The Oil
Pricequake
Political Turmoil in a Time of Low Energy Prices
By Michael
T. Klare
January 12,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Tom
Dispatch"
-
As 2015 drew
to a close, many in the global energy industry were
praying that the price of oil would bounce back from
the abyss, restoring the petroleum-centric world of
the past half-century. All evidence, however,
points to a continuing depression in oil prices in
2016 -- one that may, in fact, stretch into the
2020s and beyond. Given the centrality of oil (and
oil revenues) in the global power equation, this is
bound to translate into a profound shakeup in the
political order, with petroleum-producing states
from Saudi Arabia to Russia losing both prominence
and geopolitical clout.
To put
things in perspective, it was not so long ago -- in
June 2014, to be exact -- that Brent crude, the
global benchmark for oil, was
selling at $115 per barrel. Energy analysts
then generally
assumed that the price of oil would remain well
over $100 deep into the future, and might gradually
rise to even more stratospheric levels. Such
predictions inspired the giant energy companies to
invest hundreds of billions of dollars in what were
then termed “unconventional”
reserves: Arctic oil, Canadian tar sands, deep
offshore reserves, and dense shale formations. It
seemed obvious then that whatever the problems with,
and the cost of extracting, such energy reserves,
sooner or later handsome profits would be made. It
mattered little that the cost of exploiting such
reserves might reach $50 or more a barrel.
As of this
moment, however, Brent crude is selling at $33 per
barrel, one-third of its price 18 months ago and way
below the break-even price for most unconventional “tough
oil” endeavors. Worse yet, in one scenario
recently offered by the International Energy Agency
(IEA), prices might not again
reach the $50 to $60 range until the 2020s, or
make it back to $85 until 2040. Think of this as the
energy equivalent of a monster earthquake -- a
pricequake -- that will
doom not just many “tough oil” projects now
underway but some of the over-extended companies
(and governments) that own them.
The current
rout in oil prices has obvious implications for the
giant oil firms and all the ancillary businesses --
equipment suppliers, drill-rig operators, shipping
companies, caterers, and so on -- that depend on
them for their existence. It also threatens a
profound shift in the geopolitical fortunes of the
major energy-producing countries. Many of them,
including Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Russia, and
Venezuela, are already experiencing economic and
political turmoil as a result. (Think of this, for
instance, as a boon for the terrorist group Boko
Haram as Nigeria shudders under the weight of those
falling prices.) The longer such price levels
persist, the more devastating the consequences are
likely to be.
A
Perfect Storm
Generally
speaking, oil prices go up when the global economy
is robust, world demand is rising, suppliers are
pumping at maximum levels, and little stored or
surplus capacity is on hand. They tend to fall
when, as now, the global economy is stagnant or
slipping, energy demand is tepid, key suppliers fail
to rein in production in consonance with falling
demand, surplus oil builds up, and future supplies
appear assured.
During the
go-go years of the housing boom, in the early part
of this century, the world economy was thriving,
demand was indeed soaring, and many analysts were
predicting an imminent “peak”
in world production followed by significant
scarcities. Not surprisingly, Brent prices rose to
stratospheric levels, reaching a record
$143 per barrel in July 2008. With the failure
of Lehman Brothers on September 15th of that year
and the ensuing global economic meltdown, demand for
oil evaporated, driving prices down to $34 that
December.
With
factories idle and millions unemployed, most
analysts assumed that prices would remain low for
some time to come. So imagine the surprise in the
oil business when, in October 2009, Brent crude rose
to $77 per barrel. Barely more than two years
later, in February 2011, it again
crossed the $100 threshold, where it generally
remained until June 2014.
Several
factors account for this price recovery, none more
important than what was happening in China, where
the authorities decided to
stimulate the economy by investing heavily in
infrastructure, especially roads, bridges, and
highways. Add in soaring automobile ownership among
that country’s urban middle class and the result was
a sharp increase in energy demand. According to oil
giant BP, between 2008 and 2013, petroleum
consumption in China
leaped 35%, from 8.0 million to 10.8 million
barrels per day. And China was just leading the
way. Rapidly developing countries like Brazil and
India followed suit in a period when output at many
existing, conventional oil fields had begun to
decline; hence, that rush into those
“unconventional” reserves.
This is
more or less where things stood in early 2014, when
the price pendulum suddenly began swinging in the
other direction, as production from unconventional
fields in the U.S. and Canada began to make its
presence felt in a big way. Domestic U.S. crude
production, which had dropped from 7.5 million
barrels per day in January 1990 to a mere 5.5
million barrels in January 2010, suddenly headed
upwards,
reaching a stunning 9.6 million barrels in July
2015. Virtually all the added oil came from newly
exploited shale formations in North Dakota and
Texas. Canada experienced a similar sharp uptick in
production, as heavy investment in tar sands began
to pay off. According to BP, Canadian output
jumped from 3.2 million barrels per day in 2008
to 4.3 million barrels in 2014. And don’t forget
that production was also ramping up in, among other
places, deep-offshore fields in the Atlantic Ocean
off both Brazil and West Africa, which were just
then coming on line. At that very moment, to the
surprise of many, war-torn Iraq succeeded in lifting
its output by nearly one million barrels per day.
Add it all
up and the numbers were staggering, but demand was
no longer keeping pace. The Chinese stimulus
package had largely petered out and international
demand for that country’s manufactured goods was
slowing, thanks to tepid or nonexistent economic
growth in the U.S., Europe, and Japan. From an
eye-popping annual rate of 10% over the previous 30
years, China's growth rate fell into the single
digits. Though China’s oil demand is expected to
keep rising, it is not
projected to grow at anything like the pace of
recent years.
At the same
time, increased fuel efficiency in the United
States, the world’s leading oil consumer, began to
have an effect on the global energy picture. At the
height of the country’s financial crisis, when the
Obama administration
bailed out both General Motors and Chrysler, the
president forced the major car manufacturers to
agree to a tough set of fuel-efficiency standards
now noticeably reducing America’s demand for
petroleum. Under a plan
announced by the White House in 2012, the
average fuel efficiency of U.S.-manufactured cars
and light vehicles will rise to 54.5 miles per
gallon by 2025, reducing expected U.S. oil
consumption by 12 billion barrels between now and
then.
In
mid-2014, these and other factors came together to
produce a
perfect storm of price suppression. At that
time, many analysts believed that the Saudis and
their allies in the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) would, as in the past,
respond by reining in production to bolster prices.
However, on November 27, 2014 -- Thanksgiving Day --
OPEC confounded those expectations,
voting to maintain the output quotas of its
member states. The next day, the price of crude
plunged by $4 and the rest is history.
A
Dismal Prospect
In early
2015, many oil company executives were expressing
the hope that these fundamentals would soon change,
pushing prices back up again. But
recent developments have demolished such
expectations.
Aside from
the continuing economic slowdown in China and the
surge of output in North America, the most
significant factor in the unpromising oil outlook,
which now extends
bleakly into 2016 and beyond, is the steadfast
Saudi resistance to any proposals to curtail their
production or OPEC’s. On December 4th, for
instance, OPEC members
voted yet again to keep quotas at their current
levels and, in the process, drove prices down
another 5%. If anything, the Saudis have actually
increased their output.
Many
reasons have been given for the Saudis’ resistance
to production cutbacks, including a desire to
punish Iran and Russia for their support of the
Assad regime in Syria. In the view of many industry
analysts, the Saudis see themselves as better
positioned than their rivals for weathering a
long-term price decline because of their lower costs
of production and their large cushion of foreign
reserves. The most likely explanation, though, and
the one advanced by the Saudis themselves is that
they are seeking to maintain a price environment in
which U.S. shale producers and other tough-oil
operators will be driven out of the market. “There
is no doubt about it, the price fall of the last
several months has deterred investors away from
expensive oil including U.S. shale, deep offshore,
and heavy oils,” a top Saudi official
told the Financial Times last spring.
Despite the
Saudis’ best efforts, the larger U.S. producers
have, for the most part, adjusted to the low-price
environment, cutting costs and shedding unprofitable
operations, even as many smaller firms have filed
for bankruptcy. As a result, U.S. crude production,
at about
9.2 million barrels per day, is actually
slightly higher than it was a year ago.
In other
words, even at $33 a barrel, production continues to
outpace global demand and there seems little
likelihood of prices rising soon, especially since,
among other things, both Iraq and Iran continue to
increase their output. With the Islamic State
slowly losing ground in Iraq and most major oil
fields still in government hands, that country’s
production is expected to continue its stellar
growth. In fact, some analysts
project that its output could triple during the
coming decade from the present three million barrels
per day level to as much as nine million barrels.
For years,
Iranian production has been
hobbled by sanctions imposed by Washington and
the European Union (E.U.), impeding both export
transactions and the acquisition of advanced Western
drilling technology. Now, thanks to its nuclear
deal with Washington, those sanctions are being
lifted, allowing it both to reenter the oil market
and import needed technology. According to the U.S.
Energy Information Administration, Iranian output
could rise by as much as 600,000 barrels per day
in 2016 and by more in the years to follow.
Only three
developments could conceivably alter the present
low-price environment for oil: a Middle Eastern war
that took out one or more of the major energy
suppliers; a Saudi decision to constrain production
in order to boost prices; or an unexpected global
surge in demand.
The
prospect of a new war between, say, Iran and Saudi
Arabia -- two powers at each other’s throats at this
very moment -- can never be ruled out, though
neither side is believed to have the capacity or
inclination to undertake such a risky move. A Saudi
decision to constrain production is somewhat more
likely sooner or later, given the precipitous
decline in government revenues. However, the Saudis
have
repeatedly affirmed their determination to avoid
such a move, as it would largely benefit the very
producers -- namely shale operators in the U.S. --
they seek to eliminate.
The
likelihood of a sudden spike in demand appears
unlikely indeed. Not only is economic
activity still slowing in China and many other parts
of the world, but there’s an extra wrinkle that
should worry the Saudis at least as much as all that
shale oil coming out of North America: oil itself is
beginning to lose some of its appeal.
While newly
affluent consumers in China and India continue to
buy oil-powered automobiles -- albeit not at the
breakneck pace once predicted -- a growing number of
consumers in the older industrial nations are
exhibiting a preference for hybrid and all-electric
cars, or for alternative means of transportation.
Moreover, with concern over climate change growing
globally, increasing numbers of young urban dwellers
are choosing to subsist without cars altogether,
relying instead on bikes and public transit. In
addition, the use of renewable energy sources --
sun, wind, and water power -- is
on the rise and will only grow more rapidly in
this century.
These
trends have prompted some analysts to predict that
global oil demand will soon peak and then be
followed by a period of declining consumption. Amy
Myers Jaffe, director of the energy and
sustainability program at the University of
California, Davis, suggests that growing
urbanization combined with technological
breakthroughs in renewables will dramatically reduce
future demand for oil. “Increasingly, cities around
the world are seeking smarter designs for transport
systems as well as penalties and restrictions on car
ownership. Already in the West, trendsetting
millennials are urbanizing, eliminating the need for
commuting and interest in individual car ownership,”
she
wrote in the Wall Street Journal last
year.
The
Changing World Power Equation
Many
countries that get a significant share of their
funds from oil and natural gas exports and that
gained enormous influence as petroleum exporters are
already experiencing a
significant erosion in prominence. Their
leaders, once bolstered by high oil revenues, which
meant money to spread around and buy popularity
domestically, are falling into disfavor.
Nigeria’s
government, for example, traditionally
obtains 75% of its revenues from such sales;
Russia’s,
50%; and Venezuela’s,
40%. With oil now at a third of the price of 18
months ago, state revenues in all three have
plummeted, putting a crimp in their ability
to undertake ambitious domestic and foreign
initiatives.
In Nigeria,
diminished government spending combined with rampant
corruption discredited the government of President
Goodluck Jonathan and helped fuel a vicious
insurgency by Boko Haram, prompting Nigerian voters
to abandon him in the most recent election and
install a former military ruler, Muhammadu
Buhari, in his place. Since taking office, Buhari
has pledged to crack down on corruption, crush Boko
Haram, and -- in a telling sign of the times --
diversify the economy, lessening its reliance on
oil.
Venezuela
has experienced a similar political shock thanks to
depressed oil prices. When prices were high,
President Hugo Chávez took revenues from the
state-owned oil company,
Petróleos de Venezuela S.A., and used them to
build housing and provide other benefits for the
country’s poor and working classes, winning vast
popular support for his United Socialist Party. He
also sought regional support by offering
oil subsidies to friendly countries like Cuba,
Nicaragua, and Bolivia. After he died in March
2013, his chosen successor, Nicolas Maduro, sought
to perpetuate this strategy, but oil
didn’t cooperate and, not surprisingly, public
support for him and for Chávez’s party began to
collapse. On December 6th, the center-right
opposition swept to electoral victory, taking a
majority of the seats in the National Assembly.
It now seeks to dismantle Chávez’s “Bolivarian
Revolution,” though Maduro's supporters have
pledged firm resistance to any such moves.
The
situation in Russia remains somewhat more fluid.
President Vladimir Putin continues to enjoy
widespread popular support and, from Ukraine to
Syria, he has indeed been moving ambitiously on the
international front. Still, falling oil prices
combined with economic sanctions imposed by the E.U.
and the U.S. have begun to cause some expressions of
dissatisfaction, including a recent
protest by long-distance truckers over increased
highway tolls. Russia’s economy is expected to
contract in a significant way in 2016,
undermining the living standards of ordinary
Russians and possibly sparking further
anti-government protests. In fact, some analysts
believe that Putin took the risky step of
intervening in the Syrian conflict partly to deflect
public attention from deteriorating economic
conditions at home. He may also have done so to
create a situation in which Russian help in
achieving a negotiated resolution to the bitter,
increasingly internationalized Syrian civil war
could be
traded for the lifting of sanctions over
Ukraine. If so, this is a very
dangerous game, and no one -- least of all Putin
-- can be certain of the outcome.
Saudi
Arabia, the world’s leading oil exporter, has been
similarly buffeted, but appears -- for the time
being, anyway -- to be in a somewhat
better position to weather the shock. When oil
prices were high, the Saudis socked away a massive
trove of foreign reserves, estimated at
three-quarters of a trillion dollars. Now that
prices have fallen, they are drawing on those
reserves to sustain generous social spending meant
to stave off unrest in the kingdom and to finance
their ambitious intervention in Yemen’s civil war,
which is already beginning to look like a Saudi
Vietnam. Still, those reserves have fallen by some
$90 billion since last year and the government is
already announcing cutbacks in public spending,
leading some observers to
question how long the royal family can continue
to buy off the discontent of the country’s growing
populace. Even if the Saudis were to reverse course
and limit the kingdom’s oil production to drive the
price of oil back up, it’s unlikely that their oil
income would rise high enough to sustain all of
their present lavish spending priorities.
Other major
oil-producing countries also face the prospect of
political turmoil, including
Algeria and
Angola. The leaders of both countries had
achieved the usual deceptive degree
of stability in energy producing countries through
the usual oil-financed government largesse. That is
now coming to an end, which means that both
countries could face internal challenges.
And keep in
mind that the tremors from the oil pricequake have
undoubtedly yet to reach their full magnitude.
Prices will, of course, rise someday. That’s
inevitable, given the way investors are pulling the
plug on energy projects globally. Still, on a
planet heading for a green energy revolution,
there’s no assurance that they will ever reach the
$100-plus levels that were once taken for granted.
Whatever happens to oil and the countries that
produce it, the global political order that once
rested on oil’s soaring price is doomed. While this
may mean hardship for some, especially the citizens
of export-dependent states like Russia and
Venezuela, it could help smooth the transition to a
world powered by renewable forms of energy.
Michael T. Klare, a
TomDispatch regular, is a professor
of peace and world security studies at Hampshire
College and the author, most recently, of
The Race for What’s Left. A documentary
movie version of his book Blood and Oil is
available from the Media Education Foundation.
Follow him on Twitter at
@mklare1.
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Copyright
2016 Michael T. Klare |