Global Energy Collapse: UAE, Qatar Offline, World Dark?
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A chilling scenario unfolds as the UAE, a major OPEC producer, reportedly goes completely offline for oil and gas. This unprecedented shutdown, coupled with Qatar Energy's force majeure on critical contracts, signals a potential global energy catastrophe unlike anything seen before.
With destroyed liquefaction gas trains facing a multi-year rebuild, the core question becomes: what happens if oil, gas, and fertilizer are offline for years? The speaker draws a chilling parallel to Cuba's current reality – a world without light, fuel, or agriculture – hinting at the devastating global impact that could be on the horizon.
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Transcript
I did some research this morning the the UAE all of its oil facilities are now offline. So it's producing zero oil. That's the UAE the largest OPEC producer is completely offline and its gas field is also offline. Uh we already talked about Qatar energy declaring force measure on its long-term contracts that are supposed to deliver energy to uh various European countries as well as many Asian countries. And in our previous interview part one that people can find at brightvideos.com, we talked about how there's a multi-year rebuild time for the the two liquefaction gas trains that have already been destroyed apparently according to the CEO of Qatar energy. And that it's a 10 to 15 year rebuild time if all 14 are destroyed which Iran has promised to do. So, but my question to you, sir, is what does what happens to our world if this oil this gas this fertilizer is taken offline for years. What happens? Well, you could find out by moving to Cuba. Right. Lights are out. No, no electricity in Cuba. There's no gas. There's no fertilizer. There's no diesel for their tractors. I I I mean don't Trump you're not ...