Alarm
bells on the longevity of oil wells in Saudi Arabia
The
notion of Saudi Arabia becoming oil importer is not new
30
September, 2012
A
headline in the Telegraph of September 6 said “Saudi oil well dries
up”, which is the newspaper way of sensationalising a report
published by Citigroup earlier about Saudi Arabia production that
raised alarms not only in Saudi Arabia but around the world.
The
report titled “Saudi Petrochemicals — The End of the Magic
Porridge Pot?” was released on September 4 but I have seen no
reporting or discussion in the media on the petrochemical side of the
report and all the concentration was on one point relating to the
possibility that Saudi Arabia might become an oil importer by 2030
according to the report.
Of
course, this possibility is very important not only to Saudi Arabia
but to the whole world due to the fact that Saudi Arabia is a leading
oil and gas producer and exporter to world markets and in the view of
many observers we are unlikely to discover in the foreseeable future
another country or region that can give the world an equal potential.
But
the notion of Saudi Arabia becoming oil importer is not new. The
Royal Institute of International Affairs (Chatham House) alluded to
that more than once in its researches and is said to predict 2040 as
the year when Saudi Arabia will become an oil importer.
Jadwa
Investment, a Saudi local research firm pointed in a paper in July
2011 titled “Saudi Arabia’s coming oil and fiscal challenge” to
the same problem as it predicted that by 2030 local oil consumption
will exceed oil export volumes and that oil production in that year
is not expected to rise above 11.5 million barrels a day (mbd).
All
these reports have an important thing in common and that is the
persistent and high growth rates of domestic consumption of oil and
gas.
According
to BP Statistical Review, Saudi combined oil and gas production in
2000 was just over 501 million tons of oil equivalent (mtoe) and its
domestic consumption was almost 118 mtoe meaning that domestic
consumption was almost 24 per cent of production. However, in 2010
production was close to 543 mtoe while domestic consumption sharply
rose to 201 mtoe and the consumption to production ratio was much
higher at 37 per cent.
Saudi
Arabia consumes all the gas it can produce and has been trying for
years to increase further its gas production. This has been largely
achieved as gas production increased by 68 per cent since 2000 and
there is what may amount to an additional gas production of 70 mtoe a
year in the next two years.
But
its oil consumption is much higher because a lot of it is used for
generating electricity and oil consumption has increased by 72 per
cent since 2000. In 2010, for instance, gas consumption of 75.5 mtoe
is only 37.6 per cent of total consumption and oil consumption in
this case was 125.5 mtoe or 62.4 per cent.
The
ratios in 2000 were 38 and 62 per cent respectively, which means that
although gas production is increasing, it is not yet sufficient to
bring oil consumption down.
Therefore,
if these trends continue, there is no doubt that Saudi oil exports
will come under pressure and will be progressively reduced. The date
when Saudi Arabia becomes an oil importer may not be 2030 as
Citigroup suggests or even 2040 as Chatham House suggests and many
changes can be effected to prolong the life of Saudi exports.
The
panic in some circles is well answered by a well-reasoned article by
Mohammad Al Sabban, advisor to Saudi oil minister and chief
environmental negotiator for Saudi Arabia. He shed doubt about the
estimates in the reports as they assume that production and
consumption trends will continue for the foreseeable future while
these can and should change according to the market and
circumstances.
However,
Al Sabban considered these reports as a warning bell and urged that
Saudi Arabia reconsiders its domestic pricing policy as a key to
conserve energy and reduce consumption. He also advocated a programme
for public transport within and between cities. The gas initiative
must be expedited and similarly the same for the declared programme
of expanding the use of renewable energy.
Saud
Kabuly in Al Watan newspaper seems to be genuinely concerned that
Saudi foreign policy will lose its edge as oil production goes down
and ventures to ask what will replace oil — with the US “our
political and security umbrella.”? I can only say do the right
thing and let the Saudi people be your umbrella.
The
Saudis sooner or later will realiswe that if something is limited
then it can one day finish. They should reduce their dependence on
oil not only in consumption but by driving their economy gradually in
other directions.
The
writer is the former head of the energy studies department in the
Opec Secretariat at Vienna
The days of that profligately wasteful pastime of F1 motor racing are numbered. [racing a car around a track is hardly a sport]
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