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J Curve on target

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    When more people wake up to the J curve oil will skyrocket.


    From oil glut to shortage? Oil industry contemplates new problem
    GEORGI KANTCHEV, BILL SPINDLE
    THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
    DECEMBER 31, 2015 8:30AM

    The world oil market is “in the killing zone”.

    With the world awash in crude, the oil industry is contemplating a new problem the oversupply could tee up: an oil shortage.

    As the oil glut has sent prices to decade lows, plummeting investment by oil-producing countries such as Venezuela and Russia and oil drillers such as Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell means fewer barrels will be produced.

    That could leave the world in exactly the opposite situation as now: short of oil and willing to pay more to get it.

    This may herald the beginning of a cycle that other commodities, from gold to copper, find more familiar — a cycle in which a glut leads to lower prices that lead to investment cuts, which chokes supply and prompts the price gains that lead to renewed expansion and future gluts.

    MORE: Oil prices drop as glut worsens
    “A big gap is forming in oil-industry investment,” Claudio Descalzi, chief executive of Italian energy company Eni SpA, recently told reporters. “That will lead in two to three years to an imbalance between supply and demand that will push prices higher.”

    This year, global exploration-and-production investments will fall by $US170 billion, or 20 per cent, according to Rystad Energy. If international oil prices average $US50 a barrel next year — a level many analysts said appears optimistic — investment could fall by one-fifth in 2016, the Oslo-based energy consulting firm estimates.

    That would be the first time the industry has registered two consecutive years of investment declines in 30 years, according to the International Energy Agency, a global industry monitor.

    Overnight in New York, Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, fell 3.5 per cent, to settle at $US36.46 a barrel. US crude dropped 3.4 per cent to $36.60.

    Crude has fallen almost 70 per cent since June 2014, while producers are pumping two million more barrels a day than is needed.


    That rout has seen oil companies cut deeply into investment budgets.

    US oil producers Chevron and ConocoPhillips will each cut capital spending next year by about one-fourth, the companies said this month. European producers such as BP and Total have also announced large spending cuts.

    Tudor, Pickering & Holt, an energy-focused investment bank, has tallied 150 projects that have been delayed, resulting in an estimated 13 million barrels a day of oil production deferred indefinitely. That is equal to 15 per cent of total global output.

    A chunk of the deferred oil — 20 per cent — comes from projects in Canada’s oil-sands deposits, where extracting crude is particularly expensive. Arctic production and complicated deepwater projects in the Gulf of Mexico and Africa have also suffered, according to Tudor Pickering.

    In countries such as Venezuela, Mexico, Nigeria and Algeria, producers are putting off projects needed to reverse the natural depletion that oilfields experience over time. The industry’s average decline rate — the speed that output falls without field maintenance or new drilling — usually runs between 3 per cent and 4 per cent annually. That has nearly doubled this year, estimates Miswin Mahesh, an oil analyst at Barclays.


    The oil industry needs to replace 34 billion barrels of crude every year to satisfy expected consumption growth, according to Rystad. Investment decisions for only eight billion barrels were made in 2015, it said.

    “The stage is set for a supply crunch down the line,” Mr Mahesh said. “Supply from existing fields will fall, while new projects won’t come online to replace them.”

    Barclays sees Brent reaching $US85 a barrel by 2020, while others see the potential for an even steeper rise.

    “You could see prices shooting up from $US30 to $US100 pretty quickly,” said Iain Reid, head of European oil and gas at Macquarie bank. “At some point the chickens will come home to roost.”

    Miners have been through this cycle several times. A decline in investment and exploration budgets in the mid- to late 1990s led to a fall-off in the supply of many metals in the latter part of the last decade. That contributed to a sharp metal-price run-up at the time, which led in turn to the opening of new mines that would later flood the market with metal once again.

    There are, of course, alternative scenarios in which prices continue to languish at low levels. Demand for crude could falter, especially if China’s economy remains sluggish. Weak data in recent months has sparked concern about the health of the world’s second-largest oil consumer.

    Also, US output of shale oil could remain resilient. This year, after a peak at 9.6 million barrels a day, U.S. production has stabilised at about 9.1 million barrels in recent months.

    The IEA sees prices rising no higher than $US80 a barrel by 2020, in part because shale production could fairly quickly meet new demand.

    Meanwhile, the US Energy Information Administration said Wednesday that US crude inventories rose more than expected in the week ended last Friday. Oil stored at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for US stocks, increased by 900,000 barrels, to 63 million barrels, a record, the EIA said in its weekly report.

    The oil industry was once notoriously slow to turn the taps back on, given the need for larger pieces of drilling equipment and with rigs in far-flung places, from the Nigerian Delta to the North Sea. But the shale revolution has changed that, bringing technology and oilfields that can be brought online much more quickly. That also differentiates oil from metals, in which mines can take up to eight years to develop.

    “The oil market is in the killing zone,” said Michael Hulme, manager of the $US460 million Carmignac Commodities Fund. “That’s what killing zones are for — to kill supply and set the scenes for the recovery of prices for the survivors.”

    Wall Street Journal
 
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