Saudi Arabia and the Oil Price
Collapse
Remarks
to a Panel at the Center for the National Interest
Ambassador
Chas W. Freeman, Jr. (USFS, Ret.)
Washington,
DC 27 January 2015
I’ve been asked to speak about
the geopolitical aspects of Saudi Arabia’s decision to continue producing
petroleum at previous levels despite falling oil prices.
Last June, oil sold at as much
as $115 per barrel. Now it’s between $45
and $50. That’s a 60 percent collapse in
price. There has been all sorts of
speculation about why the Saudis let this happen and don’t seem to want to do
anything about it.
Elsewhere, I've expressed doubts
about the wisdom of a number of Saudi
Arabia’s current foreign policies. But the Kingdom’s approach to the oil market
impresses me as intelligently calculated to serve its long-term economic
interests, while yielding geopolitical benefits at no real political cost. Before I explain why I think this is so, bear
with me as I briefly describe the market environment in which Saudi Arabia and
other oil producers operate.
World demand for oil is now about
92 million barrels a day. Altogether,
including Saudi Arabia, OPEC can supply about 40 percent of this demand. By itself, the Kingdom can meet about 13 - 14
percent of it. Saudi Arabia is the only
oil producer that can ramp up output to fill an immediate supply
shortfall. On pretty short notice, it
can add a couple of million barrels a day -- about 2 percent -- to global oil
supplies.
The Kingdom is also a very
low-cost producer with reserves that will last for many decades. Many other OPEC members – like most non-OPEC countries
– are high-cost producers whose costs per barrel are many times those in Saudi
Arabia. Others are running out of oil.
Oil is a globally traded
commodity. Its prices are determined
partly by the current balance between supply and demand and partly by hopes and
fears about future shifts in that balance.
Estimates of trends in the balance between supply and demand by traders
and guesses by speculators about future prices determine current prices of oil and other commodities. Speculators' expectations are often
exaggerated and invite sharp corrections that create market volatility. 2008
alone saw oil prices as high as $147 and as low $47 per barrel.
In the relatively short term, supply can be affected by geopolitical
events, like war and civil strife. Recent
examples are what happened in Iraq and Libya as well as several times in
Nigeria. Rough weather and labor unrest
can prevent tankers from loading, leading to supply pinches. But the major factors determining whether
supply can meet demand over the long term are investment in new exploration and
production, new technologies for finding and extracting oil, and new ways of
prolonging production in nearly depleted reservoirs.
Demand for energy is closely related to the rate of growth in the
world economy amd to seasonal factors.
Natural disasters can have an impact on demand as well as supply. (For example, the Japanese tsunami forced a
shut down in nuclear power in Japan and Germany and pushed both back into the
fossil fuels market). In the long term,
demand for oil is greatly affected by changes in technology that alter its costs
of production, the efficiency with which it is used, and the availability of
competitive alternatives to it.
If the companies that explore
for oil and produce it think prices will stay high enough for them to make a
significant profit, they will invest in finding and developing new oilfields or
in prolonging output from existing fields.
Efforts to find and produce oil from "conventional" sources
may take nine years or more to begin to bring additional oil to market, if they succeed.. After an initial, often massive amount of
investment, investors then begin to get their money back. New infusions of capital are seldom necessary
for many years. Once the original investment has been returned, it's all profit
from then on in.
Fracking is different. The lag between discovery and production tends
to be much shorter, but so is the time it takes to deplete fields -- which must then be refracked to
release new oil. The need to refrack on
a regular basis means that to keep production going frackers, unlike
conventional producers, must regularly inject
large amounts of new capital into their companies. This makes them prisoners of their banks. They must not only repay current loans but
constantly borrow new money.
For the past five years, prices and expectations
about future prices have both been high.
Interest rates, by contrast, have been very, very low. This situation encouraged a lot of investment
projects, especially in unconventional sources of oil, like fracking and
oil-sand development, some of which have been almost obscenely profitable at
recent prices. In the United States, over
the past four years, oil output rose by two-thirds, displacing imports and
making an additional 5 - 6 million barrels per day available to markets abroad. Meanwhile, Iraq and Libya restored production
to an aggregate total of about 4 million barrels a day.
Much of the world has been in
recession since 2008. Demand for oil has
continued to grow but more slowly than
supply and well below investor expectations.
By late 2014, global oil supplies of about 93 million barrels a day exceeded
demand by about one million barrels, or a bit more than one percent. Inventories of unsold oil were meanwhile growing
rapidly.
To traders the oversupply and
growth in inventories signaled a clear trend toward lower future prices. Their apprehensions about an expanding
oversupply of oil conspired to bring about a price collapse comparable to that
in earlier speculative cycles.
Saudi Arabia is used to being
blamed when prices seem too high. Now
it's being blamed for prices being too low.
But the Kingdom had nothing to do with either the increase in supply or
the recession-induced decrease in demand for oil. Nor did it bring about the collapse in
prices. But its position as the world's
swing supplier gives it uncommon influence on expectations. And, as Riyadh saw it, the rapidly falling
prices for oil confronted it with some stark choices.
The Kingdom could lead OPEC in
trying to reverse some or all of the drop in prices by curbing production to
reduce supply. But shoring up prices
would enable other producers to continue investing profitably in expanded
production from shale and oil sands, as well as deep-sea drilling. It would therefore allow higher-cost
producers to continue to gain long-term market share at Saudi Arabia and other OPEC
members’ expense. If OPEC members cut
production, prices might rise somewhat but they would likely stabilize at
levels that would still result in less revenue for the Kingdom and also slow,
if not end, savings needed to fund the transition to an eventual post-petroleum
Saudi economy. More damaging still, loss
of future market share would cut the Kingdom’s future revenue from oil as well
as its global clout. Adding insult to
injury, the main beneficiaries of an OPEC production cut and consequent stabilization
of oil prices would be the Iranian and Russian governments and American and
Chinese consumers, not Saudi Arabia or other Arab oil producers.
Alternatively, Saudi Arabia
could do nothing, accepting the loss of significant current revenue but
allowing prices to fall to levels at which its competitors could no longer
produce profitably or invest with confidence in new capacity to meet future oil
demand.
For Riyadh, this is a “no brainer.” It is
clearly smarter to eliminate current and future competition and assure future
market share than to help competitors remain profitable at the expense of Saudi
and other Arab oil producers’ patrimony and well-being in the decades to come. There are many reasons for this. I'll give you seven.
First. Low prices don’t hurt the Saudi national oil
company, Saudi Aramco, much. The world’s
biggest oil company does not disclose its production costs, but estimates
center around an average of $5 - 6 per barrel.
In general, it appears to cost about $70 to produce a barrel of shale
oil in the U..S. (Some U.S. fracking is profitable at $40 per
barrel but some requires a price of $90 or more to break even.) Oil-sand-based production comes in at about $80
- $90 a barrel, plus transport, which can be expensive. Saudi Aramco and other Gulf
Cooperation Council oil companies make a lot of money with oil at $50 a barrel. Many other producers can’t turn a profit at
that price.
Second. Low oil prices both halt investment by
high-cost producers and inhibit any switch to energy sources other than
oil. They affect not just fracking but
deep-water drilling, Arctic exploration, expanded reliance on natural gas, and
the development of alternatives to oil, including renewable energy sources (which
have just become much less competitive than before). Lower oil prices also help force older,
depleted fields out of production earlier, further reducing current and future
supply. Major project investment will
not go forward. Fracking and refracking
will lose the access to bank loans they depend upon. All this sets the stage for a minor price
rebound to $65 or so in a year or less and a much bigger price rise a few years
later. Better to maximize income over
the long run than go for short-term revenue.
Third. The Kingdom’s foreign-exchange reserves of
about $900 billion are one-fifth larger than its GDP and almost four times its
annual budget. Saudi Arabia can afford
to take a revenue hit for a few years – long enough for others to be wrung out
of the market.
Fourth. The countries most negatively affected by low
prices are Saudi Arabia’s enemies and competitors. The Kingdom cannot help but be pleased that
low prices hurt the Assad regime’s main backers – Russia and Iran, which depend heavily on
revenue from oil exports. . Saudi Arabia
is not close to Venezuela. Nigeria has emerged as a competitor for the China
market. So what if these governments
suffer? Meanwhile, low prices benefit
American, Chinese, and Indian consumers and deepen their addiction to oil,
ensuring a market for Saudi exports once prices return to high levels, as they
will once demand again outstrips supply.
Fifth. Cheap oil helps build
markets in rising powers like China and India, where future energy demand is
concentrated. (Asia already buys over
two-thirds of Saudi oil exports, while the Americas now take less than one-fifth.) The Kingdom is cultivating relations with Asian
nations to dilute its dependence on the United States. Current prices help in this regard.
Sixth. Both the prospect of
several years of low prices and the timely reminder of market volatility that
the price collapse has provided help discourage Chinese and Indian plans to
develop domestic fracking and impede progress toward self-sufficiency of oil
supply in the Kingdom’s most promising markets.
Seventh. The effect of the price
collapse has been to demonstrate that rumors of Saudi and OPEC irrelevance have
been greatly exaggerated. The Kingdom's
prestige has been enhanced.
In sum, the Kingdom’s stance in
OPEC and policies on oil pricing constrain future supply growth, inhibit the
development of alternatives to oil, and preserve market share for it and other
low-cost oil producers. Riyadh has
reminded the world and the region of its power, demonstrated its independence,
and served its geopolitical interests.
It can afford to stick with its strategy and policies until investors in
countries producing more expensive oil have been forced out of the market. In time, oil prices will rise, plussing up
the Kingdom’s revenue stream. From the
Saudi point of view, all this makes sense even without the geopolitical bonuses
it brings. The new king, his crown
prince, and the crown prince's heir apparent all participated in formulating
current policies. There is no reason to
expect them to alter their calculus about what's in the Kingdom's interest
anytime soon.
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