Sunday 15 January 2012

Here are two perspectives on the ability of the Saudis to make up any shortfall in oil production.
Saudis have 2.5m barrels spare oil capacity, PFC says


Arabian Business
14 January, 2012

Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, is able to boost production to its officially-announced peak of 12.5 million barrels a day, according to PFC Energy.

Proposed European Union sanctions to block imports from Iran have raised the prospect that other suppliers may need to make up any shortfall.

Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi, who has said the kingdom can reach a level of 12.5 million, said last month that it’s pumping at about 10 million a day.

“The market always questions how much spare capacity Saudi Arabia actually has,” Jamie Webster, an analyst at the consulting company, said by phone from Washington.

“Their total productive capacity including the neutral zone is around 12.5 million barrels.”

Saudi Arabia’s sustainable oil production capacity was estimated by the International Energy Agency, in its December 13 Monthly Oil Market report, at 12.04 million barrels a day.

The agency defines this as capacity levels that “can be reached within 30 days and sustained for 90 days.”

“When you talk to people that have a hand in the oil business, the closer you are to a handshake relationship with Saudi Aramco, the more likely you are to believe that they have the 12.5 million barrels,” Webster said.

Iranian Vice President Mohammad Reza Rahimi said on December 27 the country would block the Strait of Hormuz, the transit route for about a fifth of the world’s oil, if the EU bans the country’s oil exports.

An accidental collision between navies amassed in the Strait of Hormuz poses a more likely security risk than Iran delivering on threats to close the waterway, PFC’s Webster said.






Comments from Mike Ruppert on this next story:
"The story itself is full of inaccuracies and lies, such as stating that Saudi reach 12mbpd this year. Saudi production of conventional oil has never exceeded 10 mbpd. So where did the other 2 mbpd come from? Natural gas liquids like propane and butane.The Saudis have always called that oil as well. Saudi oil books are as bad a Ban of America's, Lehman Bros., the Fed and MF Global". -- MCR



Saudi oil output 'stretched to the limit'


UPI
13 January, 2012

Saudi Arabia, the world's leading oil exporter, has for decades used spare production capacity to cover shortfalls in output by other oil states and prevent prices spiraling in times of crisis.

But questions are being asked now whether the kingdom will be able to come to the rescue if Iran blocks Persian Gulf exports -- at least one fifth of the world total -- in its current confrontation with the West.

On paper, Saudi Arabia has spare capacity totaling around 2 million barrels per day.

Earlier this year, it raised its output to 10 million bpd, in part to pick up the slack from the drop in output by Libya because of its seven-month civil war and other drops in strife-torn Syria, Yemen and South Sudan.

That's the highest level for the kingdom in 30 years.

On Dec. 14, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which includes Saudi Arabia, increased its production ceiling from 24.84 million bpd to 30 million bpd.

But apart from Saudi Arabia and possibly the United Arab Emirates, no OPEC member has any spare production capability to act as a cushion in the event of a major supply crisis.

So the kingdom, as it has so often in the past, will be expected to play a crucial role if the global oil supply is heavily disrupted, as it would be if the Strait of Hormuz is closed.

In November, Khalid al-Falihj, chief executive of state-owned Saudi Aramco, disclosed that Riyadh has halted a planned $100 billion expansion after the kingdom had reached 12 million bpd capacity.

He said the pressure on Saudi Arabia to raise its output capacity had "substantially reduced."

The kingdom launched the expansion program in the early 2000s, when production was pegged at 8.5 million bpd. The target was 15 million bpd.

Energy analysts said the decision to curtail the drive to boost production capacity may have stemmed from pressing budgetary problems as the ruling House of Saud grapples with the pro-democracy uprisings that have convulsed Arab republics for the last year.

"The current focus of Saudi Arabia is on domestic social spending on the back of the Arab Spring," observed Amrita Sen, an oil industry analyst with Barclays capital in London.

King Abdallah announced a social welfare and public spending package worth $130 billion earlier this year in a bid to stifle any demand for political reform by the kingdom's 12 million citizens.

Industry sources say Saudi Arabia would have difficulty sustaining production rates higher than its declared capacity for lengthy periods.

It has declared reserves of 262 billion barrels of oil, the highest in the world. But these are what the Saudis say they are, and there have been suspicions for some time that Riyadh's reserves may not be what they seem.

In February 2011, diplomatic cables from the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh to the State Department, released by WikiLeaks, cited Aramco's senior vice president for exploration, Abdallah al-Saif, as claiming Saudi Arabia had 716 billion barrels of total reserves, of which 51 percent was recoverable.

He further claimed that in 20 years Aramco would have reserves of 900 billion barrels.

That's roughly the combined reserves of the seven other leading producers, including Venezuela, Canada, Iran, Iraq and Russia.

But the U.S. diplomats quoted Sadad al-Husseini, a geologist and Aramco's former head of exploration, as warning in November 2007 that the kingdom's production capacity target of 12.5 million bpd, needed to keep a lid on prices, could not be achieved.

This, he said, was because the kingdom's reserves may have been over-estimated by as much as 300 billion barrels, nearly 40 percent.

One cable said that in al-Husseini's view, "once 50 percent of original proven reserves had been reached … a steady output in decline will ensue and no amount of effort will be able to stop it."

The U.S. consul in Riyadh observed that al-Husseini "is no doomsday theorist. His pedigree, experience and outlook demand that his predictions be thoughtfully considered."

Al-Husseini, who had publicly questioned Saudi Arabia's state reserves before his encounter with the U.S. diplomats, later claimed he had been misrepresented in the cables.

It's possible he was pressured into doing that. But even so, gulf-based sources believe Riyadh could have a tough time covering shortages stemming from a serious confrontation in the gulf.


The original Guardian article on Wikileaks cables revelations AVAILABLE HERE

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