This article reflects relative truth as it seems to ignore the reality of Peak Oil. The price war is only one aspect, as I see it.
Oil prices keep plummeting as OPEC starts a price war with the US
Vox,
28
November, 2014
Oil
prices have been dropping sharply over the past three months — a
huge energy story with major repercussions for dozens of countries,
from the United States to Russia to Iran.
But
on Friday, prices went into serious free-fall. The reason? OPEC — a
cartel of oil producers that includes Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, and
Venezuela — had a big meeting in Vienna on November 27. Before the
gathering, there
was speculation that OPEC countries might cut back on their
own oil production in order to prop up prices. But in the end, the
cartel couldn't agree on how to respond and did nothing.
Oil
prices promptly nosedived, with the price of Brent crude now
hovering around $70 per barrel:
(NASDAQ)
This
marks a big shift in global oil politics. Essentially, OPEC is
now engaged in a price war with oil producers in the
United States. The cartel will let prices keep falling in the hopes
that many of the newest drilling projects in the US will prove
unprofitable and shut down.
This
is a risky stand-off for OPEC, as many of its member countries
require high oil prices to balance their budgets. Iran, for one, is
facing a real pinch. It's also a sign that OPEC's influence over
global oil markets may be waning.
Below
is a basic overview of how we got to this point — and what
this oil price war means for the rest of the world.
Why oil prices have been plummeting in 2014
To
understand this story, we have to go back to the mid-2000s. Oil
prices were rising sharply because global demand was surging —
especially in China — and there wasn't enough oil production to
keep up. That led to large price spikes, and oil hovered around $100
per barrel between 2011 and 2014.
But
as oil prices increased, many energy companies suddenly found it
profitable to start extracting oil from difficult-to-drill places.
In the United States, companies began using techniques like fracking
and horizontal drilling to
extract oil from shale formations in North Dakota and
Texas.
That
led to a boom in "tight oil" production, as the US has
added about 4 million new barrels of crude oil per day to
the global market since 2008. (Global production is about 75 million
barrels per day, so this is a significant number.)
(Energy
Information Administration)
Up
until very recently, however, that US oil boom — along with
increases in Canada and Russia — had a fairly minimal effect on
global prices. That's because, at the exact same time, geopolitical
conflicts were flaring up in key oil regions. There was a
civil war in Libya. Iraq was a mess. The US and Europe slapped
oil sanctions on Iran and pinched that country's exports. Those
conflicts took more than 3
million barrels per day off the market.
Things
changed again around September 2014. Many of those
disruptions started
easing. Libya's oil industry began pumping out lots of crude
again. And even more significantly, oil demand in Asia and
Europe has
been weakening — particularly in places like China,
Japan, and Germany.
The
combination of weaker demand and rising supply caused oil prices to
start dropping from their June peak of $115 per barrel down to
around $80 per barrel by mid-November. Oil is still much pricier
than it was a decade ago (when it was still around $40 per barrel).
But it's dropping for now.
OPEC's surprising response: Let prices keep falling
(Alexander
Klein/AFP/Getty Images)
That
brings us to OPEC, which still produces 40 percent of the world's
oil. For decades, this cartel has often tried to influence the
price of oil by coordinating either to cut back or boost production.
At
its big meeting in Vienna on November 27, there was
a lot of heated debate among OPEC members about how best to
respond to this current drop in oil prices. Some countries, like
Venezuela and Iran, wanted the cartel (mainly Saudi Arabia) to cut
back on production in order to prop up the price of oil. The reason
is that these countries need high prices in order to "break
even" on their budgets and pay for all the government spending
they've racked up:
OPEC
"break-even" prices in 2012. (Matthew
Hulbert/European Energy Review)
On
the other side of the debate was Saudi Arabia, the world's largest
oil producer, which
was opposed to cutting production and willing to let prices
keep dropping.
For
one, officials in Saudi Arabia remember
what happened in the 1980s, when prices fell and the
country tried to cut back on production to prop them up. The result
was that prices keptdeclining
anyway and Saudi Arabia simply lost market share. What's more,
the Saudis have
signalled that they can live with lower prices around $80
per barrel in the short term. (The government has built up massive
foreign-exchange reserves to finance deficits.)
For
all intents and purposes, OPEC is
now engaged in a
"price war" with the United States. What that means is
that it's very cheap to pump oil out of places like Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait. But it's more expensive to extract oil from shale formations
in places like Texas and North Dakota. So as the price of oil keeps
falling, some US producers may become unprofitable and go out of
business. The result? Oil prices will stabilize and OPEC maintains
its market share.
The
catch is that no one quite knows how low prices need to go to curb
the US shale boom. According to the International Energy
Agency, about
4 percent of US shale projects need a price higher than $80
per barrel to stay afloat. But many projects in North Dakota's
Bakken formation are profitable so long as prices are above $42 per
barrel. We're about to find out how this all shakes out — and
which numbers are correct.
What's
especially interesting here is that Saudi Arabia and OPEC appear to
be ceding their long-standing role in modulating the global supply
of oil. Instead, they'll leave that up to the markets.
How falling oil prices could affect Russia, Iran, and the US
Vladimir
Putin has his work cut out for him. (Maxim Shipenkov/AFP/Getty
Images)
A
plunge in oil prices could have significant economic consequences
around the world. A few examples:
Russia: Russia's
situation is getting most of the attention these days. The country
was already suffering from
weak growth — on pace to expand just 0.4 percent in 2014.
Part of that was due to the ongoing Ukrainian crisis and Western
sanctions.
RUSSIA HAD
BEEN PLANNING FOR $100-PER-BARREL OIL IN ITS 2015 BUDGET
Iran: Iran's
economy had recently started to rebound after years of recession.
The International Monetary Fund had
been projecting that the country was on track to grow 1.5
percent this year and 2.3 percent next year. But that was all before
oil prices started to drop — a potentially precarious situation
for the country.
One
big problem for Iran is that it also needs oil prices well north of
$100 per barrel to balance its budget, especially since Western
sanctions have made it much harder to export crude. If oil prices
keep falling, the Iranian government may need to make up revenues
elsewhere — say, by paring back domestic fuel subsidies (always an
unpopular move, at least in the short term).
The
United States: In
the US, meanwhile, a fall in crude prices would have more varied
impacts. For many people, it will offer a nice economic boost:
cheaper oil means lower gasoline prices, giving households more
money to spend on other things. On the other hand, oil-producing
states like Texas and North Dakota are likely to see a drop in
revenues and economic activity. (For more, see: "Which
states get hurt most by falling oil prices?")
The
price drop could also spur people to start using more oil. Case in
point: In recent years, high gasoline prices have spurred many
Americans to buy smaller, more efficient cars. But if gasoline
prices fall, bigger cars and SUVs could make a comeback. (Overall
US fuel economy will still keep rising over time — because
the federal government has imposed new
standards on cars and light trucks through 2025. But this
might now happen more slowly.)
In
the Financial
Times,
energy expert Michael Levi has a
piece on how the US (and other countries) could take
advantage of low oil prices to make needed energy-policy reforms —
such as ending wasteful fossil-fuel subsidies or putting in place
new efficiency measures — in order to prepare for the day when
prices inevitably rise again. But that's hardly guaranteed to
happen: Many policymakers might just decide low oil prices are here
to stay and use it as an excuse to cut back on efficiency measures
or energy alternatives.
Further reading
--
The price of oil is falling right now, but it's not hard to imagine
scenarios in which it starts rising again. As energy economist James
Hamilton points
out, instability in Libya, Iraq, or Nigeria could do it. And, of
course, if Canadian and US oil producers pull back sharply in
response to lower prices, those prices will eventually stabilize and
rebound.
--
This piece by Reuters' Alex Lawler, Amena Bakr, and Dmitry
Zhdannikov has
some excellent reporting on the internal debates within
OPEC during Thursday's meeting.
-- How
the oil and gas boom is
changing America.
-- 9
questions about the Keystone XL pipeline you were too
embarrassed to ask
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