Oil
prices are on their march upwards as Gail Tverberg and others
predicted. Couldn’t be anything to do with Peak Oil or the world
economy, could it? Lol.
The
media seem to have latched onto problems in Nigeria (with a six-month
delay). Miraculously, disruptions to Canadian tar sands caused by the
fires seem to have had no influence on prices.
But
then I’m no expert.
Oil prices surge as Goldman reports supply deficit
RT,
16
May, 2016
Global
crude benchmarks are trading at six-month highs after Goldman Sachs
analysts said the market is now in supply shortage.
Brent
crude prices grew to $49 per barrel during Monday's trading. West
Texas Intermediate soared to over $47 per barrel, their highest level
since November.
"The
oil market has gone from nearing storage saturation to being in
deficit much earlier than we expected," Goldman said.
“The
market likely shifted into deficit in May, driven by both sustained
strong demand as well as sharply declining production,” the bank
added.
That
prompted the bank to raise its US crude price forecast to $50 a
barrel for the second half of 2016 from a $45-estimate in March.
The
biggest contributor to Goldman-reported supply shortage was wildfires
in Canada's Alberta Province. Among other significant shortfalls are
in Nigeria, where militant attacks on oil facilities have squeezed
crude exports.
In
the US, oil production has contracted to 8.8 million barrels per day
(pbd), 8.4 percent down from 2015 peaks, as the country’s crude
sector is suffering from low prices.
Supply
shortfalls around the world have totaled 3.75 million bpd, wiping the
glut that slashed oil prices from $114 per barrel in 2014 to $28 this
January, according to Goldman.
The
bank has warned the 258-403 million bpd surplus could return in the
first half of 2017.
At
the same time, OPEC countries continue their struggle for market
share, having pumped 32.44 million bpd in April, a 188,000-bpd
increase from March.
Global
oil reserves are also preventing a full price recovery, according to
analysts.
"The
inventory buffer may be preventing full price recovery and the market
is rightly nervous about the sustainability of outages," said
Morgan Stanley, as quoted by Reuters.
Here Are The Oil Market Disruptions That Are Sending Oil Soaring
16
May, 2016
The
reason why oil has resumed its ascendant ways today is due to yet
another focus, this time from the sellside, on the various
disruptions in the oil market, following notes
from Goldman,
Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley according to which the millions
in barrels of oil taken offline as a result of the Canada wildfire
and persistent Nigerian supply problems will push the market into
equilibrium much faster than originally expected.
To
be sure, this is nothing new: the mainstream media has been pointing
this out for weeks with Reuters highlighting the supply loss in a
handy table just last Friday.
Still,
now that the sellside is pushing for an even flatter oil strip
- recall
that Goldman's full note said
that while the market may get into balance faster than expected, a
surge in low-cost production by OPEC members will result in lower
prices in 2017 - the market has no choice but to follow.
So
for those who missed it, here is the visual representation of the
current oil supply disruptions courtesy of Goldman.
Large
supply disruptions have pushed production sharply lower since
mid-March
Key planned and unplanned outages since mid-February (kb/d)
Key planned and unplanned outages since mid-February (kb/d)
This
is what Goldman said:
The recent roll-over in production is the result of somewhat offsetting cross currents. (1) Production has rolled over faster than we had expected in China, India and non-OPEC Africa more than offset upside surprises in the US and the North Sea. (2) Transient but recurring disruptions have more than offset larger than expected Iran and Iraq production.And while some of the disruptions will stop such as maintenance, fires and strikes, some are likely systemic, for example in Nigeria, and we now expect production there will remain curtailed for the remainder of the year. Net, this leaves us expecting a sharp decline in 2Q output.
So
with the Canadian disruption now contained, the fate of the "oil
disruption rally" is now in the hands of Nigerian militants who
are responsible for "systemic disruptions" taking about
half a million barrels per day offline.
Finally,
it is worth reminding what Goldman also said in its note last night,
because while the press has focused on the near-term upside catalysts
it appears to have forgotten the other side of what Goldman noted,
namely the return of chronis oversupply at a time of all time high
crude oil inventories.
The inflection phase of the oil market continues to deliver its share of surprises, with low prices driving disruptions in Nigeria, higher output in Iran and better demand. With each of these shifts significant in magnitude, the oil market has gone from nearing storage saturation to being in deficit much earlier than we expected and we are pulling forward our price forecast, with 2Q/2H16 WTI now $45/bbl and $50/bbl.
However, we expect that the return of some of these outages as well as higher Iran and Iraq production will more than offset lingering issues in Nigeria and our higher demand forecast. As a result, we now forecast a more gradual decline in inventories in 2H than previously and a return into surplus in 1Q17, with low-cost production continuing to grow in the New Oil Order. This leads us to lower our 2017 forecast with prices in 1Q17 at $45/bbl and only reaching $60/bbl by 4Q17.
We expect continued growth in low-cost producer output
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Iraq, Iran (crude) and Russia (oil) production (kb/d)
For
now, the market only cares about the impact on spot, and as of this
moment, WTI is up over 3% back to levels last seen in November of
2015.
Forget the Saudis, Nigeria's the Big Oil Worry
By
Julian Lee
16
May, 2016
Drag your attention away from the Middle East for a moment. While policymakers have been focused on Saudi Arabia's oil market machinations, what really matters right now is happening 3,000 miles away in the Niger River delta.
The country that was, until recently, Africa's biggest crude producer is slipping back into chaos. A wave of attacks and accidents have hit infrastructure, taking Nigeria's output down to 20-year lows.
Nigeria's
Output Woes
Oil
prices are responding, rising to their highest in more than six
months. Part of this is explained by the International Energy Agency
lifting demand estimates this week. But taking both things together,
it's easy to doubt whether current oil surpluses are sustainable.With
no solution in sight to the problems that beset the delta's creeks
and mangrove swamps, production from onshore and shallow-water oil
fields looks vulnerable.
If the latest group of freedom fighters
seeks to outdo its predecessors, then deepwater facilities may be at
risk too.The Niger Delta Avengers have certainly been busy, forcing
Shell's Forcados terminal to shut in about 250,000 barrels of daily
exports; and breaching an offshore Chevron facility in the 160,000
barrels per day Escravos system.
In April, ENI had to declare force
majeure -- letting it stop shipments without breaching contracts --
on exports of its Brass River grade after a pipeline fire.
It's
hard to see any long-term let-up given Nigeria's record on fixing
this problem. The previous wave of discontent, which hit a peak in
2009, only came to an end when President Yar'Adua offered amnesty,
training programs and monthly cash payments to nearly 30,000
militants, at a yearly cost of about $500 million. Some leaders of
the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), the
militant group, got lucrative security contracts.
But the failure to
properly address local grievances means it was only a matter of time
before another wave of angry young men took up the fight for a better
deal for southern Nigeria. The crisis has been hastened by new
president Muhammadu Buhari's termination of the ex-militants'
security contracts and his seeking the arrest of former MEND
leaders.
The Avengers now say they want independence for the Niger
River delta.And it's not as if Nigeria's oil woes are limited to the
militants.
Exxon had to declare force majeure on Qua Iboe exports
after a drilling platform ran aground and ruptured a pipeline, while
Shell did similar with Bonny Light exports after a leak from a
pipeline feeding the terminal.
Nigeria's
Export Streams
Four
of the five largest streams are partly or totally suspended
Source:
Bloomberg
Volumes
based on 1Q16 loading programs. Excludes condensate streams.
In
its latest report, the IEA assessed the world's need for OPEC crude
this quarter at 31.9 million barrels a day, with Nigeria contributing
1.62 million to the group's 32.76 million output in
April.
Petromatrix, an oil research group, believes Nigerian
production may now be little more than 1 million barrels per day. It
won't take much more disruption to tip the global oil balance from
surplus to deficit
Read
the latest from Gail Tverberg
For
a long time, a common assumption has been that the world will
eventually “run out” of oil and other non-renewable resources.
Instead, we seem to be running into surpluses and low prices. What is
going on that was missed by M. King Hubbert, Harold
Hotelling,
and by the popular understanding of supply and demand?
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