Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on January 17, 2015

Bookmark and Share

Falling Oil Price: An Opportunity for Asia?

Falling Oil Price: An Opportunity for Asia? thumbnail

The major cause of the recent oil price fall is the increasing oil production in the United States as advanced technology enables US oil companies to extract previously untapped shale oil and gas. Although remaining a major oil importer, the US now produces more than half of the oil it consumes. One salient consequence which may have great geopolitical impact is that the US has overtaken Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest oil producing country.

On the other hand, Saudi Arabia, the leading member of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) and the world’s largest oil exporter, is unwilling to cut its oil production to reduce global oil supply. At a recent energy forum held in Abu Dhabi, Saudi Arabia’s Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi restated Riyadh’s policy of not cutting oil output, and blamed the non-cooperation of non-OPEC member oil producers for the drop of oil prices.

Will oil remain cheap?

The reason why the Opec members refused to cut oil production is two-fold. First, they would like to see low prices drive American competitors out of the market. The cost of conventional oil extraction is much lower than the cost of extracting shale oil, which can be up to US$90 per barrel. If the oil price remains lower than the cost, the American producers may not be able to afford it and will stop drilling shale oil.

Second, as Saudi Arabia claimed, cheap oil is good for the global economy, and reviving economic growth will increase the oil demand, which eventually will lead to higher prices. In the words of the Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi, “[c]urrent prices…stimulate global economic growth, leading ultimately to an ‎increase in global demand and a slowdown in the growth of supplies”.

Opec’s efforts to curb shale oil production through market forces, however, may not be successful. While the costs of producing shale oil and gas are high, most of them are sunk costs that were already made. So far, only two US shale companies have stopped drilling shale oil due to low prices, but other companies still continue their production. In the long term, there is little reason that the American oil companies will exit the global oil market.

The second wish that increasing global economic activity caused by cheap oil will heighten demand on oil is even harder to achieve in the short term. While emerging-market countries can take advantage of low oil prices and accelerate economic development and growth, the increasing demand for oil will be offset by growing oil production. So, does this mean that an era of low oil prices is coming?

The answer is yes, at least for the short term. As Saudi Arabia reiterated its reluctance to cut oil supply, we do not see any indication that the oil price will return to its peak. The US Energy Information Administration predicts that oil will remain cheap in 2015, with the monthly average price around US$63-US$73 per barrel. But how long the low price will last is hard to predict, because there are other factors that may affect the global oil market including conflicts in Middle East and these are still unclear.

Low oil prices good for Asia?

In the upstream oil and gas sector some 600,000 documents are required to complete the Indonesia business license process

Low oil prices seem to benefit most countries, even including oil producers. As long as the price does not fall below the level that OPEC members can withstand, they still profit. For other countries, low energy costs should be beneficial to consumers and to most of the industries, especially the transport and refining industries. After all, research has shown that what is harmful is not oil prices per se, but the instability of oil prices.

Asian countries are mostly oil importers, so the Asian economy should take this advantage and benefit from low oil prices. China, for example, should be one of the winners. China’s growing reliance on imported energy is a big concern to the economy and to the national security. As the US domestic supply of oil has been increasing, China is now the world’s largest net oil importer. Its demand on energy, despite the slowdown, is expected to continue escalating.

While the oil demand from China will be an important determinant of future oil prices, the current low price is a good opportunity for China to develop the economy, to lower inflation, and to increase strategic oil reserves, which China actually has started to do.

Low oil prices also help Asian governments lower their spending and reallocate the money. Malaysia and Indonesia are oil exporters and potentially can be harmed by the fall of oil prices. But both countries cut their oil subsidies that have long been a major financial burden on the governments. As Indonesian President Joko Widodo pointed out at the recent Apec Summit in Beijing, the money saved from the oil subsidy cut will be channelled to more productive sectors, including infrastructure. This is the correct direction governments should pursue when the oil price is low.

So, it may not be clear for how long we can enjoy the cheap oil, but it will be hard to see US$100 per barrel again in the near future. Low oil prices should not just benefit individual car owners. They should provide a good opportunity for governments to carry out policy adjustments or reform.

Falling Oil Price: An Opportunity for Asia?
In the upstream oil and gas sector some 600,000 documents are required to complete the Indonesia business license process
 TheEstablishmentPost


6 Comments on "Falling Oil Price: An Opportunity for Asia?"

  1. bobinget on Sat, 17th Jan 2015 3:28 pm 

    Around a hundred years ago when I was younger,
    we boys would shop gasoline like grown-ups do today. I recall 22.9 cents a gallon, down from 25.9
    at a nearby station who offered glassware with a fill-up. WE never cared why two ‘gas’ stations were in a ‘gas war’. Today, looking back, I understand, they were fighting for market share.

    First of all. Lets forget OPEC. In America, Big Oil ended gas wars by setting prices below which
    company stores could not go. Hence, free carwashes, dinner plates, 25 cent a pack cigarettes,
    coupons or ‘Green Stamps’.

    There were more independent gas stations back then. Suspend disbelief for a minute. Just say…
    Just say, owners of two fillin stations had other then market share issues with each other. I know, I know that’s hard to believe but 1950s America wasn’t
    always as portrayed on FOX .

    In fact these two owners have long standing grievances going back years.

    Not to put to fine a point on it.. But they really hate each other.
    So much so they are willing to sell gas, first at a penny over cost, then cost, then, so far below cost,
    one side, then the other, can’t pay future deliveries
    without borrowing. Both men go deeper into debt.
    Both owners are stubborn and refuse to stop borrowing so as to keep up their ‘War”.

    What could go wrong?

    Now, Plant maintains Russia, Iran and Saudi Arabia,
    unwilling to cut, are in a commercial dispute,
    strictly over market share. Plant ‘rubbishes’ the notion the Saudis are attempting to “spend Russia
    (and Iran) into submission”

    Consensus seems to be ‘it’s all about supply and demand’. simple like borsht. Just move along folks,
    there’s nothing (sinister*) going on here.

    Russia, Iran an Saudi Arabia have been fighting this proxy war to the last Syrian*.

    *Estimates of deaths in the Syrian Civil War, per opposition activist groups, vary between 127,450[1][2] and 286,455.[3][4] On 22 August 2014, the United Nations put out an estimate of over 191,000 that had died in the war.[5]

    UNICEF reported that over 500 children had been killed by early February 2012.[6][7] Another 400 children were reportedly arrested and tortured in Syrian prisons.[8][9] Both claims have been contested by the Syrian government.[10] Additionally, over 600 detainees and political prisoners died under torture.[11] The United Nations stated that by the end of April 2014, 8,803 children had been killed,[5] while the Oxford Research Group said that a total of 11,420 children died in the conflict by late November 2013.[12] By the end of December 2014, the opposition activist group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported the number of children killed in the conflict had risen to 10,515, while at the same time 6,682 women were also killed.[3][4]

    Nonetheless Plant stands by his assertion all my
    “Oil War talk” is ‘rubbish’.

  2. Plantagenet on Sat, 17th Jan 2015 4:11 pm 

    @Bobinget

    Your imaginary conversation with me is very interesting.

    Your fantasy that I “rubbish” the idea that the Saudi’s are attempting to undercut Russia and/or Iran is quite wrong. I’ve made that suggestion myself.

    But irregardless of the motive behind KSA’s cuts in oil prices, the result is an oil glut.

    Cheers!

  3. GregT on Sat, 17th Jan 2015 5:17 pm 

    Plant,

    The only thing that you are accomplishing, is making yourself look like a fool.

  4. Makati1 on Sat, 17th Jan 2015 8:28 pm 

    Call it what you will, the Us is getting destroyed. China (Saudi’s biggest customer) is benefiting. Russia has the excuse to clean up it’s domestic act while moving it’s energy markets East where the future, if any, will be. Iran will survive as will Brazil.

    However, the dominoes have begun falling in the US with the first oil frakers going belly up. They will fall faster and faster as the squeeze goes on and may eventually crash the system totally. We shall see.

    This is a financial war. Any side effectsd are just ‘colateral damage’.

  5. Apneaman on Sun, 18th Jan 2015 1:19 am 

    I’m calling a shale bail out, which will really be a bank bailout loosely disguised, which is more than enough cover to fool the sheep again. Anyone believe that the banksters are going to take the hit? Mr president, Jamie Diamon on line one.

  6. Makati1 on Sun, 18th Jan 2015 6:00 am 

    Apneaman, I think that this is too big to paper over with Charmin. We shall see.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *