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Oil prices - The triple-digit barrel

2013-06-19 10:05:19

Are high oil prices here to stay?

Jun 15th 2013 |From the print edition

SCRATCH the surface of the planet and the chances that hydrocarbons will spew

forth appear to grow by the day. This week America s Energy Information

Administration (EIA) released new estimates of the amount of gas in the world s

shale beds. It reckons that there are 7,299 trillion cubic feet, 10% more than

its 2011 estimate. The EIA s estimates for shale oil, not included in the 2011

numbers, are a staggering 345 billion barrels, adding a tenth to the world s

total oil resources.

Shale oil is already gushing out of the ground in America, displacing imports

to the world s largest consumer. New supply is not yet showing up in prices:

Brent crude, the global benchmark, sells for $103 a barrel after averaging $111

in both 2011 and 2012. But Paul Stevens of Chatham House, a think-tank, is

among those who see parallels with the price crash of 1986 caused when high

prices hit demand and brought forth new sources of supply from the North Sea

and Alaska. Are they right?

The most notable recent price surges were rooted in supply shocks in a

fractious Middle East. Arab-spring uprisings culminated in the loss of Libyan

crude from the markets in 2011 after the outbreak of civil war. Brent hit $127

a barrel. Markets back then were tight. Demand was brisk in emerging markets

and even small supply disruptions had a disproportionate effect. A slowdown in

China and the euro crisis have since dampened global thirsts. Forecasts see

relatively weak demand growth of around 800,000 barrels a day (b/d) in 2013, a

little slower than in 2012.

Saudi Arabia has the swing vote on the oil price. It is happy with oil at

around $100 a barrel. The world economy seems able to cope with prices at that

level, which also deliver the revenues needed to buy off restive populations.

Saudi Arabia boosted output last year to offset any Iranian shortfall as

sanctions took hold. Since then, as Libyan crude came back onto the market and

supplies of shale oil from North America expanded by at least 1m b/d, the

Saudis have cut output by 700,000 b/d. These cuts, and the start up of the

Manifa field earlier this year, means that spare capacity, the amount of

production that can quickly be brought on stream, is building.

This might prove useful. Oil markets seem to have forgotten about political

risk in the Middle East. According to Energy Aspects, a consultancy, the

geopolitical premium is extremely low . Yet Iran s elections and its nuclear

ambitions, Syria s civil war and growing violence in Iraq suggest that plenty

of risk remains.

As for those new sources of supply, outside America shale additions in places

like Brazil, Kazakhstan and Iraq are set to disappoint. And Christof R hl, BP s

chief economist, points out that in the 1986 oil-price slump demand was

actually falling yet producers did not want to shut down vast projects in the

North Sea and Alaska; instead they attempted to cut costs and carried on

pumping. But shale oil is extracted using hundreds of small wells, so scaling

back output is far easier if prices fall. Motorists hoping for some rapid

relief from high oil prices may be out of luck.