged.

The policy was created to help sustain American jobs, and in turn, generate economic benefits each year. Proponents claim the Jones Act has secured critical movement of goods over the years.

How Long Could the Diesel Price Pain Last?
While the industry searches for possible solutions, those who follow and track refineries don’t see a dramatic drop in diesel prices anytime soon.

“These prices are not going to go back to the levels we had at the beginning of 2021. It's more likely that we'll see maybe, you know, a $5 to $10 decline in crude price, and that would equate to maybe 50¢ to 60¢ on the diesel price itself. We're not talking about a major relief,” Chowdhury says.

On the heels of diesel prices climbing higher again this week, anyone hoping for relief might have to look out beyond this year.

“It could take a couple of years. Keep in mind the longer we go down this road, and that demand eclipses supply, the more catching up we're going to have to do,” De Haan says.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Major Water Cutbacks Loom
dry riverbed
dry riverbed(AgWeb)

By PRO FARMER EDITORS June 15, 2022

As the West endures another year of unrelenting drought, the Colorado River’s reservoirs have declined so low that major water cuts will be necessary next year to reduce risks of supplies reaching perilously low levels, a top federal water official said Tuesday. Bureau of Reclamation Commissioner Camille Calimlim Touton testified during a Senate committee hearing that protecting “critical levels” at the country’s largest reservoirs — Lake Mead and Lake Powell — will require much larger reductions in water deliveries.

“The challenges we are seeing today are unlike anything we have seen in our history,” Touton said. The Colorado River supplies water to nearly 40 million people in cities from Denver to Los Angeles and farmlands from the Rocky Mountains to the U.S./Mexico border. Roughly 80% of the river’s flow is used for agriculture.

“I’m not suggesting that farmers stop farming, but rather that they carefully consider crop selection and make the investments needed to optimize irrigation efficiency,” said John Entsminger, general manager of the Southern Nevada Water Authority, which supplies the Las Vegas area. “By reducing their use of Colorado River water, agricultural entities are protecting their own interests.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Victor Davis Hanson: The Subordinate Citizen

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 06:40 PM
Authored by Victor Davis Hanson,

I recently led a group of about 100 citizens on a tour of Israel for nearly two weeks. Before returning to the United States, all participants had to indicate their vaccination status and take a COVID-19 test for reentry.

Anxieties swept the group as Israeli testers swabbed them.

Anyone testing positive would have to delay his or her return.

That quarantine would entail spending thousands of dollars in finding scarce hotel accommodations, additional living expenses, and rebooked airline tickets—depending upon the length of the mandatory sequestration.


Contrast this to the tens of thousands of foreign nationals now mustering to cross illegally into the United States this summer.

They follow the already 2 million who’ve entered the country unlawfully since Joe Biden became president.

Does any foreign national worry about being tested for COVID-19, much less fear being turned away if he tests positive or lacks proof of vaccination?

Or do we scrutinize far more carefully U.S. citizens entering their own country legally than we do noncitizens crossing our borders unlawfully?


For that matter, the government is still determined to fire thousands of federal workers and U.S. military personnel who have refused the new mRNA vaccinations. Most citizens who declined to be vaccinated feared that the injections were dangerous to their health or ineffective in preventing COVID-19 infections, and that they wouldn’t necessarily lead to herd immunity.

Are 2 million unvaccinated foreigners arriving unaudited from impoverished countries less of a threat during the pandemic than fully audited American citizens employed by the federal government? Why would we fire unvaccinated Americans but welcome equally unvaccinated noncitizens?

The Biden administration blasted Trump’s southern border wall and canceled all further funding.

Yet Biden just appropriated $40 billion to Ukraine to ensure it doesn’t lose its border war against Russian aggression.


That’s a tiny percentage of the federal budget. But the aid is full of symbolic irony nonetheless.

The multibillion-dollar appropriation would have more than covered the completion of the entire southern border wall.

An outside observer might conclude that the U.S. government intends to uphold the universal idea of national sovereignty, internationally recognized borders, and the security of citizens inside its own country—as long as they’re not American citizens.

There are currently over 550 “sanctuary” jurisdictions established by state and local governments. They aim to prevent federal immigration authorities from deporting illegal aliens, including tens of thousands detained by law enforcement for committing additional crimes.

The nation hasn’t experienced such blatant nullifications of federal laws since the efforts of pre-Civil War Southern states—or the 1960s Southern governors who defied federal efforts to enforce civil rights legislation.

Can any citizens now simply vote to declare their hometown or local county immune from federal legislation?

Can a city or county nullify as it pleases the IRS tax code, endangered species laws, or federal gun registration legislation?

Or is nullification only permissible in the interest of noncitizens and lawbreakers?


These asymmetries also transcend noncitizens.
We have developed entire classes of American elite citizens who are not subject to the enforcement of the law—at least as it’s applied to others who are either less influential or ideologically incorrect.

Federal prosecutors sought to jail retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn for six months for not telling the truth to federal agents.

They put another Trump subordinate, George Papadopoulos, in jail for two weeks for lying to federal prosecutors.

Recently, the FBI stormed into an airport to arrest former Trump adviser Peter Navarro for contempt of a congressional subpoena.

OK, defying federal law has consequences.

Or does it?


Former Obama administration Attorney General Eric Holder brazenly defied congressional subpoenas and was found in contempt—a historic first.

Did the FBI ever arrest Holder—much less as he boarded an airplane?

James Clapper, former director of national intelligence, confessed that he flat-out lied under oath to a congressional committee.

So did former CIA chief John Brennan—twice!

Andrew McCabe repeatedly lied to federal investigators as acting director of the FBI.
Were any of them arrested or tried in the manner of Flynn, Papadopoulos, or Navarro?
If not, what then is left of the foundation of U.S. citizenship (universal equal treatment under the law)?

There are lots of reasons why the looming November midterms will likely see historic levels of pushback against the Biden administration, Democratic candidates, and the entire progressive agenda.

Take your pick of the many self-induced Biden disasters, such as hyperinflation, unaffordable gasoline, out-of-control crime, and foreign-policy humiliations.

But one reason voters are furious is rarely expressed. Americans feel that ordinary citizens like them, who follow the rules, are treated more harshly by their own government than are both noncitizens and our own progressive elites.

And they’re right, and they’re angry, and we will hear from them very soon.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

BlackRock Sells Out US Interests For 'Personal Favors' In China, Consumer Group Director Says

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 05:20 PM
Authored by Frank Fang and David Zhang via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

BlackRock, the world’s largest investment manager that oversees $10 trillion in client funds, has positioned itself as a socially conscious firm. However, the company is choosing China over the United States as it advances its environmental and social priorities, according to Will Hild, executive director of Washginton-based nonprofit Consumers’ Research.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink leaves after a meeting about climate action investments with heads of sovereign wealth funds and the French president at the Elysee Palace in Paris on July 10, 2019. (Ludovic Martin/AFP via Getty Images)
Hild said BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is “selling out the interests of American consumers and American companies in the United States, in return for personal favors for BlackRock in mainland China,” during a recent interview with EpochTV’s “China Insider” program.

Fink has been one of the most prominent advocates for ESG investment, which is investing in companies that agree to uphold certain environmental, social, and governance standards.

However, according to Fink, ESG “is an excuse for Wall Street to push politics into corporate America.” In other words, Wall Street is pushing ESG policies that “could never be achieved at the ballot box,” he added.

Additionally, BlackRock has also taken up the position of supporting a net-zero emission future.

The company’s website tells its clients that “climate transition creates a historic investment opportunity.” In a 2020 letter to CEOs, Fink wrote that “climate risk is investment risk.”

While BlackRock has pushed U.S. companies such as ExxonMobil to embrace green energy, it has not taken the same approach with Chinese firms, according to Hild.

Ironically, Blackrock controls about the same amount of shares, about seven-and-a-half percent, of PetroChina as they do Exxon, but they don’t engage in any of the same behavior when it comes to that company,” he said, such as pushing Chinese companies to adopt net-zero policies.

Continue reading here...
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Viral Video Appears To Show 100s Of Dead Cattle Hit By Kansas Heatwave

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 04:40 PM

Chaos in food supply chains continues to worsen as thousands of cattle across Kansas have mysteriously died. Officially, at least 2,000 cattle died of "extreme heat and humidity" amid triple-digit temperatures, however skeptics aren't buying it as viral footage shows hundreds of cows laying upside down.

The high-end of estimates comes from Progressive Farmer Senior Editor Victoria Myers, who reports preliminary estimates from feedlot or feed yards that show 10,000 fat cattle across the state have died because of scorching hot weather.
"What is known is that leading up to these heartbreaking losses, temperatures in the area were over 100 degrees Fahrenheit, there was humidity, and there was little to no wind to help cool the animals. Temperature readings reported for Ulysses began to exceed the 100-degree mark on June 11. By June 13, the high temperature was reported at 104 degrees, with humidity levels ranging from 18% to 35%. Temperature and humidity levels began to break some on June 14. Just a few days prior to the heat setting in, highs had been in the 80s," Myers said.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment told Reuters they only know of at least 2,000 cattle deaths due to high temperatures and humidity as of Tuesday.

One farmer insists "wasn't the heat."

Others had similar commentary:

Bloomberg weather models show high temps across Kansas have been range-bound between 95-100 degrees Fahrenheit since Saturday and could persist through the 25th of the month.



What's odd is that Texas, the state with the highest concentration of cows, is experiencing even hotter weather than Kansas and has thus far yet to experience mass cow deaths.



Corbitt Wall, a cattle analyst with National Beef Wire, told Progressive Farmer that two non-media sources had described the extent of the Kansas losses. He said there is so much frustration among farmers and pointed out futures markets fell on Monday despite the losses.
"I know it's hard for people in the business to watch that futures market, but it's not real," Wall said. "The only time those traders and speculators make money on futures is when the market is volatile, and they are watching these algorithms to tell them where the market is going. For people following the fundamentals, it is frustrating."
Kansas State University veterinarian A.J. Tarpoff called the loss a "perfect storm" of too much heat and no opportunity for nighttime cooling that stressed the cattle.
"Heat stress doesn't happen all at one time. Cattle accumulate heat during the day, and then over the nighttime hours, it takes four to six hours for them to dissipate that heat.
As long as we have a cooling effect at night, cattle can mostly handle the heat. Where we run into issues is where we have two to four days in a row of minimal nighttime cooling, and we start the day with the heat load we accumulated the day before still there," Tarpoff said.
So was it the heat that killed the cows or something else?
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

'Big Oil' Responds To Biden's Threats: Here's 10 Things You Can Do To Ease Gas Prices

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 04:20 PM

Following President Biden's letter to many 'Big Oil' executives, threatening them with forced production quotas, windfall taxes, and/or price-caps (because all those things have proved so successful in past crises... not), Exxon Mobil issued a reasoned response to The White House accusations and scapegoating: (emphasis ours)
We have been in regular contact with the administration to update the President and his staff on how ExxonMobil has been investing more than any other company to develop U.S. oil and gas supplies. This includes investments in the U.S. of more than $50 billion over the past five years, resulting in an almost 50% increase in our U.S. production of oil during this period.

Globally, we’ve invested double what we’ve earned over the past five years -- $118 billion on new oil and gas supplies compared to net income of $55 billion. This is a reflection of the company’s long-term growth strategy, and our commitment to continuously invest to meet society’s demand for our products.

Specific to refining capacity in the U.S., we’ve been investing through the downturn to increase refining capacity to process U.S. light crude by about 250,000 barrels per day – the equivalent of adding a new medium-sized refinery. We kept investing even during the pandemic, when we lost more than $20 billion and had to borrow more than $30 billion to maintain investment to increase capacity to be ready for post-pandemic demand.

In the short term, the U.S. government could enact measures often used in emergencies following hurricanes or other supply disruptions -- such as waivers of Jones Act provisions and some fuel specifications to increase supplies.

Longer term, government can promote investment through clear and consistent policy that supports U.S. resource development, such as regular and predictable lease sales, as well as streamlined regulatory approval and support for infrastructure such as pipelines.
Additionally, buidling on Exxon's suggestions, the American Petroleum Institute - which represents 'Big Oil' - sent a letter to the president offering some advice.



The letter begins by acknowledging President Biden's efforts to address Russia's actions and then focuses on how we got here:
"Unfortunately, Russia’s actions and the instability it created has contributed to an already forming global energy crisis. Several factors have led to a significant and sustained supply and demand imbalance in global oil markets. Demand for energy, specifically crude oil, has surged as global economies have rebounded from the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic. In part, supplies have not kept pace due to global underinvestment in recent years driven by geopolitical and market forces, public policies, and investor sentiment.

This combination of factors and events leaves us in the situation we face today. Namely, the most consequential energy crisis since the 1970s."
Then, The API lays out ten steps that President Biden can take to ease the bottlenecks and lower gas prices for the 'average joe'...

1. Lift Development Restrictions on Federal Lands and Waters
The Department of the Interior (DOI) should swiftly issue a 5-year program for the Outer Continental Shelf and hold mandated quarterly onshore lease sales with equitable terms. DOI should reinstate canceled sales and valid leases on federal lands and waters.
2. Designate Critical Energy Infrastructure Projects
Congress should authorize critical energy infrastructure projects to support the production, processing, and delivery of energy. These projects would be of such concern to the national interest that they would be entitled to undergo a streamlined review and permitting process not to exceed one year.
3. Fix the NEPA Permitting Process
Your administration should revise the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process by establishing agency uniformity in reviews, limiting reviews to two years, and reducing bureaucratic burdens placed on project proponents in terms of size and scope of application submissions.
4. Accelerate LNG Exports and Approve Pending LNG Applications
Congress should amend the Natural Gas Act to streamline the Department of Energy (DOE) to a single approval process for all U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects. DOE should approve pending LNG applications to enable the U.S. to deliver reliable energy to our allies abroad.
5. Unlock Investment and Access to Capital
The Securities and Exchange Commission should reconsider its overly burdensome and ineffective climate disclosure proposal and your administration should ensure open capital markets where access is based upon individual company merit free from artificial constraints based on government-preferred investment allocations.
6. Dismantle Supply Chain Bottlenecks
You should rescind steel tariffs that remain on imports from U.S. allies as steel is a critical component of energy production, transportation, and refining. Your administration should accelerate efforts to relieve port congestion so that equipment necessary for energy development can be delivered and installed.
7. Advance Lower Carbon Energy Tax Provisions
Congress should expand and extend Section 45Q tax credits for carbon capture, utilization, and storage development and create a new tax credit for hydrogen produced from all sources.
8. Protect Competition in the Use of Refining Technologies
Your administration should ensure that future federal agency rulemakings continue to allow U.S. refineries to use the existing critical process technologies to produce the fuels needed for global energy markets.
9. End Permitting Obstruction on Natural Gas Projects
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission should cease efforts to overstep its permitting authority under the Natural Gas Act and should adhere to traditional considerations of public needs as well as focus on direct impacts arising from the construction and operation of natural gas projects.
10. Advance the Energy Workforce of the Future
Congress and your administration should support the training and education of a diverse workforce through increased funding of work-based learning and advancement of STEM programs to nurture the skills necessary to construct and operate oil, natural gas, and other energy infrastructure.

The question is - will the Biden administration do any of them?
* * *
Read the full letter below: (scribd doc on website)
1655347499291.png

Download this PDF
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

"We're Barely Making It": Furious Farmer Goes Viral Explaining Why Food Prices "Are Going To Go Up"

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 03:00 PM
Last week we noted how US farmer sentiment plummeted in May - as producers have become anxious about their farm's financial health.



According to the monthly survey by Purdue University/CME Group, The rapid rise in production costs and uncertainty regarding the direction of input prices have been important contributors to the drop in sentiment. About 44 percent of farmers, according to the monthly survey, cited input costs as their biggest concern for the coming year, according to the Epoch Times.

In fact, 60% of farmers predict farm input prices to be at least 30% higher this year compared to 2021.

To that end, Ohio farmer Holly Weilnau took to TikTok two weeks ago in a now-viral video to explain how farmers are suffering under inflated input costs, which is going to send the price of food much higher than it is right now.



"There are things that we have to buy," she sais, adding "There's something we have to buy that two years ago cost us $24, last year was about $46, this year it is costing us $96."

"Please understand, food prices are going to go up," she continues. "You wanna act like it's the farmers' fault—it is not the farmers' fault. We are barely making it to grow the stuff so you guys are able to get it in August, September, October."

https://v16m-default.tiktokcdn-us.c...MS9zcw==&l=202206160246470101131341831201CED9 (NRT)

"Guys, this is not going away. Stop sticking your head in the sand and thinking 'oh, it's going to be okay' -- it's not going to ****in' be okay."

In a Saturday video, Weilnau relayed a story about another farmer who was unable to lock in diesel pricing for this fall, and was told that it was because of uncertainty amid rapidly rising diesel costs.

"That alone, guys—to fill the tractors and the equipment needed to get the product out of the field—is going to be astronomically bad all the way around," she said, adding: "So understand, people are like, 'Oh, plan ahead'—we're trying. They're not letting us."

Oh - and at least as of this writing, Twitter considered Weilnau's videos "potentially sensitive content."



This is far from the first farmer to offer a dire warning. Three weeks ago John Boyd Jr., the President of the National Black Farmers Association, said "We are in a crisis right now as far as the food chain goes with the farmer in this country," adding "We're going to see a lot of empty shelves and a lot more high food prices."

View: https://youtu.be/YGi8aMog-W4
5:48 min


In his forty-year career as a farmer, Boyd said he never imagined he would be "paying $5.63 for a gallon of diesel fuel, $900 a ton for fertilizer, and all-time high prices for soybean seeds." All of the prices he mentioned are at record highs, pressuring farmers' margins.

He said the American people need to wake up to the crisis in the farming industry, adding, "farming isn't Republican or Democratic, it's food, the land is neutral … this is the time the American people need to support the American farmer and put pressure on the Biden administration to put things in place to help farmers."

He mentioned that banks need to provide emergency funding to farmers to get their crops in the ground. Out-of-control inflation has left some farmers unable to plant because of soaring costs.

Boyd said, "We only have a short window of opportunity to give farmers funding."

He stated the worst-case scenario is "a lot of shortages" of food that could materialize later this year.

Prepare accordingly.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Watch: Biden Officials Again Tell Americans To Buy Electric Cars

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 11:45 AM
Authored by Steve Watson via Summit News,

Just buy an electric car. That seems to be the only fix the Biden administration has for record high gas prices, as well as pretending that forty year high inflation isn’t all that bad.



The electric car suggestion was once again raised by Biden energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm who called it a “very compelling case”, noting that Americans could save $60, but without mentioning that electric vehicles cost at least fifty grand.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536809899203645441
.21 min

Last week, Senator Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, of all places, declared in the Senate that it doesn’t matter to her how high gas prices are because she drives an electric vehicle.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1534205274529087488
.30 min

Joe Biden urged Americans two months ago that driving an electric vehicle will save them about $80 a month on gas. Again, no mention of the $55,000 price tag on the cheapest EVs though.

Biden’s Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who last week said it’s not fair to say that Biden’s actions have had no impact on lowering gas prices, also told Americans last year to just buy electric cars.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1500911652815966213
.19 min

Meanwhile, Biden’s climate guy, John Kerry, declared Tuesday that soon enough (2035) there will only be electric cars and there is absolutely no case for increasing gas and oil drilling in the U.S.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536799603160383494
.29 min

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536797759419867136
.18 min

It’s all part of the painful but necessary ‘transition’.

If you don’t like that idea, and you voice concern about it, Biden’s National climate advisor Gina McCarthy wants you to be silenced and booted off social media:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536520133849632769
.48 min

And what’s all the fuss about anyway? As Biden’s economic advisor told Bloomberg Tuesday, Americans are actually doing “very very well” economically:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536776663245242369
.34 min

Let’s pretend inflation is worse everywhere else. Stop complaining.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536743150286520321
.13 min

Let’s also pretend that wages are going up:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536731979747667968
.13 min

Let’s pretend that Americans have more savings:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536730913677139969
.06 min

And look, the supply chain crisis never happened:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536763948418093059
.08 min

People queuing up to get food is a thing of the past:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536728918320881664
.17 min

America has really made “extraordinary progress” economically:

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536731948793708545
.13 min
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

FIGURES: Biden’s Electric Vehicle Agenda Is Being Led By Electric Car Investors And Insiders
By Michael Robison
Published June 15, 2022 at 10:46am

Granholm-1.jpg


President Biden’s Secretary of Energy, Jennifer Granholm, is the latest Democrat to suggest the solution to high gas prices is to buy an electric vehicle, which costs at least $60,000.

In a clip tweeted by the Republican National Committee Tuesday, Granholm made a case for going electric to combat surging gas prices.

Democrats created the crisis to then bring in their plan as a solution.

It’s the same scenario over and over again.

View: https://twitter.com/i/status/1536809899203645441
.21 min

“If you filled up your EV [electric vehicle] and you filled up your gas tank with gasoline, you would save $60 per fill-up by going electric rather than using gasoline… it’s a very compelling case, but again, we want to bring down the price at the point of purchase,” Granholm said.

The comments by Granholm follow the record-setting surge in gas prices, which have now pushed over $5 per gallon.

According to Fox News, Granholm made similar points in a White House press briefing in May 2021.

“If you drive an electric car, this would not be affecting you,” she said during the briefing.

Granholm is worth roughly $8 million, according to Forbes. She recently served as the director of an electric car company called Proterra.

In May, she exercised stock options in the company, pocketing about $1.6 million from the transaction, according to an energy department spokesperson.

According to Kelley Blue Book, the average cost of an electric vehicle is $56,437, which is approximately $10,000 higher than the industry average, including electric and gas cars.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Biden Energy Secretary’s Message to Americans Suffering Because of High Gas Prices: Brazilians Pay the Same Amount For Gas (VIDEO)
By Cristina Laila
Published June 15, 2022 at 12:17pm

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Joe Biden’s Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has a message to Americans suffering because of high gas prices: Brazilians pay the same amount for gas.

Gas prices are soaring because of Joe Biden’s war on domestic energy production.

The current national average price for gas is well over $5 a gallon.

Joe Biden’s incompetent and corrupt Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm on Wednesday was confronted about the pain at the pump during an appearance on CNN.

Instead of offering up common sense solutions such as drilling for more oil here at home, Secretary Granholm said Americans should stop complaining because Canadians, Brazilians and Germans are paying the same amount for gas.

“If you were in Brazil, you’d be paying the same amount for gas…” Granholm said.

“We’re talking about the United States, though,” CNN’s John Berman said.

VIDEO:

View: https://youtu.be/Evw5J3VyswA
.17 min

This is the new talking point from Biden’s White House.

The Biden White House’s message to American peasants suffering because of high inflation rates: Shut up and be thankful for your crumbs.

Joe Biden downplayed inflation and said other countries have it worse.

“We’ve made extraordinary progress and put America in a position to tackle the worldwide problem that is worse everywhere but here, inflation!” Biden said on Tuesday.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Trump Was Right Again – Russia Further Reduces Natural Gas Flow by 40% into Germany

By Jim Hoft
Published June 15, 2022 at 9:45am
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In 2018 during his speech to the UN General Assembly President Donald Trump lodged a warning to Germany about their country’s reliance on Russian energy.

The German delegation laughed on camera at the remarks.

View: https://youtu.be/FfJv9QYrlwg
.28 min

On Wednesday Russia announced it would reduce natural gas flows through a key European pipeline by roughly 40% into Germany.

German politicians call this a political move.

The Russians don’t care what they call it. They will have to deal with it.

Trump was right again.

The Germans aren’t laughing now.

ABC News reported:

Russia’s announcement that it would reduce natural gas flows through a key European pipeline by roughly 40% appears to be a political move rather than a result of technical problems, Germany’s vice chancellor said Wednesday.

Russia’s state-controlled energy giant Gazprom also told Italian gas giant Eni that it would reduce gas through a different pipeline by roughly 15% on Wednesday. The reason for the reduction has not been made clear, and the Italian company said it was monitoring the situation.

The reduced flows follow Russia’s halt of natural gas supplies to Bulgaria, Poland, Finland, Netherlands, Denmark as Europe works to reduce its dependence on Russian energy amid the war in Ukraine. Gas demand has fallen after the end of the winter heating season, but European utilities are racing to refill storage ahead of next winter with prices high and supplies uncertain.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

John Kerry as Gas Prices Skyrocket: “We Absolutely Don’t” Need to Drill For More Oil (VIDEO)

By Cristina Laila
Published June 14, 2022 at 5:53pm
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Joe Biden’s Climate Envoy John Kerry hosted a discussion with the USC Center for Public Diplomacy over the weekend.

John Kerry is the perfect person to be in charge of reducing carbon emissions since he owns several mansions, a mega yacht and flies in private jets.

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John Kerry said “we absolutely don’t” need to drill for more oil and gas during last weekend’s discussion.

Kerry made the remarks as gas prices soared to new record highs this week.

The cost of gas at the pump rose 55 cents in May to reach new highs almost every day of the month

US Producer Price Index rose 0.8% in May from a month earlier. In April the PPI climbed 0.4%. The number indicates the price crunch consumers are facing under the Joe Biden economy.

Americans are being forced to make changes to their lifestyle because gas is $5+ a gallon nationwide.

Instead of drilling for more oil here at home, Joe Biden plans on begging the Saudis for more oil.

But the US can’t drill.

WATCH:

As Gas Prices Are Skyrocketing, Kerry Says We Absolutely Don’t Need To Drill For More Oil/Gas

As Gas Prices Are Skyrocketing, Kerry Says We Absolutely Don’t Need To Drill For More Oil/Gas .18 min

Last year John Kerry had a message to out-of-work oil and gas workers: make solar panels.

John Kerry was asked what his message would be to oil and gas workers who “see an end to their livelihoods” because of Joe Biden’s war on energy.

“What President Biden wants to do is make sure that those folks have better choices… That they can be the people to go to work to make the solar panels.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Biden Sends Threat-Letters To Big Oil: Help Ease "Putin Price Hike" Or Face Our Tools

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 09:55 AM
President Biden intensified attacks against the nation's largest oil companies, writing an "angry" letter to the heads of ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP America, Shell USA, Phillips 66, Marathon, and Valero to boost US refinery output, according to Axios.

"I understand that many factors contributed to the business decisions to reduce refinery capacity, which occurred before I took office," Biden writes in hopes that everyone is an idiot and incapable of grasping how how green policies have crippled the US energy sector, adding, "at a time of war, refinery profit margins well above normal being passed directly onto American families are not acceptable."

"My administration is prepared to use all reasonable and appropriate federal government tools and emergency authorities to increase refinery capacity and output in the near term, and to ensure that every region of this country is appropriately supplied," the president escalated for dramatic effect.

Biden, always happy to blame other but never himself, ended the letter by also scapegoating Putin - not just energy companies - for "driving up costs for consumers."
"Vladimir Putin's Price Hike and are driving up costs for consumers. I appreciate your immediate attention to this issue and your efforts to mitigate the economic challenges that Viadimir Putin's actions have created for American families."
In effect, Biden is blaming energy companies for his own failures as a president, and not only that - he is also going to beg and grovel in Saudi Arabia while bashing his own domestic producers.

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The letter comes a week after the national average for regular gasoline at the pump hit a record high of $5 a gallon. Soaring energy prices have helped drive an unexpected hot consumer price inflation print last week shows peak inflation has yet to be achieved, causing discontent among the vast majority of Americans as the president's polling data sinks to a new low.

Declining US refinery capacity has nothing to do with Putin's actions in Ukraine, but instead, Democrats and Wall Street, who've been on a crusade over the last several years, pushing for a transition to a low-carbon economy that disincentivized oil companies from reinvesting and expanding refinery capacity. Instead, oil companies were forced to slash capacity by upwards of 1 million barrels from April 2020 to 17.95 million bpd as of June.



Putin has been a frequent strawman abused by what may be the worst administration since Carter, for its failed green transition of the economy and skyrocketing fuel prices.

Of course, no matter how many angry letters the president sends, or what emergency moves he takes like releasing millions of barrels in SPR reserves into the market to prevent a decimation for the Democrats, the bottleneck in refinery capacity cannot be quickly resolved. The lack of understanding of the refinery bottleneck shows just how unseasoned the administration is at tackling the core of the problem months ago.

Americans should blame the fuel crisis on the administration, the Democrats, and Wall Street's hypocritical ESG movement that has crippled refinery capacity for years, if not forever, just as we warned exactly one year ago in "Will ESG Trigger Energy Hyperinflation".

Meanwhile, Mike Wirth, the CEO of oil giant Chevron, recently told Bloomberg TV that America's refining capacity is structurally short, and no new refineries will ever be built in the US again.

Wirth explains his reason: "You're looking at committing capital ten years out, that will need decades to offer a return for shareholders, in a policy environment where governments around the world are saying, 'We don't want these products to be used in the future.'"

Here's a good reminder of who to blame for the refining bottlenecks in the US that predates "Vladimir Putin's Price Hike."

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Reuters energy analyst John Kemp is about to lose it on Biden.

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Biden also asked big oil for an "explanation" for falling refining capacity. He may as well have addressed the letter to his own White House.

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Here's the letter for your own entertainment:

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marsh

On TB every waking moment

EU NatGas Soars On Gazprom Flow-Cuts, Goldman Hikes US NatGas Price Target

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 08:48 AM

Goldman Sachs commodity analysts Samantha Dart and Damien Courvalin revised their US and European natural gas price targets due to last week's explosion at the Freeport LNG Terminal in Quintana, Texas.



On Tuesday, Freeport released a statement about how the expected three-week closure at the LNG terminal would only be partially restarted in 90 days (a complete surprise to the energy analysts). This sent US NatGas prices in the US tumbling as much as 25% since the explosion.

Inversely, European NatGas has soared by more than 40% because fewer exports from the US will crunch European supplies amid weening attempts from Russian fossil fuels.

EU NatGas is surging even more this morning after Russian natural gas deliveries through Nord Stream to Europe will drop by around 40% this year.

State-controlled energy giant Gazprom said Tuesday that the flow has been restricted after Canadian sanctions over the war in Ukraine prevented German partner Siemens Energy from delivering overhauled equipment.
“Gas supplies to the Nord Stream gas pipeline can currently be provided in the amount of up to 100 million cubic meters per day (compared to) the planned volume of 167 million cubic meters per day,” Gazprom said in a statement.
As AP reports, Siemens Energy said a gas turbine that powers a compressor station on the pipeline had been in service for more than 10 years and had been taken to Montreal for a scheduled overhaul. But because of sanctions imposed by Canada, the company has been unable to return the equipment to the customer, Gazprom.
“Against this background we informed the Canadian and German government and are working on a sustainable solution,” Siemens Energy said in a statement.
It did not provide a timeline for the planned drop in gas flows and that sent EU NatGas prices soaring. (The chart below shows 'energy equivalent' comps to enable better comparisons price premia)



The Freeport explosion was a significant enough problem that Goldman's Dart and Courvalin couldn't overlook. They readjusted their price targets for US and EU NatGas higher.
The longer-than-previously-announced outage at Freeport, which reduces our expected US LNG exports to the rest of the world, raises our US end-Oct22 storage estimates and lowers storage in NW Europe vs our previous expectations.

As we incorporate these changes into our balances, we modestly raise our natural gas prices forecasts, with 3Q22 TTF at 90 EUR/MWh vs 85 EUR previously and Bal Sum22/Win22-23 Henry Hub at $7.15/$6.40/mmBtu vs $6.80/$5.60 previously.
The analysts explained why they shifted up the price target for US NatGas, indicating the decision to raise "US natural gas forecasts may seem counter-intuitive":
1. The outage impact on US gas inventories vs. our Apr expectations is partly offset by hotter temperatures and stronger-than-expected power and residential demand;
2. The tightening risk to balances coming from weather for the remainder of summer has increased relative to what we had in Apr, given 1 standard deviation for balance-of-summer temperatures is worth 1.2 bcf/d vs the 0.5 bcf/d equivalent to 1 standard deviation for the whole summer, and (3) the gas price level required to trigger gas-to-Appalachia-coal substitution has increased from about $11 to over $12/mmBtu, as Appalachia coal prices have followed international coal higher.
Dart and Courvalin said the Freeport outage would impact European supplies and decrease global LNG availability. That was the main reason why they increased the EU NatGas price target.
The 5 EUR price response in Europe to the Freeport announcement is consistent with our estimated demand elasticity estimates. Specifically, as we discussed recently, because of the buffer built summer to date in NW European storage, the Freeport outage would need to last more than 70 days before taking storage below the 90% full target.

The current outlook for the facility implies this will be the case, taking end-Oct storage in NW Europe 0.4 Bcm (or approximately 1%) below the 90% full threshold. This can be offset with a 3 mcmd drop in demand for the remainder of summer, which our estimated elasticity of 1 mcm/d change in NW European gas demand for a 1.8 EUR/MWh move in TTF prices suggest requires a 5 EUR/MWh increase in prices, consistent with what we've seen in the market. Accordingly, we raise our 3Q22 TTF price forecast by 5 EUR to 90 EUR/MWh, vs current forwards at 97.60 EUR.
They said, "the next nine months as the tightest part of the US gas forward balances of the next few years given the still relatively low inventories in 2022 and the slow pace of production growth observed year to date," adding US NatGas production should increase in the second half of the year and will set the stage for a more balanced market in 2023/24.

As a reminder, the Texas terminal is the fourth largest in the US regarding export flows. This is bullish for NatGas supplies in the US (hampering prices) and very bearish for Europe (sending prices higher).
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

WTI Extends Losses After Unexpected Crude Build, Gasoline Demand Slows

WEDNESDAY, JUN 15, 2022 - 07:37 AM

Oil pries are modestly lower this morning, extending on yesterday's losses as traders weigh the impact of Fed tightening and Biden's letter to 'Big Oil' against China's solid overnight data.
"It appears that market participants got cold feet ahead of today's Fed decision, as a stronger tightening of monetary policy could have negative effects on oil demand," Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch said in a note.
For now, while markets are calmly sitting on their hands ahead of the major event risk today at 1400ET, all algo's eyes will be on the inventory/demand data.

API
  • Crude +763k (-1.2mm exp)
  • Cushing -1.067mm
  • Gasoline -2.159mm
  • Distillates +234k
DOE
  • Crude +1.96mm (-1.2mm exp)
  • Cushing -826k
  • Gasoline -710k (+100k exp)
  • Distillates +725k (+800k exp)
US Crude stocks rose for the second straight week (a surprise vs expectations a draw) and distillates inventories also built again. Gasoline stocks fell very modestly...


Source: Bloomberg

US crude production rose last week to 12mm b/d for the first time since May 2020...


Source: Bloomberg

Gasoline demand’s weak showing dampens optimism around its growth trajectory that arose following last week’s report. The dip in the weekly product supplied figure stalls out the four-week moving average, dragging demand further behind the 2015-19 average. Current levels sit 515,000 barrel a day below the 2015-19 average, and that gap will grow further if demand remands stagnant.



With The White House's focus on 'Big Oil', we note that US refinery utlization dropped very modestly last week to 93.7%


Source: Bloomberg

WTI was hovering around $118 ahead of the official data and extended losses to yesterday's lows after...



Finally, we note that in its influential monthly Oil Market Report, the IEA said global oil inventories rose in April and May following two years of declines. However it noted much of the gains came on the release of strategic supplies from industrialized countries and its uncertain on the future course of inventories.
"After seven consecutive quarters of hefty inventory draws, slowing demand growth and a rise in world oil supply through the end of the year should help world oil markets rebalance. This situation might prove short-lived, however, as tougher sanctions on Russia come into full force, oil demand in China recovers from Covid-lockdowns, if sharper Libyan losses persist and the OPEC+ spare production capacity cushion erodes," the agency noted.
The IEA left its 2022 demand-rise forecast unchanged at 1.8-million barrels per day over 2021, and expects a rise of 2.2-million bpd in 2023.
 
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