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FACTS AND FICTIONS ABOUT THE WORLD OIL SCENE
By Ferdinand E. Banks
A publication that I occasionally refer to as a compendium of London
wine bar gossip recently offered a few choice observations about oil that
deserve elaboration and a wider circulation. I place these observations in the
category of facts, and use them to present a few comments on associated
fictions. First and foremost it was noted that
“Unfortunately for consumers, OPEC has little incentive to expand that
‘cushion’ in the short term. It would, in effect, be spending money to reduce
its revenue, since the price of oil would undoubtedly fall if traders had no
fear of future shortages” (The Economist,
October 21, 2006).
The unforthcoming “cushion” that is being referred to
above is sufficient production capacity to ensure at all times an excess of
supply over the predicted demand for OPEC and/or world oil. This situation has
been appearing in my work for the last five years, and is spelled out at some
length in my forthcoming textbook (2007). I can add that since the major
producers in OPEC have little or no reason to raise their output to the levels
desired by the major oil consumers, they also have no need to indulge the
fantasies of assorted experts and pseudo-experts by declaring themselves ready
to welcome foreign executives and technicians in order to help them determine
optimal extraction programs for their
reserves of oil and gas. Students of the oil markets would do well to
accept these realities.
Pointing things like this out appears to have
increased my unpopularity in certain high-value circles in North America and
According to the article cited above, Amy Jaffee of
The key word above is “rational”, while the phrase
“given all uncertainties” is superfluous, because although there may be some
uncertainties about the exact quantity of reserves at the disposal of various
OPEC oil producers, there can hardly be any about the laws of supply and
demand. According to the article being discussed, Saudi Arabia “has plans to
pump a third more oil”, which sounds impressive but actually amounts to only an
extra three and one half million barrels (= 3.5 mb/d) at the most, and thus
means a total 12-12.5 mb/d, at some unspecified time in the future. For better
or worse, this is not what President Bush and his advisers have been waiting to
hear, assuming that they prefer lower oil prices to higher. The oil minister of
In my textbook I calculated the required OPEC output
to be 60 mb/d at that point in time if the dreams of the IEA are to come true, but
regardless of assumptions and mathematical sleight-of-hand, neither 57 mb/d nor
60 mb/d has the slightest possibility of being realized. I think that it is
best for all of us on the buy side of the oil market if our political masters
understand this as soon as possible. I also have very serious doubts as to
whether
Before changing the subject, an issue that needs to be
addressed is how a reduction in OPEC output would be managed if one were
necessary in order to support an oil price floor of $60/b. The usual opinion is
that most OPEC countries would object to making a cut in their production, but to me this implies that somebody in authority
was asleep during the courses in development economics that he or she might
have taken, because (ceteris
paribus) they should be overjoyed for the opportunity to keep as much
oil as possible in the ground, since a simple option of this nature would contribute
to maintaining or increasing the oil price.
The difference between the oil market today and that
market a decade ago is that certain sophisticated producers would be overjoyed. Any doubts that anyone
may have on that score should be discarded as soon as possible. For example,
one major OPEC country recently announced that instead of continuing to think
in terms of a one generation time-horizon for the output of their natural gas,
they now want this resource to provide them with a generous income for 100
years. It is a short step from expressing an intention of this nature about gas
to adopting the same attitude for oil, although it happens to be true that the
government of
Why should they? Would
you if you were in their place?
Much attention is directed to OPEC’s attempt to impose
a $60/b floor on the oil price, with comparisons frequently made to the $78/b
‘spike’ once enjoyed by all oil producers. The thing to notice here is that
$78/b was really and truly a ‘spike’, which suggests that it was unsustainable.
$60/b cannot be regarded as a spike, but the belief here is that it is also unsustainable, although not in the
way envisioned by oil optimists such as Dr Michael Lynch. Having experienced a
comparatively long stretch of $70/b oil,
the OPEC countries are hardly in the mood to rejoice at having to accept a
REDUCTION in their revenue of 27.5 x (70 – 60) = 275 million dollars a day for
a long period of time. (Here 27.5 mb/d is the current OPEC output, while I take
$70/d as a ‘putative’ sustainable price.) The ostensible floor that OPEC is
gearing up to defend is $60/b, but it
would be naïve to believe that OPEC’s goal at the present time is less than $65
or $70/b.
A basic position that I have always held is that oil
is much scarcer than commonly realized. My textbook is filled with all sorts of
numbers whose purpose is to support this belief. However, recently I
encountered some interesting work by Fredrik Robelius, a doctoral student of
physics and petroleum engineering at
It has been said that Canterell’s deline will be more
than compensated for by the large ‘strike’ in the Gulf of Mexico called ‘Jack’
(or Jack-2), but as has been pointed out by Robelius (2006) and Len Gould
(2006), this allegation is a misunderstanding, or worse. Very likely any good
news being circulated about that venture is another component of the ‘hype’
that is flooding the oil world, and mostly has to do with boosting share prices,
as well as attracting some billions for exploration and production. As noted by
Chris Skrebowski, editor of Petroleum
Review, there are so many untruths in circulation these days about oil that
it is almost impossible to carry out a
credible analysis.
There are still a few observers who disagree with the
analysis provided above, but I have good reason to believe that their number
diminishes every year: the oil spike referred to above concentrated a great
many recalcitrant minds. I also believe that it is apparent now that the global
macroeconomy will not find it easy to deal with an ‘early’ peaking of global
oil production. Everything considered, an early peaking is something that
should be be avoided at all costs if possible, and since it could involve
serious losses of one sort or another to all players on the oil market, both OPEC
and the major oil importing countries should turn to an interesting axiom from
game theory which says that when cooperation is possible, it always – or almost
always – pays to attempt to bring it about.
NOT THE REAL DEAL
Having made some favourable comments about a ‘piece’ in one of my least
favoured publications, I would now like to make some unfriendly comments about
a presentation in ‘Forbes’ , which to
me ranks with ‘Fortune’ as an
outstanding review.
Christopher Helman (2006) begins a discussion of the
oil future by citing Michael C. Lynch’s claim that the oil price could fall to
$45/b by mid 2007, and touch the $20s in 2008. According to Dr Lynch, the
recent high oil price can be easily overcome. Since a great deal of Lynch’s
optimism is based on new projects, this might be the place to cite a recent
statement by Chris Screbowski: “The time lag between discovery and first oil
production for a major project is currently averaging over 6 years. A few large
projects are taking as little as 4 years, but many others are taking up to 10
years. This means there is now little or no chance of significantly altering
the production outlook for 2010, while even that for 2012 is already largely
determined”.
In a curious flight of fancy, Lynch has noted that the
price of oil is is not rising but declining if expressed in grams of gold,
which is an observation that is completely without any scientific relevance to
anyone except possibly Steve Forbes – owner and publisher of Forbes – who wants the international monetary
system reinvented to make gold the ‘reserve of last resort’ (2006). The last
time I encountered a suggestion of this incongruity was during the Nobel Prize
lecture at
Apart from this show of respect for what has been
called the most “noble” of all
commodities, Dr Lynch envisages an ‘Oil Spring Busting Out All Over’, to
slightly alter the title of an American musical comedy ‘hit’. Detail is
unnecessary here, because almost everything Mr Helman chooses to cite is based
on sheer delusion. For instance,
What we have with the ruminations of Dr Lynch and a
few others is a soap opera that has been confected to support the crank
conclusions of the IEA. Every decade for the last 40 years oil additions to
global oil reserves have declined by fairly large volumes, while increments in consumption
have been considerable, and in the coming years the gap between these could be greater
than ever, particularly if present trends are maintained. Moreover, rumour has
it that the IEA researchers do not have a great deal of faith in the
projections they so grandly present their clients, however they feel compelled
to offer them because more realistic estimates are not politically acceptable.
More realistic estimates are, fortunately,
increasingly acceptable in the corridors and restaurants of power in
In a recent
article in EnergyPulse (2006), Alan
Caruba insists that plenty of oil could be located in the Western Hemisphere if
the search for it were more intensive, which may or may not be true. However he
is correct when he states that it is better to put more effort into looking for
and producing what oil is available, than
to engage in á series of wars in order to ensure access to various energy
resources. Taking into consideration the fact that substitutes have been found
for these resources, and clarifying for all concerned the relevant direct and
indirect benefits, it may be time to begin thinking in terms of a Manhattan Project type effort that involves the
large-scale production of e.g. biofuels and hydrogen. There have been many
systematic and impressive arguments on EnergyPulse
and elsewhere that this is an idea whose time has not arrived, but given the
economic and political consequences of a too-early-peaking of the global oil
output, it might turn out to be an
optimal strategy.
REFERENCES
Aleklett, Kjell (2006). Comment: oil
production limits mean opportunities, conservation (Aug 21).
Banks, Ferdinand E. (2007). The Political Economy of World Energy: An Introductory
Textbook.
______ (2006). ‘Economic theories
and oil market realities’. Energy and
Environment (Forthcoming).
Beyer, Jim (2006). Comment on Reynolds. EnergyPulse
(www.energypulse.net).
Caruba, Alan (2006). ‘Peak oil or
lots of oil’. EnergyPulse (www.energypulse.net).
Forbes, Steve (2006). ‘Powerful
Antiterror weapon – unused’. Forbes
(October 16).
Helman, Christopher (2006). ‘Really,
really cheap oil.’ Forbes (October 2).
Gould, Len (2006). Comment on
Caruba. EnergyPulse (www.energypulse.net).
Reynolds,
Robelius, Fredrik (2006). ‘Oljefyndet
är en bluff’. Interview for PsXpress.