Reuters
LONDON, Nov 17 –
As ministers from the 12 members of the Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) prepare to fly to Vienna for their 166th
meeting next week, the quiet consultations and soundings have already
begun.
OPEC
must decide whether and how to respond to the 30 percent decline in oil
prices since the middle of June, in what may be the organization’s
toughest test in five years.
Slower
oil demand growth and rising competition from non-OPEC suppliers,
especially U.S. shale producers, pose a common threat to all the
organization’s members.
But
formulating a common response will be hard because the slowdown in
demand and the shale revolution have had a very different impact from
member to member.
Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are producing and exporting
close to their highest-ever levels of crude, according to the BP
Statistical Review of World Energy.
All
three countries have built large financial reserves so they could
weather a prolonged period of lower prices without too much effect on
their day-to-day government operations.
In
contrast, production and exports from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Venezuela and
Nigeria have been variously hit by war, sanctions, unrest,
expropriations and mismanagement.
None
of those countries has significant foreign exchange reserves and the
drop in oil revenues will quickly feed through into reduced government
spending and/or inflation.
The
light oils being produced in the United States are not much of a direct
threat to the heavier crude grades exported by Saudi Arabia and other
Gulf countries.
But
they compete directly with the very light oils exported by North and
West African producers, including Libya, Nigeria and Angola.
Formulating
a common response is made complicated because ministers are negotiating
on two separate issues: (1) OPEC’s share of the world oil market versus
non-OPEC producers; and (2) how OPEC’s share is allocated among its
members.
Allocating
production is the age-old problem for any cartel — OPEC is a cartel,
whatever its members may say, and however incomplete its market
coverage.
OPEC has struggled with these issues, on and off, since the early 1980s, so it is familiar territory for the ministers.
But
sharing out the market is much easier when oil demand is growing
rapidly and non-cartel supplies are flat or falling — a situation that
describes much of the last decade.
It
is much harder when demand is stagnating and non-OPEC output is surging
— putting the organization back into the difficult position in which it
found itself 30 years ago.
TO CUT, AND IF SO, HOW MUCH
Ministers must decide whether to cut production, and if so by how much, and how to share out the reductions.
The
first option is to do nothing, allowing lower prices to force a
rebalancing between demand and supply: the best cure for low prices is
low prices.
Prices might remain stuck at current levels, perhaps even head another $10 or $20 lower in the short term.
But
eventually demand will pick up as moves towards energy efficiency take a
back seat in consuming countries and incomes rise in emerging markets.
And supply growth will fall as shale producers cut back and new capital spending around the world is postponed or canceled.
The market would tighten again over a 12- to 24-month period and prices begin to rise.
Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi could ride out a period of lower prices
with comparative ease. But for the organization’s other members, it
would be much tougher.
The
second option is to cut production, sacrificing market share in the
hope of obtaining higher prices and higher revenues overall, and perhaps
also speed the adjustment process.
But
there is no guarantee production cuts would produce a big enough rise
in prices to offset the fall in volumes. If prices rose too much, shale
producers would be unlikely to cut back, and the necessary rebalancing
might not take place at all.
ALLOCATING PRODUCTION CUTS
If the organization does decide to cut, the question becomes how to share the reductions.
The
producers that are best placed to cut their output (Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait and Abu Dhabi) are also the ones with the least incentive to do
so.
The
countries that most need higher prices (Iran, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria and
Venezuela) are the least able to afford to reduce their output.
Iran
blames Saudi Arabia for taking advantage of U.S. sanctions to increase
its market share at the expense of Iranian exports, and expects Saudi
Arabia and its allies to shoulder the bulk of any cuts.
In
fact, Saudi Arabia’s share of global oil exports has remained broadly
flat. It is U.S. shale production (up 3 million barrels per day in the
last five years) which has filled the gap left by sanctions, war and
unrest across the Middle East.
If
there are to be production cuts, Saudi Arabia will almost certainly
insist all the organization’s members participate. There is no reason
for the kingdom to accept a significantly greater share of the cuts than
its historic market share (http://link.reuters.com/suw43w).
Cuts
totalling around 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) would be too small to
make a significant difference to prices or market balances in the short
term.
To have any impact, the organization would need to find cutbacks amounting to at least 1 million bpd.
Based
on Saudi Arabia’s historic share of OPEC production, which has been
around 30 percent since the late 1990s, the kingdom might contribute
300,000 bpd — which could perhaps be stretched to as much as 500,000
bpd.
Close
allies such as Kuwait and Abu Dhabi might contribute another 150,000 to
250,000 bpd between them based on their financial strength. That would
leave the other members needing to find relatively small and symbolic
cuts totalling around 300,000 to 400,000 bpd.
Production
cuts would demonstrate that the organization is not powerless to
respond to the challenge posed by the shale revolution. But by propping
up prices, production cuts also prop up non-OPEC suppliers who
contribute nothing to the cutbacks.
Free-riding
has always been the organization’s biggest problem. In the past, it was
Britain, Norway, Mexico and Russia that benefited most. Now it would be
U.S. shale players.
If
prices do bounce and non-OPEC supply growth continues unabated, OPEC
could be forced to cut again in 12-18 months, and face the prospect of a
permanent loss of market share.
OPEC
must determine the best joint path for its output, prices and the
output of non-members. This is fiendishly difficult, given the large
uncertainties around the demand outlook and the sensitivity of U.S.
shale producers to falling prices.
So
there are no good options for oil ministers in Vienna next week — only a
choice between poor alternatives in the hope of finding the least-bad
one.
And there is no guarantee that they can reach an agreement at all.
Copyright (2014) Thomson Reuters.
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