Peak Oil raises its head again,although it never went away
Citi
Says Get Ready for an Oil Squeeze
- Some nations including Iraq may be pumping at maximum capacity
- Supply gap could emerge in market as early as 2018: Ed Morse
26
September, 2017
Those
in the oil market fearing a flood of OPEC supply next year will
probably be better off preparing for a shortage, according to
Citigroup Inc.
Five
countries in the group -- Libya, Nigeria, Venezuela, Iran and Iraq --
may already be pumping at their maximum capacity this year, Ed Morse,
the bank’s global head of commodities research, said in an
interview. Rather than a surge in output, there’s a risk of a
market squeeze emerging as early as 2018, driven by those nations
because of weaker investment in exploration and development, he said.
“Fear
in the market has been that OPEC production will rise dramatically,”
said Morse. However, “there could be a supply gap emerging, which
could point to a tighter market,” he said in Singapore on the
sidelines of the S&P Global Platts APPEC Conference.
Crude
is still trading more than 50 percent below mid-2014 levels amid
concern over whether output curbs by the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries will be enough to eliminate a global glut. A
gathering in Vienna last week between OPEC and its allies ended with
no decision on an extension or deepening of the cuts beyond the first
quarter of 2018, while the potential revival of U.S. shale production
is also weighing on the outlook for prices.
If
the output reductions are prolonged, that would only hasten the
prospect of a tighter market, said Morse, adding that the source of
the supply squeeze will probably be OPEC rather than producers
outside the group. “There’s no room for them to do more,” he
said, referring to the five nations.
“We’re
seeing more and more evidence that it’s not the international oil
companies, it’s not the independent oil companies that are lagging
new investments, but it’s OPEC countries lagging, particularly
those five,” he said.
In
Iran, investors may be vulnerable to U.S. sanctions on dealing with
companies owned by the Middle East nation’s Revolutionary Guards,
the premier security force that dominates the domestic services
sector, said Morse. The OPEC producer is shipping a combined 2.6
million barrels a day of crude and the ultra-light oil known as
condensate, and expects to export more at the end of 2017, according
to the National Iranian Oil Co.
Morse
said Iraq’s contract terms weren’t competitive, while major
energy companies such as Lukoil PJSC and Royal Dutch Shell Plc had
either pulled out of projects or bemoaned the drop in investments.
Libya and Nigeria have brought back as much production as they can,
he said.
Brent
crude in London slipped 0.6 percent to $58.68 a barrel at 5:42 p.m.
Singapore time. The benchmark for more than half the world’s oil
rose to the highest close in more than two years on Monday. West
Texas Intermediate fell 0.5 percent to $51.97 a barrel in New York.
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