Europe – Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog http://investing.curiouscatblog.net Thu, 04 Aug 2016 22:09:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.3 Chart of Global Wind Energy Capacity by Country 2005 to 2013 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2014/08/19/chart-of-global-wind-energy-capacity-by-country-2005-to-2013/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2014/08/19/chart-of-global-wind-energy-capacity-by-country-2005-to-2013/#comments Tue, 19 Aug 2014 16:48:11 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=2101 chart of Wind power capacity by country 2005 to 2013

Chart by Curious Cat Economics Blog using data from the Wind Energy Association. Chart may be used with attribution as specified here.

In 2013 the addition to wind power capacity slowed a great deal in most countries. Globally capacity was increased just 13% (the increases in order since 2006: 26%, 27%, 29%, 32%, 25%, 19% and again 19% in 2012). China alone was responsible for adding 16,000 megawatts of the 25,838 total added globally in 2013.

At the end of 2013 China had 29% of global capacity (after being responsible for adding 62% of all the capacity added in 2013). In 2005 China had 2% of global wind energy capacity.

The 8 countries shown on the chart account for 81% of total wind energy capacity globally. From 2005 to 2013 those 8 countries have accounted for between 79 and 82% of total capacity – which is amazingly consistent.

Wind power now accounts for approximately 4% of total electricity used.

Related: Chart of Global Wind Energy Capacity by Country 2005 to 2012In 2010 Global Wind Energy Capacity Exceeded 2.5% of Global Electricity NeedsGlobal Trends in Renewable Energy InvestmentNuclear Power Generation by Country from 1985-2010


Countries where wind power accounts for the largest total shares of electricity: Denmark 34%, Spain 21%, Portugal 19%, Ireland 16%, Germany 9%.

The USA installed just 1 GW (gigawatts) in 2013, compared to 13 GW in 2012. That left the USA solidly in 2nd place (China 91 GW, USA 61 GW, Germany 35 GW, Spain 23 GW). The USA now accounts for 19% of global installed capacity the lowest percentage since 2007.

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Chart of Global Wind Energy Capacity by Country 2005 to 2012 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/09/05/chart-of-global-wind-energy-capacity-by-country-2005-to-2012/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/09/05/chart-of-global-wind-energy-capacity-by-country-2005-to-2012/#comments Fri, 06 Sep 2013 04:07:41 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1978 Global wind power capacity has increased 391% from 2005 to 2012. The capacity has grown to over 3% of global electricity needs.

chart of global wind power capacity by country from 2005 to 2012

Chart by Curious Cat Economics Blog using data from the Wind Energy Association. Chart may be used with attribution as specified here.

The 8 countries shown on the chart account for 82% of total wind energy capacity globally. From 2005 to 2012 those 8 countries have accounted for between 79 and 82% of total capacity – which is amazingly consistent.

Japan and Brazil are 13th and 15th in wind energy capacity in 2012 (both with just over one third of France’s capacity). Japan has increased capacity only 97% from 2005 to 2012 and just 13% from 2010 to 2012. Globally wind energy capacity increased 41% from 2010 to 2012. The leading 8 countries increased by 43% collectively lead by China increasing by 68% and the USA up by 49%. Germany added only 15% from 2010 through 2012 and Spain just 10%.

Brazil has been adding capacity quickly – up 170% from 2010 through 2012, by far the largest increase for a county with significant wind energy capacity. Mexico, 24th in 2012, is another country I would expect to grow above the global rate in the next 10 years (I also expect Brazil, India and Japan to do so).

In 2005 China accounted for 2% of wind energy capacity globally they accounted for 30% in 2012. The USA went from 15% to 24%, Germany from 31% to 12%, Spain from 17% to 9% and India from 8% to 7%.

Related: Global Wind Energy Capacity Exceeds 2.5% of Global Electricity Needs (2011)Nuclear Power Generation by Country from 1985-2010Chart of Wind Power Generation Capacity Globally 2005 to 2012 (through June)

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The Risks of Too Big to Fail Financial Institutions Have Only Gotten Worse http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/06/26/the-risks-of-too-big-to-fail-financial-institutions-have-only-gotten-worse/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/06/26/the-risks-of-too-big-to-fail-financial-institutions-have-only-gotten-worse/#comments Wed, 26 Jun 2013 15:35:44 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1961 Printing money (and the newer fancier ways to introduce liquidity/capital) work until people realize the money is worthless. Then you have massive stagflation that is nearly impossible to get out from under. The decision by the European and USA government to bail out the too big to fail institutions and do nothing substantial to address the problem leaves an enormous risk to the global economy unaddressed and hanging directly over our heads ready to fall at any time.

The massively too big to fail financial institutions that exist on massive leverage and massive government assistance are a new (last 15? years) danger make it more likely the currency losses value rapidly as the government uses its treasury to bail out their financial friends (this isn’t like normal payback of a few million or billion dollars these could easily cost countries like the USA trillions). How to evaluate this risk and create a portfolio to cope with the risks existing today is extremely challenging – I am not sure what the answer is.

Of the big currencies, when I evaluate the USA $ on its own I think it is a piece of junk and wouldn’t wan’t my financial future resting on it. When I look at the other large currencies (Yen, Yuan, Euro) I am not sure but I think the USD (and USA economy) may be the least bad.

In many ways I think some smaller countries are sounder but smaller countries can very quickly change – go from sitting pretty to very ugly financial situations. How they will wether a financial crisis where one of the big currencies losses trust (much much more than we have seen yet) I don’t know. Still I would ideally place a bit of my financial future scattered among various of these countries (Singapore, Australia, Malaysia, Thailand, Brazil [maybe]…).

Basically I don’t know where to find safety. I think large multinational companies that have extremely strong balance sheets and businesses that seem like they could survive financial chaos (a difficult judgement to make) may well make sense (Apple, Google, Amazon, Toyota, Intel{a bit of a stretch}, Berkshire Hathaway… companies with lots of cash, little debt, low fixed costs, good profit margins that should continue [even if sales go down and they make less they should make money – which many others won’t]). Some utilities would also probably work – even though they have large fixed costs normally. Basically companies that can survive very bad economic times – they might not get rich during them but shouldn’t really have any trouble surviving (they have much better balance sheets and prospects than many governments balance sheets it seems to me).

In many ways real estate in prime areas is good for this “type” of risk (currency devaluation and financial chaos) but the end game might be so chaotic it messes that up. Still I think prime real estate assets are a decent bet to whether the crisis better than other things. And if there isn’t any crisis should do well (so that is a nice bonus).

Basically I think the risks are real and potential damage is serious. Where to hide from the storm is a much tricker question to answer. When in that situation diversification is often wise. So diversification with a focus on investments that can survive very bad economic times for years is what I believe is wise.

Related: Investing in Stocks That Have Raised Dividends ConsistentlyAdding More Banker and Politician Bailouts in Not the Answer
Failures in Regulating Financial Markets Leads to Predictable ConsequencesCharlie Munger’s Thoughts on the Credit Crisis and RiskThe Misuse of Statistics and Mania in Financial Markets

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Eurozone Unemployment at 12.2% and for Those Under 25 is 24.4% http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/06/03/eurozone-unemployment-at-12-2-and-24-4-for-those-under-25/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2013/06/03/eurozone-unemployment-at-12-2-and-24-4-for-those-under-25/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2013 15:05:51 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1951 Eurozone unemployment hits new high with quarter of under-25s jobless

The problem was most extreme in Greece where almost two-thirds of those under-25 are unemployed. The rate was 62.5% in February, the most recently available data.

Youth unemployment in Spain is 56.4%, in Portugal 42.5%. Italy recorded its highest overall unemployment rate since records began in 1977, at 12%, with youth joblessness at 40.5%. Economists said that the rise in unemployment was fairly broad-based with rises in so-called core countries as well, including Belgium and the Netherlands. The rate in France was 11%.

Ireland recorded one of the biggest falls in unemployment, down to 13.5% from 14.9% a year ago. That compares with a rate of 7.7% for the UK, where youth unemployment is 20.2%. The lowest rates for youth unemployment were in Germany at 7.5% and Austria at 8%.

Unemployment continues to be a huge problem. The slow recovery from the great recession caused by the too big to fail financial institutions continues to do great damage. That damage is very visible in unemployment figures and the huge transfer of wealth from savers to bail out otherwise failed financial institutions (that not only haven’t been made to be small enough to fail but continue to pay themseves enormous bonuses while taking the billions in transfer of wealth from retirees that have had their income sliced by the interest rate policies necessatated to bail out the bankers).

The USA employment situation is still bad but has actually could easily be much worse. Unemployment in the USA stands at 7.5% now (the rate for teenagers is 24.1%).

Related: 157,000 Jobs Added in January and Adjustments for the Prior Two Months add 127,000 More (Feb 2013)USA Unemployment Rate Drops to 7.8%, 200,000 Jobs Added (Oct 2012)USA Adds 216,00 Jobs in March and the Unemployment Rate Stands at 8.8% (March 2011)

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Is Adding More Banker and Politician Bailouts the Answer? http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/06/11/is-adding-more-banker-and-politician-bailouts-the-answer/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/06/11/is-adding-more-banker-and-politician-bailouts-the-answer/#comments Tue, 12 Jun 2012 02:17:22 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1697 When critics say that Europe is running out of time to deal with the financial crisis I wonder if they are not years too late. Both in Europe responding and those saying it is too late.

It feels to me similar to a situation where I have maxed out 8 credit cards and have a little bit left on my 9th. You can say that failing to approve my 10th credit card will lead to immediate pain. Not just to me, but all those I owe money to. That is true.

But wasn’t the time to intervene likely when I maxed out my 2nd credit card and get me to change my behavior of living beyond my means then? If you only look at how to avoid the crisis this month or year, yeah another credit card to buy more time is a decent “solution.”

But I am not at all sure that bailing out more bankers and politicians for bad financial decisions is a great long term strategy. It has been the primary strategy in the USA and Europe since the large financial institution caused great recession started. And, actually, for long before that the let-the-grandkids-pay-for-our-high-living-today has been the predominate economic “strategy” of the last 30 years in the USA and Europe.

That has not been the strategy in Japan, Korea, China, Singapore, Brazil, Malaysia… The Japanese government has adopted that strategy (with more borrowing than even the USA and European government) but for the economy overall in Japan has not been so focused on living beyond what the economy produces (there has been huge personal savings in Japan). Today the risks of excessive government borrowing in Japan and borrowing in China are potentially very serious problems.

I can understand the very serious economic problems people are worried about if bankers and governments are not bailed out. I am very unclear on how those wanting more bailout now see the long term problem being fixed. Unless you have some system in place to change the long term situation I don’t see the huge benefit in delaying the huge problems by getting a few more credit cards to maintain the fiction that this is sustainable.

We have seen what bankers and politicians have done with the trillions of dollars they have been given (by governments and central banks). It hardly makes me think giving them more is a wonderful strategy. I would certainly consider it, if tied to some sensible long term strategy. But if not, just slapping on a few more credit cards to let the bankers and politicians continue their actions hardly seems a great idea.

Related: Is the Euro Going to Survive in the Long Run? (2010)Which Currency is the Least Bad?Let the Good Times Roll (using Credit)The USA Economy Needs to Reduce Personal and Government Debt (2009 – in the last year this has actually been improved, quite surprisingly, given how huge the federal deficit is) – What Should You Do With Your Government “Stimulus” Check?Americans are Drowning in DebtFailure to Regulate Financial Markets Leads to Predictable Consequences

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Nuclear Power Generation by Country from 1985-2010 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/05/08/nuclear-power-generation-by-country-from-1985-2010/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/05/08/nuclear-power-generation-by-country-from-1985-2010/#comments Tue, 08 May 2012 11:08:21 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1664 chart of nuclear power generation by the largest producing countries from 1985 to 2010The chart shows the top nuclear power producing countries from 1985 to 2010. The chart created by Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog may be used with attribution. Data from US Department of Energy.

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Nuclear power provided 14% of the world’s electricity in 2010. Wind power capacity increased 233% Worldwide from 2005 2010, to a total of 2.5% of global electricity needs. Nuclear power generation declined by .72% for the same period.

Burning coal was responsible for 41% of electricity generation in 2010. Burning natural gas accounted for 21% and hydroelectric generation accounted for 15%.

Japan just announced that they have closed their last operating nuclear power plant. They have no nuclear power plant generating electricity for the first time in more than 40 years. It will be interesting to see how low their actual generation totals fall this year. They plan to re-open some of the plants but it is a political issue that is far from settled.

Globally nuclear power production increased 84% from 1985 to 2010. This is a very low percentage. Global output over that period increased much more than that, as did global electricity use. The share of electricity production provided by nuclear power peaked at about 17% for much of the 1990s.

Related: Nuclear Power Production Globally from 1985 to 2009Oil Production by Country 1999-2009Top 10 Countries for Manufacturing Production from 1980 to 2010: China, USA, Japan, Germany…Japan to Add Personal Solar SubsidiesNuclear Energy Institute (statistics)

Another view of data on nuclear power shows which of the leading nuclear producing countries have the largest percentages of their electrical generating capacity provided by nuclear power plants (as of 2009). France has 75% of all electricity generated from nuclear power. Ukraine had the second largest percentage at 49%, then Sweden at 37% and South Korea at 35%. Japan is at 28% compared to 20% for the USA. Russia was at 18% and China was at just 2%.

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Which Currency is the Least Bad? http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/02/27/what-currency-is-the-least-bad/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2012/02/27/what-currency-is-the-least-bad/#comments Mon, 27 Feb 2012 07:27:19 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1566 I really can’t figure out which currency is something I would want to hold if I had the option. It doesn’t really matter, since I am not going to act on it in a very direct way (maybe if I felt very strongly I would do something but it would probably be pretty limited), but I still keep thinking about this issue out of curiosity.

The USA dollar seems lousy to me. Huge debt (both government and consumer). Government debt is huge on the books and huge off the books (state and local retirement – and federal medical care [social security is really in much better shape than people think, though it also has issues 30 + years out}).

The Euro seemed a bit lame 3 years ago. Today it seems crazy to think at least one Euro country won’t default in the next 3 years – and likely more. And if they take steps to avoid that it seems like it is going to make the case for the Euro worse).

The Japanese Yen is much stronger than makes any sense to me. I think it is mainly because of how lousy all the options are. The huge government debt (worse than almost anywhere) and lousy demographics (and the refusal to deal with demographics with immigration or something) are big problems. The biggest reason for strength is that the individuals have huge savings (when your citizens own the debt it is much less horrible than when others do – especially when you are looking at currency value).

The Chinese Yuan is the best looking at the economic data. The problem is economic data is questionable for the best cases (looking at the USA, Japan…). China’s economic data is far from transparent. There is also great political and social risk. The current worries of a real estate bubble seems justified to me and China just this week took exactly the wrong action – trying to prop up the bubble (in order to decrease the economic slowdown). I can see either of these cases playing out 10 years from now: It was obvious the Yuan was the strongest currency you are an idiot for not being able to see that or It was obvious China was a bubble with unsustainable policies and likely social upheaval thinking that was anything but a sign to sell the Yuan was foolish.

Given all this I think I weakly come down on the side that the Yuan is likely to be the strongest.

The safest play I think is the US dollar (as lousy as it is on an absolute basis the options make it look almost good). It could get clobbered. But that seems less likely than the others getting clobbered.

Smaller currencies have some promise but they can be swamped by global moves. I really have no idea about the Brazilian Real. That might actually be a really good option. The Australian Dollar and Canadian Dollar may also. But those economies are really small. I don’t trust India: they have many good macro-economic factors but the climate for business leaves far too much to be desired (as does the pace of progress fixing those weaknesses). Many economist like them due to demographic factors. I understand that demographic factors will help, but without systemic reform I question how well India can do (it certainly has the potential to do amazingly well, but they seem to be significantly farther away from reaching their potential compared to many countries).

The Singapore Dollar seems good on many levels, but the economy is small. I am not really sure about emerging economies, there currencies can get swamped in a hurry. Thailand and Indonesia experienced this recently. Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia are interesting to me in thinking about what their currencies may experience, I would like to read more on this.

This is more an intellectual and curiosity exercise than something I see directly tied to my investing strategy. But having clear answers of what I thought reasonable scenarios were for currencies going forward that would factor into my investing decisions. Right now, the confusing this causes me, leads me to favor companies that should be fine whatever happens: Apple, Google, Toyota, Intel (I don’t really like Facebook overall but in this way they fit). Lots of the stocks in my 12 stocks for 10 years portfolio, you might notice.

Related: Is the Euro Going to Survive in the Long Run?Why the Dollar is FallingStrong Singapore DollarWarren Buffett Cautions Against Buying Long Term USD Bonds

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Global Wind Energy Capacity Exceeds 2.5% of Global Electricity Needs http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/12/07/global-wind-energy-capacity-exceeds-2-5-of-global-electricity-needs/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/12/07/global-wind-energy-capacity-exceeds-2-5-of-global-electricity-needs/#comments Wed, 07 Dec 2011 09:03:12 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1442 chart showing installed wind energy capacity by Country from 2005-2011Chart by Curious Cat Economics Blog using data from the Wind Energy Association. 2011 data is for the capacity on June 30, 2011. Chart may be used with attribution as specified here.

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In 2007 wind energy capacity reached 1% of global electricity needs. In just 4 years wind energy capacity has grown to reach 2.5% of global electricity demand. And by the end of 2011 it will be close to 3%.

By the end of 2011 globally wind energy capacity will exceed 240,000 MW of capacity. As of June 30, 2011 capacity stood at 215,000. And at the end of 2010 it was 196,000.

As the chart shows Chinese wind energy capacity has been exploding. From the end of 2005 through the end of 2011 they increased capacity by over 3,400%. Global capacity increased by 233% in that period. The 8 countries shown in the chart made up 79% of wind energy capacity in 2005 and 82% at the end of 2010. So obviously many of other countries are managing to add capacity nearly as quickly as the leading countries.

USA capacity grew 339% from 2005 through 2010 (far below China but above the global increase). Germany and Spain were leaders in building capacity early; from 2005 to 2010 Germany only increased 48% and Spain just 106%. Japan is an obvious omission from this list; given the size of their economy. Obviously they have relied heavily on nuclear energy. It will be interesting to see if Japan attempts to add significant wind and solar energy capacity in the near future.

Related: Nuclear Power Production by Country from 1985-2009Top Countries For Renewable Energy CapacityWind Power Capacity Up 170% Worldwide from 2005-2009USA Wind Power Installed Capacity 1981 to 2005Oil Consumption by Country 1990-2009

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Government Debt as Percent of GDP 1998-2010 for OECD http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/05/30/government-debt-as-percent-of-gdp-1998-2010-for-oecd/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/05/30/government-debt-as-percent-of-gdp-1998-2010-for-oecd/#comments Mon, 30 May 2011 15:18:58 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1255 This chart shows government debt as a percent of GDP based on OECD data. The chart is limited to central government debt issuance and excludes therefore state and local government debt and social security funds.

Economic data is always a bit tricky to understand. It makes some sense that excluding social security would reduce the USA debt percentage a bit. But these debt as a percentage of GDP are lower than other sources show. There are obviously many tricks that can be used to hide debt and my guess is the main thing going on with this data is OECD intentionally trying to make things look as good as possible.

Still looking at historical trends in data is useful. And I believe looking at data from various sources is wise. There has been a dramatic increase from 2008-2010. The USA is up from 41% of GDP to 61%. Spain is up from 34% to 52% (but given all the concern with Spain this doesn’t seem to indicate the real debt problems they have.

Japan and France don’t have 2010 data, so I used a rough estimate of my own based on 2009 data. Greece has been over 100% since 1998 and now stands at 148%, 2nd worst (to Japan) for any OECD country (Europe, North America, Japan and Korea), Italy is 3rd. Ireland is at 61% (up from 28% in 2008). The UK is at 86%, up from 61%.

Related: Government Debt as Percentage of GDP 1990-2009: USA, Japan, Germany, China… (based on IMF data)Government Debt as Percentage of GDP 1990-2008Government Debt Compared to GDP 1990-2007Top 15 Manufacturing Countries in 2009

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Nuclear Power Production by Country from 1985-2009 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/03/16/nuclear-power-production-by-country-from-1985-2009/ http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/2011/03/16/nuclear-power-production-by-country-from-1985-2009/#comments Wed, 16 Mar 2011 23:05:50 +0000 http://investing.curiouscatblog.net/?p=1196 chart of nuclear power production: 10 largest countries 1985-2009The chart shows the leading nuclear power producing countries from 1985-2009. The chart created by Curious Cat Investing and Economics Blog may be used with attribution. Data from US Department of Energy.

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Nuclear power provided 14% of the world’s electricity in 2009. Wind power capacity increased 170% Worldwide from 2005-2009, to a total of 2% of electricity used (38,025 Megawatts of capacity). The USA produced nearly twice as much electricity using nuclear power than any other country, which surprised me.

Another view of data on nuclear power shows which of the leading nuclear producing countries have the largest percentages of their electrical generating capacity provided by nuclear power plants (as of 2009). France has 75% of all electricity generated from nuclear power. Ukraine had the second largest percentage at 49%, then Sweden at 37% and South Korea at 35%. Japan is at 28% compared to 20% for the USA (I am surprised these are so close _ would have thought France and Japan would be much closer). Russia is at 18% and China was at just 2%. As of January 2011, 29 countries worldwide are operating 442 nuclear reactors for electricity generation and 65 new nuclear plants are under construction in 15 countries. Source, Nuclear Energy Institute.

From 1985 to 2009, USA production increased 108%, France 84% and Japan up 77%. South Korea is up 550% (from a very low starting point). Globally nuclear power production increased 80% from 1985 to 2009. From 2000-2009 production increased 5% in the USA and decreased by 1% in France and 13% in Japan. China was up 318% (from a very low level) from 2000-2009 (they did not have nuclear power capacity prior to 1995.

The global capacity of nuclear power was scheduled to increase more rapidly in the future before the earthquake in Japan and the crisis at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant. China was going to add a great deal of capacity and is likely to over the next few years (nuclear power plants take many year to bring online so those coming online in the next few years have already had hundreds of millions invested in building them). Several European countries have already announced temporary closing of some plants (especially some plants nearing the end of their originally scheduled lives – which those countries had been in the process of extending).

As a comparison global oil production increased by 10.5% from 1999-2009, while nuclear global production increased by 5% from 2000-2009. From 1999-2009 USA oil production decreased 7%. Russia increased production 62% in the decade, moving it into first place ahead of Saudi Arabia that increased production 10%.

Related: Oil Production by Country 1999-2009Oil Consumption by Country 1990-2009Japan to Add Personal Solar SubsidiesSolar Thermal in Desert, to Beat Coal by 2020

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