The much debated shape of the oil-price curve will take the form of a W as crude is whipsawed by mixed signs from a rattled U.S. shale boom, while Saudi Arabia refuses to balance a global supply glut, Yergin said in an interview on Tuesday.
As spending cuts are forecast to begin easing production from shale next month, the fate of world oil markets is largely in the hands of a myriad of U.S. wildcatters, all with different strategies and an unusual ability to respond quickly to changed circumstances. Ramping down will be quicker and easier than stepping up production as prices recover, said Yergin, vice chairman of IHS Inc. Increased supply will renew downward pressure on prices and volatility will be exacerbated by storage and investment decisions, he said.
“It’s not a light switch,” he said of the producers’ response to an oil price slump, one of the themes to be discussed at next week’s IHS CERAWeek energy conference in Houston. “There isn’t going to be a landing place for oil.”
Yergin’s view is in line with those of other forecasters and analysts including Wolfe Research LLC’s Paul Sankey and ARC Financial Corp.’s Peter Tertzakian. Sankey, a former International Energy Agency analyst, has said the oil price curve will follow the pattern of a shark’s tooth in the medium term.
That’s because it will take time for crude produced at higher cost to come out of the market. Oil stored in anticipation of higher prices in the future will also put a ceiling on a near-term rebound, he wrote Feb. 13. Tertzakian has called it a “seesaw recovery.”
Momentous Year
Yergin, author of “The Prize,” identified this year as one of the most momentous in the history of the commodity. Demand growth from China, perhaps the biggest reason for oil’s meteoric rise in the last decade, has slowed. Meanwhile, risk to supply abounds in producing countries, from the proxy war being waged in Yemen by Iran-backed rebels and Saudi forces to ongoing tensions between Russia and Ukraine, he said.
“There is a lot of risk in the world, but there isn’t much of a risk premium in oil, which is unusual,” he said. “There is so much oil, the supply of it is so great that the fear of supply being disrupted in some fashion” is very small.
The past several years, in which North America surpassed Russia and Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, are only the fourth time since the early part of the 20th century that there’s been such a sudden surge, he said.
Previous instances include the flood of new oil from East Texas in the 1930s, and again in the 1950s from the Middle East and more recently from North Sea and Mexican oil. The market accommodated each sudden surge with a price collapse, he said.
Upward Path
The path to higher prices could come as capital-spending cuts and reduced investment now equate to delays in bringing new production projects online by major oil companies, he said.
“The oil market is cyclical, supply and demand are not always in balance,” he said. “Will there be the sufficient long-term investment to keep the market balanced? This is still very early days as companies are making their adjustments.”
It remains to be seen whether demand will surge in the downturn, and Saudi Arabia appears to have that among its foremost considerations in deciding to let the market resolve itself, Yergin said.
“Demand is a real question mark,” he said. “Lower prices will stimulate demand, but the question is how much.”


gdubya on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 6:52 am
Although America is now producing so much oil that it is now energy independant, and the peak oil theory has been debunked; it is “Saudi Arabia (that) refuses to balance a global supply glut”.
Either all the pundits and politicians are morons or they are being purposefully obtuse; you decide which and why.
rockman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 8:19 am
g – Your words or someone else’s? IOW you do understand that the US is still a net importer of oil, NG and LNG…right?
shortonoil on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 8:58 am
Over the years Yergin has worn out 10 Ouija boards, two dozen dart boards, and several truck loads of dried chicken bones, and tin cans. This guy couldn’t find his butt with both hands, and a full length mirror. Why anyone would give anything that he says any credence is the real question?
paulo1 on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 9:02 am
Let’s see, supposedly they can ramp down faster than ramping up. In other words, some shale boys can choose to call it quits and be destroyed right now instead of nursing along some cash flow and hoping for a rise in prices. And if they stop producing right now I guess they can hope to get more financing down the road and maybe pay their bills for service contractors, later?
Somebody won’t get paid when operations cease and it all has an effect. Around here a few years ago a super producing logging contractor tipped a fuel barge over in Robson Bight….(where tourists kayak with the orcas, etc). He reminded me of the shale boys….producing unbelieveable volumes, logging 24 hours per day with lights, etc. It was a house of cards. Immediate bankruptcy when the barge sank. A whole lot of folks didn’t get paid, from the local gas station owed $7,000.00 to other suppliers owed hundreds of thousands.
ghung on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 9:21 am
Yeah, Paulo, I watched my former boss rob Peter to pay Paul for a few years in the early-mid 2000s to build his real estate empire. Late in 2008 he laid us all off with no notice, defaulted on about 3 times our entire County’s budget (the $30 million golf course development he was so proud of sold last year for $1.25 million) and then he did a disappearing act. Where to? North Dakota, to build ‘man camps’. I wonder how that’s working out for his latest investors.
BobInget on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 10:02 am
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/iraqi-prime-minister-fears-yemen-conflict-could-spark-wider-sectarian-war/2015/04/15/9ea63bd2-e374-11e4-905f-cc896d379a32_story.html
Brent on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 11:00 am
Yergin is a fool wasn’t he the one just a little while ago crowing how the US was going to be the next Saudi Arabia?
Davy on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 11:08 am
Folks like Yergin are on retainer for the BAUtopians so to speak. He maintains a following be supposedly being an author and noted economist. He tells people what they want to hear and he says what TPTB want to be said. IOW he is a paid off stooge for the market makers. I wish he would come back on and brag about his credentials like several months ago. What a dork.
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 11:09 am
Yergin off
Plantagenet on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 11:12 am
Yergin is a brilliant Pulitzer price winning author, and his observations on the current oil glut are just common sense. Now that we’re in an oil glut, returning to balance in the market requires adjustments in supply and demand.
Whats so hard to understand about that?
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 12:26 pm
Drone master Obama won a peace prize.
Davy on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 12:34 pm
Planter, do you believe everything you hear on TV? If you do then I understand why Yergin is common sense and not hard to understand for you. The bonus for you, in addition to Yergin’s common sense, is he mentions the supply glut. That must feel satisfying that you have glut support.
steve on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 12:36 pm
Unfortunately, I think Yergin will be right in the short term but very wrong in the long term….further drawing in the fools…by the way Plant I saw on another post that you are a women is that true?
Davy on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 12:50 pm
Steve, that was a mistake he squats to piss but still has a package.
Northwest Resident on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:16 pm
steve, that’s right. Plantagenet is the hottest troll babe on the internet. But that ain’t saying much. If you’ve seen “The Hobbit” Part I, picture the big dumb troll that picks Bilbo out of his butt, put lipstick and a curly doo on him, then you’ve got an accurate portrait of exactly how “hot” Plantagenet is.
BC on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:24 pm
Few of us get the chance to be the well-paid spokesperson, advocate, and chief PR dandy for a deep-pocketed, powerful firm, industry, or private interest. Yergin has milked his rare opportunity to an enviable extent. He’s not stupid. He gets paid really well often to say stupid things, but that is what he does.
At this point in my life, I wouldn’t mind the opportunity to be paid really well to say stupid things.
I suspect that I’m not alone in preferring to be well paid while appearing stupid, rather than smart and poor. 🙂
BC on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:30 pm
NWRes, be careful. You might attract more trolls to this site with your stimulating description. I suspect we already have our fair share of trolls now. 🙂
rockman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:44 pm
Paulo – By stop producing do you mean stop drilling or reduce the production rate of their existing wells?
Spec9 on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:47 pm
In other words, Yergin doesn’t have a clue. And I’ll complement him for at least being honest with that sentiment. No one knows. You can make a decent guess but a war here or a big new discovery there or a battery cost drop or a drilling technology improvement or a terrorist attack or whatever can throw off your guess by miles.
Northwest Resident on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 1:50 pm
BC — I hear you man, that is a real danger. But my philosophy is pay compliments where compliments are due, consequences be damned. I do wish, however, that peak oil dot com site management would take an active interest in moderating such titillating posts, and an equal if not greater interest in prohibiting trollish activity on this forum. It is a damn shame that a forum such as this that attracts a high number of intelligent, sociable and concerned individuals seeking truth is also permitted to be the regular hangout and broadcasting station for the lies, BS, crude putdowns and assorted crap that we regularly get from Plantagenet, marmico and other assorted trolls.
Davy on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 2:04 pm
Well, BC, around here they call it poor but proud. Smart but poor has a ring to it. Lett’s try “Real but poor” maybe. I say that because how do you agree what is smart these days? I know allot of smart people who are numb nuts.
marmico on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 2:29 pm
I watched my former boss rob Peter to pay Paul for a few years in the early-mid 2000s to build his real estate empire
And in 2009 you were an engineer and systems analyst for a real estate empire. You are a pathetic dipshit!
Plantagenet on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 2:40 pm
Daver—I’m sorry but I don’t share your interest in TV. I watch PBS newshour and the occasional BBC special (Wolf Hall on right now is great) but thats bout it.
I don’t know why you guys waste time watching MSNBC or Fox or CBS or any of that drivel anyway. There are better things to do with your time than watching TV.
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 2:53 pm
What does it even mean to be smart? What about successful? Many people measure that in dollars, some in helping others. I have a friend (since 13 years old) who is dyslexic. He graduated high school, but they just pushed him through. He is a true entrepreneur. He saved his money from working at the saw mill and started many business ventures – most of them have failed, but he learned. He started a winery & store less than a decade ago and two years ago he made a huge deal with Chinese buyers for as much as he could produce – busy guy. Not too “smart” on the book learning as far as society’s standards go, but he found a way. Asks a million questions of anyone to make up for his reading deficiencies and gets help with editing/correction of business correspondence. I have helped him with his editing over the years. He is the equivalent of a 7th grader with terrible spelling and grammar. Is he smart?
Myths of The American Mind: Smartness
The first lecture in my new series: “Myths of the Modern American Mind.” This lecture explores the origins, development and influence of commonly held, but often factually suspect, American beliefs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjR3h0RqVG0
paulo1 on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 3:14 pm
Rockman,
I meant stop drilling and finishing off new wells, certainly any new fracking, and let existing wells already producing simply fade into stripperdom. Drilling cutbacks will eventually do just that, I would imagine.
It was my understanding that once a well is producing it is necessary to keep flows going or lose resevoir entirely, thus simply wasted invested development monies.
Speculawyer on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 3:19 pm
“At this point in my life, I wouldn’t mind the opportunity to be paid really well to say stupid things.
I suspect that I’m not alone in preferring to be well paid while appearing stupid, rather than smart and poor.”
Yeah, there is a lot of growth in this field. Look at the climate-denier industry and right-wing talk radio. That Willie Soon guy collected more than $1M to write lame scientific papers attempting to blame the sun for climate change on behalf of this fossil fuel patrons. Look at Alex Jones . . . that guy spouts stupid nonsensical conspiracy theories nonstop and makes a lot of money from that inanity.
And then there is massive original business of saying stupid stuff for money . . . . religion.
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 4:24 pm
We need more drilling and more wells.
……………………………..
Methane Leaks from Oil and Gas Wells Now Top Polluters
The oil and gas industry surges past cows as top U.S. methane emitter
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/methane-leaks-from-oil-and-gas-wells-now-top-polluters/
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 4:33 pm
Yabut were only doing it for the Children.
//////////////////////////////////////////
Air Pollution Takes Early Toll on Children
“Air pollution can be bad for children – starting even before birth, a new study suggests.
Researchers studied exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs, a form of pollution caused by burning gasoline, diesel fuel, home heating oil and coal. They found that prenatal exposure to these compounds was tied to changes in the structure of offspring’s brains and to intellectual deficits and behavioral problems in childhood.”
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/04/02/air-pollution-takes-early-toll-on-children/?smid=re-share
apneaman on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 4:37 pm
Humans R FF industry externalities
///////////////////////////////////
Mexican Oil Spill Leaves 100K Without Drinking Water
Greenpeace Mexico says incident underscores problems with ‘dirty’ oil industry
“It polluted two rivers, forcing the shutdown of four water treatment plants, which initially left half a million people without drinking water.”
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/04/16/mexican-oil-spill-leaves-100k-without-drinking-water
Davy on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 5:49 pm
Planter, I only watch the occasional documentary. I watch nothing else.
steve on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 6:12 pm
Sorry plant…did not mean to set you up there; I was just wondering if there were any women on here as I am trying to figure why the PO message does not translate to women. Here is a long description by Tom Murphy called programmed to ignore…
http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/
When I try to talk to people the just don’t want to her anything but up…up…and away with the economy…it drives me crazy that people will not listen to peak oil…
Perk Earl on Thu, 16th Apr 2015 9:52 pm
The running joke on The Oil Drum was a ‘Yergin’ was $30. dollars, because he’d predicted so many times oil price to go not higher than, to remain at $30. a barrel.
Right you are on Yergin, Davy. Of course this paid lackey for oil industry that MSM goes to for opinions regarding oil, has never called Yergin on any of his completely inaccurate predictions. The guy is an accepted expert without scrutiny, and whatever he says is considered lore. It’s as if he is a God and the rest of us must bow in his presence, or at least that’s the demeanor of MSM.
If Bush jr. was still president with a war going on, he’d probably claim anyone cross-questioning Yergin is against the troops. That’s how ingrained he is as an accepted expert.