Lest
we lose sight of where all of this came from.
Pool
of world oil exports dwindling
For
all the world’s net oil-importing countries – including South
Africa – the crucial oil supply variable is total world oil
exports, rather than total world oil production
1
June, 2012
The
fact that world crude oil production has been stagnant since 2005 is
now commonly acknowledged. But for all the world’s net
oil-importing countries – including South Africa – the crucial
oil supply variable is total world oil exports, rather than total
world oil production – that is, oil importers must compete for the
surplus oil sold by oil-producing nations that is left over after the
latter’s domestic consumption.
According
to the US Energy Information Administration, one of the leading
providers of global oil data, world oil exports reached a peak in
2005 at 43.4-million barrels per day (mbpd) and have declined every
year since then by an average of 1.8% year. World crude oil exports
totalled 40.2 mbpd on average in 2009, according to the latest
available data. This represented 48% of total world oil production of
82.4 mbpd.
The
12 members of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(Opec) cartel currently produce about 31 mbpd of oil and export about
two-thirds of this amount. Opec, therefore, accounts for about half
of total world oil exports, and wields this market power to influence
prices.
The
largest individual net oil exporters in 2009 were Saudi Arabia,
Russia, Iran, Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates. The top ten
together provided 64% of total world exports.
There
are several medium and long-term threats to future world oil exports.
The
first is the continuing rise in domestic oil consumption in the
oil-exporting countries. In most oil producing countries, local fuel
prices are heavily subsidised, which encourages high levels of
consumption. And the record-high oil prices of recent years have
translated into rapid economic growth and incomes in oil exporters,
further stimulating domestic petroleum use.
The
second factor undermining world oil output is reserve depletion and
production decline in some exporting countries. Already depletion has
turned several former net exporters into net importers, including the
UK, Indonesia and Egypt. Over time, more and more oil producers will
become net importers. Mexico – currently one of the leading
suppliers to the US – is near the top of this list.
The
third threat is posed by wars, conflict and political uncertainty in
a number of oil exporting countries. In Nigeria, militants have
consistently undermined the country’s export potential by blowing
up pipelines in the Niger Delta. Libya’s 1.2 mbpd of exports was
taken off line completely last year and may not reach their precivil
war levels for some time as the political ructions persist. Although
Iraq’s exports are increasing, this country, too, is beset by
perennial political conflict. As competition for the world’s
dwindling oil supplies intensifies, we can expect more civil and
regional strife in oil-producing countries.
The
fourth – and most immediate – threat to world oil exports is
posed by the looming sanctions on Iran’s oil exports. The US and
Europe are pressuring importers of Iranian crude to sharply reduce
their purchases from the Islamic republic. At 2.4 mbpd last year,
Iran contributed 6% of global oil exports. Even halving this could
have a major impact on international oil prices.
These
developments surrounding world oil exports have some stark
implications.
First,
from the net oil importers’ perspective – a large majority of the
world’s nations – oil supply effectively peaked in 2005. What’s
more, world exports will decline more rapidly after aggregate global
production peaks.
Second,
the decline in global oil exports goes a long way toward explaining
why the average price of oil doubled between 2005 and 2011. And we
can expect the upward trend in oil prices to continue.
Third,
this rising oil price has contributed to a shift in oil consump- tion
from the West – the US, Europe and Japan – to the East. It seems
that the dynamic emerging markets have a higher productivity of oil –
more gross domestic product per barrel – and, therefore, can better
cope with higher oil prices than the oil-saturated Western economies.
China and India, in particular, are rapidly increasing their share of
world oil imports, thereby squeezing out of the market both poorer
developing countries and highly indebted industrialised nations.
Finally,
prices are not the only mechanism for allocating diminishing traded
oil supplies. China has used its economic muscle to conclude
bilateral deals with several oil-producing countries, often providing
loans for infrastructure projects in exchange for long-term
oil-supply commitments. The US strategy is to use its over- whelming
military superiority to ensure access to, and control over, oil
resources for Western oil companies.
South
Africa depends on imports for two-thirds of its petroleum
consumption. But ranking just seventeenth on the list of oil
importers in 2009, we will be hard-pressed to outcompete the big
players like China, India and the US. The only feasible option is to
wean ourselves off imported oil. The myriad ways to do this will be
explored in future columns.
Edited
by: Martin Zhuwakinyu
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