EnergyInsights.net 
128: Tightening of oil supplies leading to dangerous inflation - could trigger recession 15-09-2013 7:50 pm

EnergyInsights.net team

Oil Prices:  Oil prices are now back at danger levels of $115/bbl. As we have previously advised, any oil price over about $110/bbl starts to close down the OECD economies because:

  • Oil prices feed rapidly into general inflation
  • Inflation puts upward pressure on interest rates
  • Borrowing costs rise
  • House prices fall
  • Disposable income drops
  • Currencies of net oil importing nations declines – further increasing inflation
  • Ensuing stagflation and economic slowdown puts pressure on unemployment
  • Borrowing costs rise further as tax revenues drop and deficits increase

The global economic growth is always strongly impacted by oil price – particularly in the net oil importing nations with high deficits.

US Economy Slowing: We expect the US economy to slow down further later in 2013. When economies start to suffer and hardship rises, countries often go to war, in part to deflect blame and attention from the economic hardships back home. They can also blame the slowdown on some external influences, giving out messages about needing to “do the right thing for humanity” by going to war. We see this manifested today in the US’s desperation to go to war against Syria – or the Syrian government. It will likely fan the flames of atrocities and lead to further knock-on conflicts within the region. I very dangerous strategy.

Oil Supply Disruptions: Despite the shale oil boom in the US driven by technology advances with fraccing in combination with horizontal drilling, the world oil suppliers are struggling to keep pace with demand. In China alone, another 70 million people each year start using oil of transport and home use. 

Let’s take a look at some countries with production issues:

Yemen – oil production started a steep decline in 2006 and the country has suffered severe economic and security problems ever since with sporadic production outages

Syria -  oil production started a steep decline in 2006 and the country has suffered severe economic and security problems since 2011, oil production has crashed from 0.6 million bbls/day to a tenth of these levels.

Egypt -  oil production started a steep decline in 2009 and the country has suffered severe economic and security problems since 2011 which have worsened as oil and gas production has been effected – a vicious circle of decline

Libya – just before Col. Gaddafi was deposed, the country was producing 1.6 million bbls/day at a steady rate – Libya now produces 0.25 million bbl/day after oil port strikes, security problems and insurgents shutting pipeline demanding payments etc. The economy has spiralled into a miserable depression as oil revenues have dried up and civil wars have started.

Nigeria – oil production is about 1.5 million bb/day, well under capacity of ~2.5 million bb/day – security issue, lawlessness and oil leaks are rife, with investment dwindling.

Sudan – production is on-off depending on negotiation between North and South Sudan after a bitter war led to break-up.

Iraq – oil production has plateaued at this time at around 2.3 million/day – back in 2010 production was projected to recover to 5.5 million/day as security improved. However, insurgency, car bombs and sectarianism has kept back oil production growth. Oil production is no higher than before the 2003 military intervention.

Iran – sanctions over nuclear enrichment have cause oil production to drop from 3 million bbl/day to around 1.8  million bbl/day with no end in sight

Supply Crunch on Horizon:  These are only some of the lowlights. OPEC production is dropping and OECD countries are using up oil in storage at a rate of 2.2 million bbls/day – compared to demand at around 85 million bbl/day. A supply crunch is now well and truly on the horizon – it only needs one big producer to get into difficulties and the oil prices to sky-rocket/spike to $150/bbl. The situation is becoming grave. Especially as a US led war looks likely in Syria now that could or would likely fan out across the region.

The following key trends are taking place:

  • Increasing US light oil production and reducing oil imports
  • Decreasing European oil production and high oil imports
  • Increasing oil demand from China and most developing nations
  • Declining OPEC oil exports because of rising populations, rising consumption and security issues/wars stifling oil production rates

Overall – demand continues to increase at a higher rate than supply, leading to tightening of supply-demand and increasing oil prices.

Security – Production Interruptions: We are seeing Peak Oil for the time being in OPEC countries not because oil is running out, but because of wars, security issues, civil disorder and supply disruptions. If oil production rates cannot be kept up for any reason, then this can cause Peak Oil in a particular country or overall around the global if several countries have the same problems.

Cost of Extraction New Oil $80/bbl:  Talk of oil demand dropping is rather overdone – indeed, it would at very high oil prices as this leads to recession and factories closing with higher unemployment and lower oil demand. So in a way, the world is struggling to supply low priced oil – new oil now needs a prices of at least $80/bbl to make it economic to develop because unconventional oil costs so much to produce – either oil shale, deepwater oil or ethanol from sugar/corn.  Hence the oil prices is directly controlling the rate of global economic growth – this has always been the case and nothing has changed.

The war in Syria will not help of course, and the US response is likely to make matters far worse as Iran and other countries and sects get involved.

 

 

Security, sanctions and civil disorder have led to production disruptions that have caused on overall collapse in oil production in most of these countries. In summer 2013 this has led to a tightening of supply and increasing oil prices that will drive up inflation and could trigger another OECD recession. 

Summation of all the countries showing overall collapse in oil production in summer 2013

Cost of Oil Exploration-Development-Production (full life cycle) - ranges

Conventional  $1 - $40

Heavy Oil $50 - $100

Deepwater $20 - $80

Oil Shale $70+

Ethanol-Sugar $70 

Key Points on Peak Oil

There is plenty of producible globally – it’s a question of how much it costs to produce and how fast this oil will flow

  • “Peak ‘Conventional’ Oil” was 2005 – since then, conventional oil production has been on a undulating plateau
  • Total liquids oil production has continued to rise – but only because of unconventional oil sources such as Heavy Oil, Deepwater Oil, Oil Shale, Ethanol and Natural Gas Liquids (a bi-product of expanding gas production) 
  • As oil price rises, consumption drops as people cut back on driving and the economy goes into stagnation or recession
  • If oil prices stay high – this encourages new oil supplies to come on-stream
  • The system is self-levelling to s certain extent though with an overall increase price trend as extraction costs rise
  • OPEC would certainly be capable of increasing oil production rates considerably – but about 4-5 million barrels/day of oil production capacity is currently offline because of civil wars, security issues, sectarianism and worker strikes.
  • We have hit “Peak Cheap Oil” – liquid oil from now onwards will cost considerably more than the cost range of conventional oil – new oil supplies will cost >$80/bbl to make development economic – so it is very unlikely oil prices will drop below $80/bbl (at least not for any more time than a few months, unless there is a financial meltdown-crash and massive deflation)
  • Trillions of dollars-worth of printed currencies by the US Fed, BoE and BoJ have done their bit in driving oil prices from $10/bbl in 1999 to $110/bbl in 2013. This eleven fold increase in oil prices in 14 years has been caused by high cost marginal oil extraction  costs, printed money and tightening of oil supplies along with strong demand from developing industrialising nations
  • The world is losing control of total oil production as some key oil exports struggle or collapse (e.g. Libya, Syria, Yemen, Egypt, Sudan, Iraq). With rising food costs, water shortages, massively increasing desert populations and the USA withdrawing from its role as “policeman of the world” – these security issues in this region are likely to intensify not improve and hence OPEC production and exports are likely to decline rather than rise in years to come.
  • A tightening of the oil market will create economic recessions as oil prices spike – this tends to control the pace of overall global economic growth. As oil prices drop, activity will pick up – then oil prices will rise, then economic activity will stall out once more.
  • Big net oil exporters like Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Qatar will be able to afford subsidies for their expanding populations for the next few years – though pressures will eventually build even for these big producers as declining oil exports cause by high indigenous use and populations threatens their stability
  • Middle East countries that have hit national “Peak Oil” like Syria, Egypt, Yemen and Tunisia – that were used to oil revenues that then dried up – will come under increasing economic pressure and with this, more in-fighting will ensue. Countries that used to export oil then end up importing oil whilst having expanding populations usually collapse. The mixture of desert, water shortage, poor agriculture, and oil exports turning to imports is a particularly toxic economic mixture

 

 

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