Syria
sends oil to 2-year high, $150 spike feared
Oil
has jumped to a two-year high and could see Brent spike as high as
$150 per barrel as US and western allies move towards a military
strike on Syria.
RT,
28
August, 2013
Brent
October futures are above $115 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate
blend (WTI) hit $110 on speculation unrest in Syria will disrupt oil
shipments and supplies in the Middle East. For WTI its the highest
price since May 2011.
The
US and Britain are gearing up in a coordinated military action
against Syria, as both confirmed chemical weapons attacks were
carried out against civilians, something the Assad government denies.
The
US-Syria standoff could send oil prices soaring, and Brent could
‘spike briefly’ to $150 a barrel if the US initiates a military
attack on Syria, Societe Generale bank told Bloomberg on Wednesday.
US
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has given the green light to launch a
strike against Syria, and is just waiting for the directive from
President Obama.
“The
concern is that an attack on Syria will reverberate through the
region, increasing the spill over into other countries and possibly
resulting in a larger supply disruption elsewhere,” Michael
Wittner, the head of oil market research in New York, said in an
August 27 report.
Oil-production
in Syria is low, but its geographical position poses a threat to
disrupt neighboring pipelines and seaways. Turkey, its northern
neighbor, is home to 2 major pipelines that transport Iraqi oil to
Europe and Central Asia.
A
conflict in Syria would benefit more ‘detached’ oil producing
countries, like Saudi Arabia, which would be able to capitalize on
supply chokes in Iraq and Iran. Saudi Arabia has the capacity to
produce 9.8 million barrels of crude per day.
Simultaneous
turbulent politics to the south in Egypt could also threaten global
supply, as Egypt hangs in an unresolved state of emergency, fanning
fears Suez Canal operations could be disrupted. A crucial trade
route, the canal handles 800,000 barrels of crude a day and the
Suez-Mediterranean Pipeline, which also runs through Syria, is a
regional transport staple.
A
US-led strike would hook oil-rich Iran, a Syrian ally and OPEC
member, into the conflict. Another big geo-political concern for oil
investors is spill over into Iraq, a direct neighbor of Syria that
produced 3 million barrels of crude per day in 2012. Many Syrian
refugees have sought safety in Western Iraq.
Hawkish
military hints of intervention in Syria have sent prices up despite a
2.47 million barrel increase in oil supplies last week, as estimated
by the American Petroleum Institute.
Syria’s
foreign minister has warned against military strikes and said his
country’s defenses will ‘surprise’ the world.
A
US-led missile strike seems likely in the next week, according to
most political commentators.
Russia’s
stake in expensive oil
Russia,
an oil and natural gas dependent economy, and friend of numerous
Middle Eastern oil producing states, has said it doesn’t plan to go
to war with anyone over Syria, and the US may be jumping to
conclusions.
Russia’s
economy counts on oil prices above $100 in order to adequately fund
the budget, of which oil and gas revenue provide 50 percent of funds.
The
country's reliance on oil prices in world markets makes it vulnerable
to a surge in pricing, as the 2008 bust/boom dramatic rise and fall
demonstrated. Russian officials, as well as investors, should fear
any dramatic increases set off by Syria.
Crude
oil prices in the summer of 2008 hit a record high of $147 per
barrel, and then by December 2008, the bubble had burst and Brent was
trading near $40 a barrel.
Chinese
consumption and increased worldwide GDP, coupled with Syrian unrest,
could create a demand bottleneck, and another bust/boom effect.
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