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Lagniappe
Scraping The Barrel
By
Michael Casey
Increased demand
is an obvious reason for the alarming oil price rises, but
several other forces are also playing their part, writes
Michael Casey .
WHAT KIND of company persuades its customers to consume less
of its products; spends great swathes of its money on items
unrelated to its core business; doesn't manufacture the products
it sells; and at a major triennial convention, does not display
any of its products on any of the hundreds of exhibition stands?
Answer: a petroleum company, of which there are three kinds.
The first are the super gigantic multinationals like ExxonMobil,
Chevron, Shell and BP. The second are the nationally-owned
companies (NOCs) such as Qatar Petroleum, Petroecuador and
Aramco. The third category includes the independent oil companies
(IOCs) such as Broken Hill, Enserch Exploration, Union Pacific
and so on.
All say they want their customers to consume less oil and
gas; all claim to spend a lot on the environment; none of them
manufactures the products as such (they extract and refine
them); and, despite hundreds of exhibition stands with various
items on display, there was not one drop of oil or cylinder
of gas to be seen at the recent World Petroleum Congress.
The oil and gas business is unique in many other ways as well,
some of which will become apparent later on.
This was the 19th congress at which these companies had come
together to talk, present their case to various governments
- and indeed to the world. Not all of it was hype and there
was certainly a feeling of genuine scientific inquiry in the
meetings held by geologists, engineers and independent academics.
They often disagreed among themselves - a sure sign of truth-seeking.
The
administrative chiefs of the oil companies tended on the
whole to sing from the same hymn sheet - always
a little worrying
for those who believe in the benefits of competitive forces.
There was a substantial degree of consensus about the following:
the recent alarming oil price rises were not caused by financial
speculation - the financial wünderkind were simply "following" the
fundamental forces of supply and demand. One Kuwaiti woman
questioned this from the floor and was given a long and severe
lecture from the podium.
No
speaker suggested that financial speculation could be exacerbating
the price rise through the familiar
mechanism of "over-shooting".
For some reason, the oil chiefs wanted to focus solely on the
fundamentals of supply and demand. They argued that the main
reason for the surge in demand for energy was the rapid economic
growth in countries like China and India.
The problem is made worse by the existence of oil subsidies
in these and other developing countries.
On a per capita basis, the demand for oil in OECD countries
is actually falling slightly, though from a high level. The
average consumption of oil per head per year in the OECD area
is 17 barrels, compared with two barrels in China.
The fear is that developing nations will become as energy-profligate
as developed nations.
Why
should oil-producing companies worry about growing demand
for their product? Don't they get to sell
more at higher prices?
Yes, but there is a snake in that fool's paradise. It is the
fear of "demand-destruction" - if the price goes
too high, people will slash their consumption and turn to alternative
sources.
At present, the world consumes 81.5 million barrels of oil
every day. Proven reserves of oil are estimated at 1,238 billion
barrels.
At this rate, those reserves should be able to keep the world
going for about 40 years. The equivalent figure for gas is
about 70 years and our old friend coal, which is making a comeback,
is good for approximately 150 years. Geologists and engineers
claim there are good chances of significant discoveries in
the Arctic, Russia (mainly natural gas) and Brazil. At the
congress, they said that refining technology could be improved
so that we can get up to 15 per cent more refined product out
of the same volume of crude.
There
wasn't much discussion of "peak" oil, which
is, apparently, a fuzzy concept. There might be a "plateau" for
a few years at a fairly comfortable level of 95 million barrels
a day. Moreover, a lot of natural gas should be coming on stream.
And, as well as transporting it by pipeline, it can now be
liquefied and shipped by tanker.
So
where is the problem? If reserves are comfortable, why are
prices rising at such an alarming rate? It was summarised
succinctly, but elliptically, by the chief executive of BP. "The
problem is not speculative or geological, but political."
Another
insider was even more coy, saying that most of the problems
were "above ground". We got a bit closer
to the truth when another oil chief referred to "rising
resource nationalism".
What all these euphemisms mean is that big companies just
can't go into sovereign countries any more, grab the oil and
gas, and leave. In the past, there were plenty of examples
of large oil giants damaging the environment of countries like
Nigeria - and leaving a whiff of neo-colonialism in the already-polluted
air. More recently, we had a case in this country where six
men were jailed for several months.
At present, the countries that won't play ball with the oil
giants include Venezuela (under Hugo Chavez), Nigeria and Iran.
Even the Russians are backing out of some of their earlier
deals with the oil giants.
Hardly anyone mentioned Iraq, or the fact that the US could
be using high oil prices to pay their war debt as a more politically
expedient method than raising the taxes of American citizens.
Every time we put fuel in our cars, we are probably paying
for the war in Iraq - a disturbing thought. The fact is, oil
output from Iraq fell to one-third of what it was before the
invasion and one-fifth of what it could now be. Fortunately,
some Iraqi oil wells are currently being brought back into
more regular production and there is talk of the discovery
of a new field in the western desert of Iraq.
There is also the issue of OPEC countries wishing to keep
the oil in the ground. They reject this and claim they are
happy to pump more oil - at the existing high prices of course
and certainly not so much that prices would fall. They do have
massive reserves - especially Saudi Arabia. But if they want
to leave most of it in the ground for their children, as is
widely rumoured, what can the oil companies do about it except
make them an offer they can't refuse? And all that will do
is serve to push costs up.
Then, continuing our global tour, we come to Russia, which,
as far as natural gas is concerned, has the whip hand and is
not going to give it away. The newly-appointed president Dmitry
Medvedev wants Gazprom to be the world's biggest company by
2017, and his colleague Vladimir Putin expects oil output to
rise by almost 14 per cent by 2015.
As Dan McLaughlin outlines in the next article, Putin has
committed his government to cutting taxes for oil firms and
introducing incentives for exploration. And in Medvedev, he
has an ally who knows the needs of the oil and gas industry
- before becoming president, he was chairman of Gazprom.
Shoot over to the US and there is very limited exploration
going on, largely due to the fact that permits can be blocked
by locals and by NGOs. In summary, oil production and international
politics are intertwined in a dangerous and damaging way.
Leaving aside conspiracy theories involving the US, Saudi
Arabia, Iran and Israel, what has really happened is that the
big oil companies now have to negotiate with countries and
regions outside the aforementioned established few to get at
the oil and gas. And these new countries are not prepared to
be pushed around. So, even though reserves are adequate globally,
oil companies are going to have to give better terms to the
countries in question.
In the meantime, while we wait for deals to be agreed and
rigs are put in place, it's likely that prices will stay on
the high side. Even when the oil and gas is being extracted,
it is likely to remain quite expensive, because the oil companies
will have had to offer fairly attractive terms to the new -
business savvy - host countries.
Then there are the rising costs of extraction. There is a
reasonable degree of consensus that costs in the oil industry
generally are rising by about 20 per cent annually. (For specific
reasons to do with forward contracts, Shell is below that figure.)
So, even if supply and demand do come into better balance
and even if the over-shooting caused by speculators abates,
we are still talking about high cost oil and gas in the future.
So to turn to the governments: what can your country do for
you at the pumps?
Well, get in line. It's not just truck drivers and fishermen
that are knocking on government doors for help over oil.
In one of the great twists of fate, the big oil giants, once
archetypal private-sector entities, are now pleading for help
- and for subsidies. More than anything else, they want certainty.
This is because the investments they must make in exploration
and refining oil are enormous, even for oil companies with
plenty of cash and resources.
The days when small countries like Ireland virtually gave
away exploration rights are long gone. Suppose the government
of the host country changes, and seeks to nationalise its own
oil or gas. Where would that leave the company that made the
huge investment? Suppose the finds are not economical or the
lead times and pay-back periods too long?
These are high-stake risks, similar to those faced by early
prospectors. Speaking to oil company chief executives these
days, it's hard to avoid the impression that some are frozen
in the headlights. These are not the risk-taking prospectors
of old, but cautious accountants more used to trimming costs
than going for broke. One of the most serious aspects is that
the big oil firms are actually doing very little exploration:
most of that is undertaken by the NOCs and IOCs.
One chief executive revealed to us that his company outsourced
almost everything - even corporate strategy. Whether governments
can give any help or reduce the risks in any significant way
is a moot point.
It
seems that the countries with the reserves don't have the
technology - and the companies that have the
technology don't
have access to the reserves. So, is there a danger that drilling
for oil will be seriously scaled back? One could envisage a
geo-political situation in which this could happen, but the
odds of this are slight. Even if the oil giants pull in their
horns, the NOCs and IOCs will undoubtedly fill the gap. One
major problem for the big oil giants is the greying factor.
Senior staff are ageing and the industry is finding it difficult
to attract young professionals. Young people don't find the
industry sexy. Even the physical image of huge refineries and
rows of large, ugly tanks is off-putting. Most people see it
as an "old" industry and not really part of the new "information" economy,
which is largely based on services.
Is
it possible that the people speculating on oil prices are
the young "quants" who, in a
former age, might have gone into the petroleum sector? In
most developed economies,
the financial services sector is the fastest growing one.
However, these are corporate and political issues that partly
reflect the state of the industry and the reason it struggles
to quell the rising prices and risks to their business that
are inherent within that. They are well discussed between all
the firms.
However, the phantom elephants in the room whenever oil executives
meet are science and innovation. Suppose over the next few
years some innovative young engineer or physicist develops
a really good energy alternative, or perhaps a means of leveraging
the known alternatives - what would happen the mega oil companies?
Maybe they have contingency plans, but they certainly don't
talk about them. Not openly and between one another at the
World Petroleum Congress, anyway.
Presumably
they would try to buy out the genius inventor at an early
stage. However, there is no doubt that
if oil prices
continue to rise sharply, the push to find cheaper alternatives
will be accelerated to an extraordinary degree. This "demand-destruction" is
what the companies fear.
The process is commonly known as economic adjustment, and
it has worked well throughout history. When spices became scarce
and the Eastern countries cartelised the spice trade, Columbus
set out on his voyage. He didn't find many spices, but eventually
other means were discovered to keep food fresh for longer periods
of time. Price signals are extremely powerful.
After the first oil shock in the mid-1970s, no one thought
the US would or could produce smaller cars, but they did. The
world is already working on five or six alternative forms of
energy. And the push towards energy conservation is increasing
daily.
The
oil companies are right to fear "demand-destruction".
And though it seems rather masochistic to say it in today's
developed societies, it could be in the world's interest if
prices went through the roof, despite the pain. If you have
confidence in the innovation and inventiveness of humans you
will believe that cheaper, sustainable alternatives would undoubtedly
be found, sooner rather than later.
The present difficulties are worrying, but not on a par with
the first oil crisis of the mid-1970s, when the price of crude
oil quadrupled virtually overnight due to the actions of OPEC,
which had more monopoly power than it does today.
That crisis plunged the world economy into recession and caused
geo-political problems which remain with us today.
One could argue that the seeds of the Gulf War and the subsequent
invasion of Iraq were sown back then. Unfortunately, oil and
geo-politics are inextricably linked and there are several
conspiracy theories doing the rounds involving America and
Iran. It's a time for cool heads and reasoned debate. It is
also time for transparency from the US.
In the mid-1970s, OPEC countries amassed huge sums of cash,
and banks recycled most of it by lending to developing countries
without doing any sovereign risk analysis.
This led to the massive financial crisis of the early 1980s.
The banks are already in serious difficulty and it is to be
hoped that if and when the latest oil revenues find their way
into their coffers, they will handle the funds sensibly. But
there is a risk that they will not.
There does not seem to be a pressing problem regarding energy
reserves, and gas finds are regularly made, especially in Russia
and Iran. Technology is increasing the yields of refineries.
The problem on the demand side is that China and India are
growing fast and increasing their consumption of energy, especially
as it is subsidised in those countries.
The problems on the supply side are partly due to speculative
over-shooting, geo-political factors (including the Iraq war),
a weakening of the power of the giant companies vis-a-vis national
governments and, possibly, a desire on the part of OPEC to
keep most of their reserves in the ground for their children.
An
additional issue may well be the record of bad treatment
meted out by the oil giants to various host
countries in the
past. Putin refers to some of the deals done by oil companies
with Russian authorities when the country was financially unstable
as "colonial".
The lack of skilled young people in the oil industry does
not augur well, nor does the fact that the big companies are
the most reluctant to engage in risky exploration.
The
problem is not a long-term one, since the reserves are there;
it's a medium-term one which is both
cyclical and structural.
It is not clear what governments can do, but some kind of international
summit is called for. An international body, engaged full-time
in energy R&D might be a possibility. Certainly, the search
for viable renewables should be considerably speeded up.
If this happens, and is seen to be successful, the oil companies
may have to start pumping more oil quickly because leaving
it in the ground won't be of any use if renewable alternatives
come fully on stream.
They may of course buy up the renewable companies and achieve
diversification by that route. There is likely to be major
restructuring in the energy industry in the years ahead. One
could also not rule out an increase in government-run energy
companies on the grounds that the private sector is afraid
to make such risky and high-cost investment decisions.
Ireland is still far too reliant on imported energy and, although
we've made a good start on wind energy, it's disappointing
that we haven't made more progress in relation to wave and
tidal power.
Our first major warning about energy came in the mid-1970s.
Even though the present recession in Ireland is largely of
our own making, there can be little doubt that world energy
prices will worsen the situation for the next couple of years
and may even postpone our hoped-for recovery.
Michael Casey is a former
senior official with the Central Bank and a former
member of the board of the International
Monetary Fund. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published by The Irish Times,
on
July 2008. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of our readers.
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