Your a bit behind the times. I assume you're not an oil trader in NYC (but, of course, you might be). You do know that oil has spurted in price by over 20% in the last couple of days. So the Saudies' Ploy is working.
I've probably said this before, but the Frackers, and the Canadian dirty tar sands purveyors are starting to go out of business. This is exactly why the Saudies flooded the market with crude, and once these interlopers are gone, the sheikhs, Vladimir et al will almost rule the world. And Frackers are the dirtiest people in the World, IMHO. If you don't think that's correct, just relocate to Campbelltown, NSW.
I can tell that no-one here is an oil trader .., in NYC or anywhere else

. Daily price variations are pretty meaningless. I work half the year in Alberta (where I am right now) , on the periphery of the gas sector (in mining frac related products), so permit me to say I know a bit about the Albertan oil sands and the unconventional gas industries, here and in the US.
(And if you think fraccers are the dirtiest people in the world (I mean,
really?), have you ever seen what's left behind after a greenie forest protest? They don't have porta-loos brought in. :evil: and gotta run their campfires on something. Been there, done that.)
The oil price has dropped because of the s
uccess of the Canadian oil sands and the Nth American unconventional or 'tight' gas industry (the one that uses fraccing) over the past 5 years. US demand for overseas oil has dropped, or certainly stopped growing and can be seen to have no growth, only decline for next decade. OPEC's response hasn't cut their output enough to maintain prices. Some counties will have major hits to their economies with lower prices (Russia, Venezuela). The Saudis I dare say wouldn't care less about that.
So I respectfully suggest the situation is quite the opposite of what you have put forward. I'm not trying to convert you, just putting forward a view that may be a little better informed.
The Albertan oil sands guys are well established; there will be cut backs to the higher cost producers but it'll keep rolling along. No-one is "going out of business" except for some smaller leveraged explorers who can't attract risk capital. Vladimir will certainly not 'rule the world' (at least not at the point of a petrol bowser); the Russian economy is suffering big time because of the pil price drops. The Saudis will continue to do well, but not as well as if the US were still dependent on middle east oil. The US economy, and those of major oil consumers will benefit.
I regret that the knowledge of 'fraccers' expressed here appears pretty provincial. Campelltown, NSW is a bit of a far cry from the Bakkan, Horn River, Marcellus etc basins, and the rest of 1/3 of north America where
ten thousand frac wells, usually at depths of 3-4km were drilled successfully, and profitably every year ('03 - 08); about 4,000 pa currently. The wells are not 'dirty' in any sense of the word. It should not surprise anyone that the USA and Canadian environmental regulators and lobby groups are pretty strong and pro-active. Does anyone think the Americans and Canadians don't want to protect their boreal wilderness areas? And the evil George Bush (aka
Haliburton Inc) no longer rules the White House

- its that other guy (the Democrat) under whose watch (6 years and counting) the fraccing industry has continued to thrive and succeed.
The Australian coal seam gas players are small players and idiots - I have no sympathy for them (I think that's what you mean in the Campbelltown reference)? CSG 'fraccing' is another world from tight gas 'fraccing' and would account for only a tiny proportion of fracced wells by number and an even smaller proportion by metreage. By all means condemn 'fraccing' at Campbelltown, but please realise that 'fraccing' as a general term is about as descriptive as "they are both airplanes" when differentiating between a DC3 and an A380.
But good to have the tar sands sitting there waiting for their day.
Don't worry, both the sands and the tight gas reservoirs will continue to be suppliers for a lo-o-o-o-ng time, even at current rates of consumption
