Ref: Bagaimana dengan keadaan sejuta tenaga kerja NKRI  di Arab Saudia, jika 
negeri ini harus mengimpor minyak pada 2030. 

http://arabnews.com/will-saudi-arabia-become-oil-importer-2030

Will Saudi Arabia become an oil importer by 2030?

Abdel Aziz Aluwaisheg

Sunday 9 September 2012

THIS was the question asked all of this past week all over the world. Thousands 
of stories were filed on the topic, following speculation by a Citigroup 
analyst that Saudi Arabia may start importing oil by 2030. According to that 
theory, by 2030, Saudi consumption of oil would outstrip production and we 
could be importing oil instead of exporting it. In other words, the world’s 
largest oil exporter today would be importing oil by that fateful date!
While such speculation may be mathematically possible, under extreme 
conditions, it is rather laughable to imagine Saudi Arabia in 2030 consuming 
all of its oil production, let alone importing oil, because that would be 
fiscal suicide and economic collapse all in one. After all, in 2011 oil revenue 
accounted for 93 percent of the government budget. Without revenue from 
exported oil, the economy would simply grind to a halt. As no country would 
allow such a fate, one would expect Saudi Arabia to find alternative solutions 
long before that date.
The facts are fairly well known. As I wrote in two articles in Arab News last 
March, oil consumption per capita in Saudi Arabia is the highest in the world. 
In total, we consume some three million barrels a day, which translates into 
over a billion barrels a year, or about (40) barrels per person each year. 
Saudi per capita consumption is in fact the highest per capita rate in the 
world, four times more than the United States, five times that of South Korea, 
and eight times the rate of consumption in Japan.
More to the point, consumption of oil in Saudi Arabia is growing fast; it has 
jumped from around (30) per capita to over (40) barrels a year, during the past 
decade, or 33 percent increase. Some estimates for the growth rate have put it 
as high as 5 percent annually.
Depending on the rate you project for the growth in oil consumption in the 
future, you could calculate when Saudi consumption would theoretically outstrip 
production. Citigroup researcher seems to have used a rather high expected rate 
of growth to reach the conclusion that Saudi Arabia could be a net oil importer 
by 2030. 


In my column last March, I cited some research that concluded that Saudi 
domestic consumption could top seven million barrels a year by 2030.
Most economic forecasting is based on a general rule of ceteris paribus, which 
is Latin for assuming everything else would remain the same. This assumption, 
which is mostly unrealistic, enables economists to zero in on one variable to 
project its behavior, while everything else constant. While regrettable from a 
forecaster’s perspective, it is rather fortunate for us that other things 
rarely stay constant. We can do something about it.
To avert those doomsday scenarios, we should work on both energy supply and 
demand, to increase and diversify the former and reduce the latter. 
First of all, the main mode of transportation in Saudi Arabia is passenger 
cars, not public transportation. Cheap fuel makes it attractive and convenient 
to continue that way, but we need to reverse this situation, as in the rest of 
the world, in order to reduce consumption. Efficient, state-of-the-art, train 
and bus systems are needed to wean Saudi drivers from their much cherished cars 
and thus make it possible to reduce oil consumption.
Second, we need to improve efficiency in power production. Our electricity 
production could use more efficient technologies that use less oil. I know that 
such upgrade is in the works, but we need to speed it up to reap the benefits 
sooner.
Third, most Saudis are only marginally aware of the need for oil conservation. 
They take cheap oil for granted, unaware that its cheap price does not cover 
real economic cost. The fact that oil consumption is rising at 5 percent 
annually, or more than double population growth, is evidence that public 
conservation campaigns have not made a dent in popular perceptions. What is 
needed is a well-sustained campaign that enlists influential opinion makers, 
including officials, religious figures, teachers, writers, and artists.
Fourth, on the supply side, Saudi Arabia needs to aggressively develop new 
energy sources. Renewable energy sources could reduce oil consumption and 
pollution at the same time. Saudi Arabia has a clear comparative advantage in 
solar energy, but to make any renewable energy competitive, oil price structure 
should be revised.
Finally, there is a price mechanism. One reason why people use so much oil is 
its extremely low price. Conservation campaigns would have very little effect 
if prices remain low. On other hand, raising the price would force industry and 
individuals to reduce their fuel consumption. Other countries’ experience shows 
that to be the case. A case in point is the US, which like Saudi Arabia had an 
entrenched car-oriented culture for decades. 
Before 1973, US energy consumption was growing at a rate of over 3 percent 
annually with no signs of slowing down. However, following the price shocks of 
the 1970s, consumer behavior changed drastically. Between 1973 and 2002, total 
energy consumption grew at an average annual rate of 0.9 percent. Industrial 
use did not grow at all since 1973. Oil consumption, in particular, has 
steadily declined, as I pointed out earlier. 
In sum, while the story that made the rounds last week seemed rather alarmist 
in its exaggeration, it is essential that we start thinking of reasonable 
solutions to reduce our runaway consumption of oil. And while the outlook is 
indeed grim, for now, fortunately for Saudi Arabia there are many ways to avert 
such disastrous scenarios.

E-mail: [email protected]


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