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Page added on January 17, 2012

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Price of Oil: Economic Breakeven vs. Political Breakeven Prices

Consumption
The following table provided by the Bank of Kuwait gathers current reported break-even prices of major oil producing nations:

Oil Break-Even Prices
Nation US$/Barrel
Bahrain 40
Kuwait 17
Saudi Arabia 30
U.A.E. 25
Oman 40
Qatar 30
Canada’s oil sands 33

Based on the formula, profitability of these countries’ oil operations are in order:

Profitability at $100/barrel oil
Nation Break-Even Price Profitability
Kuwait 17 488%
U.A.E. 25 300%
Saudi Arabia 30 233%
Qatar 30 233%
Canada’s oil sands 33 203%
Bahrain 40 150%
Oman 40 150%

__Source

The tables above present rough estimates for economic profitability for oil production in various nations. Such numbers create a “price floor” of sorts for oil markets. But a lot more is involved than mere economic profitability. When entire nations base their budgets upon oil & gas income, another type of “breakeven” enters the4 picture: political breakeven.

Here you can see the political breakeven prices, which countries must receive for their oil in order to meet their fiscal budgetary demands. The political breakeven prices are rising almost every year now. Several oil producing nations are now dependent upon $100 per barrel oil prices now, and others are pushing to keep prices at that level just to maintain a safety margin for their governments.

Fareed Zakaria used the above logic in his predictions that oil prices must stay high — that they cannot possibly fall much below current market prices.

But he and many others of like mind are ignoring the shadow side of global energy markets: shaky demand caused by the threatened stumbling of economies in Europe, the US, and increasingly, China. If global demand crashes, political breakeven becomes essentially irrelevant.

Peak oil theorists have generally neglected the demand side of the equation, always insisting that demand will grow exponentially, no matter what. We may soon discover whether they were right, as political peak oil threatens to show its ugly nethers yet again.

The whole house of cards is currently built upon a trumped-up demand, which originates largely in one specific country:

If something happens to collapse the bubble of demand in that country, a cascading collapse of commodities demand could very well set in around the globe. Interesting times, as they say.

More: Marginal oil, with its greater risks and higher cost of production, will exert more influence on oil prices as it moves to becoming 10% of global supply by 2035.

Of course, improved technologies will make marginal oil more affordable over time — to the point that “marginal oil” will probably become more profitable than conventional oil in many of the oil states that have allowed their oil field infrastructure to decay, without investment or upkeep.

Week ending close of oil price at NYMX from 2006 to present

Making sense of such a fluctuating trend requires a lot of background information, along with a finely tuned intuitive sense. Several forces are at work: political, speculative, technological, supply :: demand economics, demographic trends, human nature, and even criminal interests. The balance is subject to rapid and catastrophic shifts.

Anyone who makes confident predictions in such an environment has either vested interests, solid gold insider information, or a declining mentation.
By. Al Fin

 



One Comment on "Price of Oil: Economic Breakeven vs. Political Breakeven Prices"

  1. BillT on Wed, 18th Jan 2012 12:57 am 

    Another sales pitch for renewables? Sure reads like a propaganda piece from Big Oil.

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