Why does it need to be 80-90/bbl now when it didn't have to be 10-15 years ago when prices at the pump were similar to where they're at now? Has the means of retrieval changed so much that it's just that expensive to extract the crude now? Has the middle east changed their way of extracting the crude or is still plugging along like they basically always have?
Could it be that the required price per bbl is now as high as it is due to the average wage in the industry being nearly double that of the national average wage earner? That's not a jab, it's an honest/legitimate question.
Cause everything else costs more now. Tooling up to support a contract is extremely expensive. Can easily runs into the 10s of millions even for a small company like ours.
And Adam, no one in this thread has worked themselves into a corner.
Setting up a plant to produce parts requires lots of thinking/engineering on the layout of machinery, who calls on us the most? Who puts bread on the table? So it's not like you can just swap back and fourth whenever the wind changes direction. Our plant doesn't soley rely on oil and gas, but when that's who's been feeding you large amounts of business for 30 years, you cant just say, "hey I'm sorry I have to cater to aerospace and defense contractors for a while so we will get back with you later". No that's not how it works. When your main customer, the one that's made you who you are, calls up and says I need these parts now, you say yes sir and get it down.
And btw, I'm not complaining at all. Ups and downs are part of business. I just started this thread to gather thoughts from people in other fields. But it seems that there is quite a lot of confusion on just how important the oil industry is.... It makes the world go round dude.