• protist@retrofed.com
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    11 hours ago

    The sudden spike in prices that immediately followed Russia invading Ukraine had almost nothing to do with the economy

    • takeda@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      I didn’t down vote you but, want to address your edit. You are absolutely right that war in Ukraine contributed to the price. And you are right that this spike had not much to do with the economy, but keep in mind that the restrictions were lifted I think in February as well pretty much simultaneously in all countries.

      During restrictions people traveled less, so the demand for oil was lower, so in 2020 oil fields reduced output.

      Now restrictions were lifted so demand increased, sanctions on Russia were imposed so demand on Persian Gulf also increased.

      It takes few months to restart production from oil wells that were shut down, and then there’s also few weeks delay as the tankers are transporting the oil.

      I think both contributed to the spike.

      • protist@retrofed.com
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        5 hours ago

        Do you have a source on Feb '22 being some kind of turning point regarding covid restrictions? Having lived through COVID as a healthcare worker, I recall the timeline pretty acutely, and my memory is lockdowns were almost universally over by summer '20, the first vaccines were administered on a large scale in December '20, and activity increased progressively throughout 2021.

        Meanwhile, the gas price spike occurred immediately after Russia invaded Ukraine, and concerns about oil supplies were plastered all over the financial news of the day