-Caveat Lector-

International Perspective, by Marshall Auerback

Fifty Dollar Oil Anybody?
August 10, 2004

The President of the OPEC cartel unsettled the oil markets last week by blurting
out something long suspected by a number of prominent independent energy
analysts:  namely, that Saudi Arabia, the world's largest exporter, could not
increase production immediately to offset crude's seemingly relentless rise.
The proximate cause for the historic surge above $45 per barrel for the first
time ever was the ongoing conflict between the Russian government and the
country's leading oil producer, Yukos.  Although the heat appears to have been
taken out of this particular dispute with the announcement by the Russian
Ministry of Justice that Yukos could pay for its ongoing business from its
hitherto frozen bank accounts, this has not stopped crude's relentless rise to
new historic highs.

The stubborn strength of the oil price continues to defy most analysts'
prediction of a return to the US$30/bbl level. The structural reason for high
oil prices is clearly growing demand for oil in the fast growing developing
world at a time when America still consumes around 25 per cent of world oil
production, not "political instability", as conventional wisdom would have you
believe.  The 10 members of OPEC excluding Iraq are operating close to full
capacity, nullifying their historical ability to bring down prices by opening
the production taps, or even merely threatening to do so.  The result is that
crude oil has risen some 35 per cent so far this year, 25 per cent in the last 6
weeks alone.

Until recently, it was commonly assumed that Saudi Arabia still had sufficient
surplus production capacity to increase its output but, OPEC president and
Indonesian energy minister, Purnomo Yusgiantoro, blurted out an unpleasant truth
to markets long inured to the effects of substantially higher energy costs:
there is little additional supply coming imminently from Saudi Arabia.



Of course, the Saudis themselves have sought to blunt the impact of this
alarmist confession by continuing to insist that it would produce 9.5m b/d in
August, sustaining production as high as 10.5m b/d if needed.  But even a
(highly questionable) promise to provide an additional 1.5m barrels per day of
crude production is a thin reed on which to base continued forecasts of sub-$30
oil (the 10 year crude futures price of oil is $24 per barrel, 25 below current
spot prices, reflecting the prevailing consensus that today's high prices are
but a temporary aberration).  This figure amounts to less than 2 per cent of
total global production, which provides a minimal cushion against other possible
supply disruptions.



Additionally, demand for oil has ensured there is barely a fraction of spare
refining capacity left.  As the Lex column of the Financial Times noted last
Saturday, "Even if Saudi Arabia soothes supply worries by extracting more oil, a
bigger problem may lie in making this oil usable."



There is also the manner in which such oil is being extracted, notably in Saudi
Arabia, which is now giving rise to heightened concerns in the markets.  Saudi
Aramco, the country's national oil company, said last week that it had brought
two fields into production earlier than planned, which would boost its planned
capacity by 800,000 barrels a day.  Unfortunately many contend that such
increased production is largely the product of dangerous water injection
extraction techniques, which deplete the underlying resource in a manner highly
inimical to ensuring the field's long term sustainability.

Leading independent oil analyst Matt Simmons, who has conducted an extensive
audit of many of Saudi Arabia's major fields, has been at the forefront in terms
of expressing concerns that the Kingdom can no longer open the tap wider at its
key oil fields as the world's "plug" producer in meeting steadily increasing
world oil demand.  He argues that  giant oil fields, such as Ghawar, might
already have peaked and could start into rapid decline in as few as three years.
In a recent interview with Petroleum News Contributing Writer, F. Jay Schempf,
Simmons disputed Saudi Aramco's claim that it has discovered 85 oil fields in
the country and has so far developed just 23 of them, implying ample future oil
supplies.

In the interview with Schempf, Simmons maintained that only a handful of fields
accounted for virtually all Saudi Arabian oil production. The aforementioned
Ghawar - the world's single largest oil field - has accounted for about 60
percent of all the oil the country ever produced, he said. Today, he added,
Ghawar still produces about 5 million barrels per day of the current Saudi oil
output of 7.5 to 8 million bpd. Five other fields produce the remainder, but it
is fair to say that whither goes Ghawar, goes Saudi oil production.

Based on his analysis, Simmons contended oil supply would be constrained in the
coming decade to an unprecedented degree.  He, like Henry Groppe of Groppe, Long
& Littell, and Colin Campbell, have long taken the view that exploration success
in global oil has been in decline for decades and that the world has been living
off of the major fields discovered literally decades ago.  Recent exploration,
all note, has gone in large part toward exploiting more effectively these major
fields.  As a consequence, the rate of depletion of these fields has increased,
implying looming supply problems ahead.  To a considerable extent this fall off
in major exploration success has gone unnoticed because the large increase in
the real oil price in the 1970's led to a significant decline in price elastic
demand which has made oil supplies adequate and has kept oil prices stable at a
level that is well below the peak levels of the late 1970's and early 1980's.



The so-called "depletion dynamics" thesis is not new.  It has been associated
with a group of futurologists called the Club of Rome and it was laid out in a
book entitled "The Limits to Growth", written in the 1970s.  The thesis was in
essence a simple one. Commodity supplies had increased ever since the onset of
the industrial revolution for two reasons:  1.) the discovery of new lands, and
2) improvements in production technology.  These two factors led to a rate of
supply expansion that, ex ante, exceeded the growth in commodity demand at any
constant real commodity price.  As supply must in the end equal demand,
commodity prices had to fall in real terms to clear the market.  The Club of
Rome argued that, by the early 1970's, mankind in its search for resources had
effectively scoured the globe.  The easy to produce resources had been found and
exploited.   The supply of commodities would continue to increase due to
technical progress in the production process, but the discovery of new lands
would no longer help increase supplies of resources as it had in the past.



This Club of Rome effect is now widely recognized as having been operative in
the U.S. gas market since the 1970s, but the collapse of oil during the
mid-1980s gave rise to the perception of an endless glut of oil in the world.
In fact, it is noteworthy that although there has been some production increase
in Iraq, Iran, Nigeria, Canada, and the former Soviet Union, on balance, for
most global oil fields, peak production was reached long ago and any new super
giant fields (defined as over 5Gb of reserves) which have been discovered over
the past 5-7 years will likely prove insufficient to offset contracting supply
from existing mega-fields.


What is the state of these important existing mega-fields? There are four of
them in the world today which produce over one million barrels per day.  Ghawar,
which produces 4.5 million barrels per day,  Cantarell in Mexico, which produces
nearly 2 million barrels per day, Burgan in Kuwait which produces 1 million
barrels per day and Da Qing in China which produces 1 million barrels per day.
Mounting problems at Ghawar, the largest oil producing field in Saudi Arabia,
appears to be the key new variable currently roiling the energy markets.



Today the world produces 82.5 million barrels per day which means that Ghawar
produces 5.5 percent of the world's daily production. Should it decline, there
would be major problems.  Although the Saudis have persistently claimed that
Ghawar is capable of producing a further 125 billion barrels, the claims are
being met by growing skepticism in a manner which suggests increasing acceptance
of the depletion dynamics thesis.  Notes the Aberdeen Press & Journal Energy:



"It seems a growing number of analysts are falling into line with the Simmons &
Company International view that Saudi Arabia may be running out of steam and may
not be able to perform the role of global swing producer for many more years,
despite being credited with oil reserves in the order of 260 billion barrels.
The Centre for Global Energy Studies hinted at the beginning of the year that
the kingdom appeared to be heading for difficulties. Now one of its analysts has
said that having reserves does not equate to production capacity. Citing the
Haradh field, he said it required 500,000 barrels per day of water injection to
get out 300,000 bpd of oil. Moreover the problem is even more serious in the
Khurais field."

- "Doubts grow about Saudi As Global Swing Producer," Aberdeen Press & Journal
Energy, April 5, 2004



In layman's terms, Matt Simmons maintains that the Saudis have instituted huge
waterflooding programs relatively soon after completing field development at
Ghawar in order to maximize production:

"All of these fields are old, but Saudi Aramco has managed them in a 'gold
standard' fashion by instituting careful and rigorous water injection to
maintain very high reservoir pressures. They're effectively sweeping the
reservoirs until the easily recoverable oil is gone. In so doing, they have
defied the standard decline curves. With water injection, they've maintained
reservoir pressures above the bubble point. The trouble is, once they finally
finish the sweep, they've done both primary and secondary depletion. There isn't
any Act 2."  -  "Simmons Hopes He's Wrong" - as quoted in Petroleum News, F. Jay
Schempf

No Act 2, especially if one assumes that the official supply/demand data on the
oil market is incorrect.  Until recently, the market consensus, which has been
continually shocked by each successive rise in the oil price, has attributed the
rise to several special one-off factors, but has not tended to question the
official statistical framework for the market from the IEA.   However, there is,
as we have pointed out in these pages before, an alternative view.  Henry
Groppe, of Groppe , Long & Littell, has analyzed the global oil market for
almost four decades.  Henry has called many of the major turning points in the
oil market over the last three decades, is widely esteemed, and is quite close
to the current US administration.  Groppe has a very bold thesis on the current
oil market: the IEA data which everyone accepts is very wrong, supply is
overstated, demand is understated, the market has been and is currently in
deficit, and global inventories are falling.

The work of Simmons and Colin J. Campbell also seem to lend support to the
notion that the IEA erroneously projects a market that is well supplied and
implies higher inventories than may not in fact exist, as does the poor historic
record of the IEA itself.  Past IEA published supply/demand data from the
2000-2001 period implied a cumulative increase of global oil inventories of 2
billion barrels.  Not only should this increase have shown up in visible stocks;
it was not physically possible to store such a high increase in global oil
inventories.  In the words of GLL:

"Chronic overstatement of production has become deeply rooted in the press and
in Oil Market Report (OMR) published by the International Energy Agency.  The
infamous 'missing barrels' - large increases in stocks outside the
industrialized world - are the result of that practice."  --Oil Statistics,
February 2001, Groppe, Long & Littell

In other words, supply/demand data have been skewed by an accumulation of
relatively small data errors over a long period of time, leading to a highly
flawed statistical framework, on which most oil analysts continue to base price
assumptions, which have persistently proven to be too low.

Last week, the Dow fell to its lowest level of the year.  It might be the case
that the markets are finally beginning to assess the unpleasant economic
ramifications of a world no longer swimming in cheap oil.  Because investors are
no where near to digesting the full implications of this analysis, the markets
have become becoming increasingly rattled as the reality of perpetually higher
energy prices begins to seep in.  OPEC, particularly Saudi Arabia, is clearly
losing the battle to maintain control of oil prices.   Matt Simmons and others
have begun to sound the alarm: what the Saudis are attempting to giveth, geology
taketh away.

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