"I
Know Of No One Who Predicted This": Russian Oil Production Hits
Record As Saudi Gambit Fails
In
late October, we
noted that
for the second time this year, Russia overtook Saudi Arabia as the
biggest exporter of crude to China.
Russia
also took
the top spot in
May, marking the first time in history that Moscow beat out Riyadh
when it comes to crude exports to Beijing. “Moscow is wrestling
with crippling Western economic sanctions and building closer ties
with Beijing is key to mitigating the pain,” we said in October, on
the way to explaining that closer ties between Russia and China as it
relates to energy are part and parcel of a burgeoning relationship
between the two countries who have voted together on the Security
Council on matters of geopolitical significance. Here's a look at the
longer-term trend:
You
may also recall that Gazprom Neft (which is the number three oil
producer in Russia) began
settling all
sales to China in yuan starting in January. This, we said, is yet
another sign of the petrodollar’s imminent demise.
On
Monday, we learn that for
the third time in 2015, Russia has once again bested the Saudis for
the top spot on China’s crude suppliers list. “Russia
overtook Saudi Arabia for the third time this year in November as
China's largest crude oil supplier,” Reuters
writes,
adding that “China brought in about 949,925 barrels per day (bpd)
of Russian crude in November, compared with 886,950 bpd from Saudi
Arabia.”
This
is an annoyance for Riyadh. China was the world's second-largest
oil consumer in 2014 and
closer ties between Moscow and Beijing not only represent a threat in
terms of crude revenue, but also in terms of geopolitics as the last
thing the Saudis need is for Xi to begin poking around militarily in
the Arabian Peninsula on behalf of Moscow and Tehran.
As
we documented in "Saudis
Poke The Russian Bear, Start Oil War In Eastern Europe,"
Riyadh has begun to encroach on Moscow's markets in Poland. Here's
what Bloomberg
wrote back
in October:
Poland has long been a client of Russian oil companies. Last year, about three-quarters of its fuel imports came from Russia, with the rest from Kazakhstan and European countries. Poland, however, is at the center of efforts to reduce the European Union's dependence on Russian energy.
A new and reliable supplier is a godsend. As for the Saudis, they need to expand outside Asia where demand is falling.
This could turn into a more active shoving match between the world's two biggest oil exporters, which already are at odds over the Syrian conflict.
Indeed,
one could plausibly argue that one of the reasons the Saudis moved to
artificially suppress prices last year was to sqeeze Putin and
ultimately force The Kremlin to give up its support for Assad. As The
New York Times put it, a dramatic decline in crude prices has certain
"ancillary
diplomatic benefits."
Unfortunately
for Riyadh, the strategy hasn't worked. In fact, it's backfired in
more ways than one.
First,
Saudi Arabia is facing a fiscal crisis as Riyadh's budget deficit
balloons to 20% of GDP, forcing the kingdom to tap the debt market in
order to offset the SAMA burn.
Second,
Putin not only refused to give up his support for the government in
Damascus, he actually doubled down by sending the Russian air force
to Latakia. Meanwhile, Russia continued to pump even more oil, and
asBloomberg
reports, Moscow
is now producing at "the fastest pace since the collapse of the
Soviet Union."
"Russia’s
unexpected oil bounty this year is the result not of a new Kremlin
campaign but of dozens of modest productivity improvements across the
sprawling sector. Even pressured by plunging prices, as well as U.S.
and European Union sanctions that cut access to much foreign
financing and technology, Russian companies have managed to squeeze
more crude out of some of the country’s oldest fields,"
Bloomberg writes, before noting that
"Bashneft and other Russian
companies working fields in the Volga River basin -- some of the
first to be discovered in Russia early in the last century -- are
benefiting from Soviet inefficiency as [the old motto was]: 'whatever
we don’t produce will be left for our children.'"
For
analysts, Russia's resiliency has come as a surprise. “I
know of no one who had predicted that Russian production would rise
in 2015, let alone to new record levels,”
Edward Morse, Citigroup’s global head of commodities research said.
As
for what it would take to curtail production, Mikhail Stavskiy,
head of upstream at Bashneft PJSC which has been "the biggest
single contributor to increased crude output this year," says he
doesn't know. “I don’t know what the oil price would have to
fall to for things to change dramatically. We’ve
been through $9 a barrel and production continued, so if something
like that happens, we know what to do.”
Indeed,
thanks to the low cost of extracting crude from Russia's oil fields
in West Siberia and the devaluation of the ruble, production costs
are rock bottom:
But
not everyone agrees that this is sustainable. Some say efforts to
improve efficiency have run their course and with financing for
exploration scarce, further gains may be hard to come by.
Interestingly, Bloomberg also notes that because Moscow takes "nearly
everything above $30-$40 a barrel" on exports, producers won't
feel the impact of low prices until crude falls substantially below
those levels.
“Russia
will maintain its current oil production levels within the bandwidth
of 525 million to 533 million tons next year, as the federal
government’s budget is set on such production levels,” Stratfor's
Lauren Goodrich says, presaging more of the same in 2016.
The
takeaway here is that the Saudi gambit failed to wrench market share
away from the Russians and between the conflict in Syria, Moscow's
closer ties with Beijing, and Riyadh's move to antagonize The Kremlin
by encroaching on Russia's eastern European market share, one
shouldn't expect Putin to back down any time soon. In short, if John
Kerry and Riyadh did in fact plan to bankrupt the Russians by tanking
crude prices, the effort was a miserable failure that resulted not
only in a 20% fiscal deficit for the Saudis, but also in the
destruction of American jobs in the oil patch.
We
close with a bit of humor from Deputy Energy Minister Kirill
Molodtsov:
“I will tell you when Russian companies are for sure going to decrease production -- when oil costs $0."
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