Lagniappe
Nader
Habibi:
$100
oil by 2008? Maybe not
A stark warning by Canadian Economist Jeff Rubin about the expected decline
in oil exports and possibility of a $100 per barrel crude oil by end of 2008
has caught the attention of the mainstream media in recent weeks. It has also
been praised by the advocates of the Peak Oil theory who believe that global
oil production has already peaked and is currently on a downtrend.
Yet
a careful examination of Rubin’s analysis and his underlying
assumptions about the oil market, raise some doubts about the
accuracy of this prediction. Rubin has argued that the large
increase in domestic consumption of crude oil by OPEC, Mexico
and Russia will reduce their exports to 32.9 mb/d by 2010,
which will be 2.6 mb/d smaller than 2006. He arrives at this
projection by assuming that OPEC’s total output is near
peak at 34.2 mb/d and it can increase by no more than 0.6 mb/d
between now and 2010.
This
is a gross underestimation which ignores the massive investments
that OPEC countries have made in recent years to expand their
production capacity. Based on recent studies by OPEC experts,
the member states (and their international oil company partners)
have allocated more than $120 billion to new capacity projects
and the cartel’s production capacity will expand to 39.7
mb/d by end of 2010. Based on this projection, OPEC countries
will be able to increase their crude export by 4mb/d even if
their domestic consumption grows at the same speed that Rubin
has predicted. This can clearly make up for the expected 1.5mb/d
decline in Mexico’s crude exports.
Furthermore
the capacity expansion is not limited to OPEC countries. The
worldwide investment in oil and gas sector development has
increased so rapidly in the past five years that energy investment
companies have experienced severe shortages of equipment and
skilled technicians. This massive global investment is likely
to expand the production capacity outside of OPEC as well.
Additional capacity is expected in Russia, the Caspian and,
as noted by Mr. Rubin, in Canadian oil sand.
Rubin’s
projections for the growth of domestic oil consumption in major
oil exporting countries also deserve a careful examination.
There is no doubt that subsidized price of refined products
and rapid economic expansion, have contributed to a noticeable
increase in domestic consumption in these countries in recent
years. But the policy makers are well aware of how this trend
is cutting into their oil exports and some are taking steps
to reduce it. After experiencing more than 10% annual growth
in demand for gasoline, Iran finally took action earlier this
year and initiated gasoline rationing. Early data show that
this policy has been successful in curbing consumption.
Currently
Egypt and Syria are also moving in this direction by gradual
reduction of their fuel price subsidies. Other oil-exporting
countries are also likely to pay more attention to this issue
in the coming years. Many Arab oil exporters are promoting
the domestic consumption of natural gas as a substitute for
refined oil products in order to make more oil available for
export - with admittedly mixed success so far. In the longer-term
the oil exporting members of the Gulf Cooperation Council are
also looking at nuclear energy as an alternative to oil and
have received encouragement from Western countries for this
initiative.
It
must also be kept in mind that a portion of domestic oil consumption
by oil exporting countries is used for production of refined
oil products which are used internally and exported. Hence
while the oil that is refined internally is not available for
export as crude oil, the portion of it that is exported as
refined oil products will benefit the oil importers and reduce
their need for crude oil. This is all the more important given
that the high price of oil in recent years has shown a strong
link with lack of refined product availability and further
investment in refining capacity will help to resolve this bottleneck
in the market. According to a 2006 study by OPEC and Wood McKenzie,
a large amount of investment in new refineries is already underway
and refining capacity of OPEC member states is projected to
increase by 60% during 2006-2012.
The
price of oil may well rise in the next three years and it might
even reach the $100 per barrel for a brief period. But this
will most likely be caused by strong global demand or an unexpected
geo-political crisis in the Middle East rather than by a decline
in exports under the circumstances that Jeff Rubin has described.
Nader
Habibi is
the Henry J Leir Chair in Economics of the Middle East
at Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle
East Studies.Petroleumworld does not necessarily share
these views.
Editor's
note: This commentary was originally published by Energy Bulleting,
on 10/14/2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest
of our readers. Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these
views.
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Petroleumworld
News 10/16/07
Copyright© 2007
Nader Habibi . All rights reserved.
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