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Oil Prices, Explained
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Brief text
Oil prices move when supply, demand, inventories, shipping routes, refinery needs and geopolitical risk change what buyers will pay for the next barrel.
- Frame 1Oil prices move on a market price board while buyers need barrels and producers, inventories and shipping routes limit supply.
- Frame 2Supply chain: wells, OPEC quotas, spare capacity and tankers meet refinery demand for crude needed today.
- Frame 3Benchmark map: Brent and WTI split when geography, pipeline space, storage and refinery needs change which barrel is reachable.
- Frame 4Inventory meter: low tanks make wars, sanctions, storms or blocked sea lanes raise prices faster.
- Frame 5Refinery flow: crude turns into gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, then margins and taxes shape pump prices.
- Frame 6Watch signal: EIA stocks, refinery runs, spare capacity, tanker routes, futures curves and whether risk removes real supply.
Verification record
- Style
- risograph-two-ink-poster
- Generation status
- generated · codex-imagegen
- Source health
- 2 live sources used and checked before publish
- Claim validation
- cross-checked sources
- Sensitivity gate
- Visual treatment checked before publication
- Selected
- Jun 19, 8:03 PM EDT
- Published source time
- Pending