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$10 Trillion Investment Needed To Avoid Massive
Oil Price Spike, Says OPEC
By Nick
Cunningham
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 30, 2015
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OPEC says that $10 trillion worth of investment will need to flow into
oil and gas through 2040 in order to meet the world’s energy needs.
The OPEC published its
World Oil Outlook 2015 (WOO) in late December, which struck a much
more pessimistic note on the state of oil markets than in the past. On the
one hand, OPEC does not see oil prices returning to triple-digit territory
within the next 25 years, a strikingly bearish conclusion. The group
expects oil prices to rise by an average of about $5 per year over the
course of this decade, only reaching $80 per barrel in 2020. From there,
it sees oil prices rising slowly, hitting $95 per barrel in 2040.
Long-term projections are notoriously inaccurate, and oil prices are
impossible to predict only a few years out, let alone a few decades from
now. Priced modeling involves an array of variables, and slight
alterations in certain assumptions – such as global GDP or the pace of
population growth – can lead to dramatically different conclusions. So the
estimates should be taken only as a reference case rather than a serious
attempt at predicting crude prices in 25 years. Nevertheless, the
conclusion suggests that OPEC believes there will be adequate supply for
quite a long time, enough to prevent a return the price spikes seen in
recent years.
Part of that has to do with what OPEC sees as a
gradual shift towards efficiency and alternatives to oil. The report
issued estimates for demand growth five years at a time, with demand
decelerating gradually. For example, the world will consume an extra 6.1
million barrels of oil per day between now and 2020. But demand growth
slows thereafter: 3.5 mb/d between 2020 and 2025, 3.3 mb/d for 2025 to
2030; 3 mb/d for 2030 to 2035; and finally, 2.5 mb/d for 2035 to 2040. The
reasons for this are multiple: slowing economic growth, declining
population rates, and crucially, efficiency and climate change efforts to
slow consumption. In fact, since last year’s 2014 WOO, OPEC lowered its
2040 oil demand projection by 1.3 mb/d because it sees much more serious
climate mitigation policies coming down the pike than it did last year.
Of course, some might argue that even that estimate – that the
world will be consuming 110 mb/d in 2040 – could be overly optimistic.
Coming from a collection of oil-exporting countries, that should be
expected. Energy transitions are hard to predict ahead of time, but when
they come, they tend to produce rapid changes. Any shot at achieving the
world’s stated climate change targets will require a much more ambitious
effort. While governments have dithered for years, efforts appear to be
getting more serious. More to the point, the cost of electric vehicles
will only decline in real dollar terms over time, and adoption should
continue to rise in a non-linear fashion. That presents a significant
threat to long-term oil sales.
At the same time, OPEC also issued
a word of caution in its report. While oil markets experience oversupply
in the short- to medium-term, massive investments in exploration and
production are still needed to meet demand over the long-term. OPEC
believes $10 trillion will be necessary over the next 25 years to ensure
adequate oil supplies. "If the right signals are not forthcoming, there is
the possibility that the market could find that there is not enough new
capacity and infrastructure in place to meet future rising demand levels,
and this would obviously have a knock-on impact for prices," OPEC
concluded. About $250 billion each year will have to come from non-OPEC
countries.
In a similar but more disconcerting conclusion, the
Oslo-based Rystad Energy recently
concluded that the current state of oversupply could be "turned upside
down over the next few years." That is because the drastic spending cuts
today will result in a shortage within a few years. To put things in
perspective, Rystad says that the oil industry "needs to replace 34
billion barrels of crude every year – equal to current consumption." But
as a result of the collapse in prices, the industry has slashed spending
across the board and "investment decisions for only 8 billion barrels were
made in 2015. This amount is less than 25% of what the market requires
long-term," Rystad Energy concluded. The industry cut upstream investment
by $250 billion in 2015, and another $70 billion could be cut in 2016. The
latter figure did not take into account the recent decision by OPEC to
abandon its production target, which sent oil prices
falling further.
So what are we to make of this? There could
be plenty of oil supplies in the future, but as it stands, the industry is
massively underinvesting? This illustrates a troubling tension within the
oil industry. Oil prices will be set by the marginal cost of production,
and recent efficiency gains notwithstanding, marginal costs have generally
increased over time. Low-cost production depletes, and the industry
becomes more reliant on deep-water, shale, or Arctic oil, all of which
require higher levels of spending. In many cases, these sorts of projects
are not profitable at today’s prices. The price spikes seen in 2011-2014
sowed the seeds of the current bust, but the pullback today could create
the conditions of another spike in the future. OPEC could be a bit too
sanguine with its call for $95 oil in 2040.
At the same time,
future price spikes set up the possibility of much greater demand
destruction, especially if alternatives become more viable. This is the
difficult balancing act that the industry must pull off over the next few
decades.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/10-Trillion-Investment-Needed-To-Avoid-Massive-Oil-Price-Spike-Says-OPEC.html
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