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Page added on February 23, 2016

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OPEC Unsure How It Can ‘Live Together’ With Shale Oil

Production

OPEC and U.S. shale may need a relationship counselor.

After first ignoring it, later worrying about it and ultimately launching a price war against it, OPEC has now concluded it doesn’t know how to coexist with the U.S. shale oil industry.

“Shale oil in the United States, I don’t know how we are going to live together,” Abdalla Salem El-Badri, OPEC secretary-general, told a packed room of industry executives from Texas and North Dakota at the annual IHS CERAWeek meeting in Houston.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which controls about 40 percent of global oil production, has never had to deal with an oil supply source that can respond as rapidly to price changes as U.S. shale, El-Badri said. That complicates the cartel’s ability to prop up prices by reducing output.

“Any increase in price, shale will come immediately and cover any reduction,” he said.

Shale Output

The International Energy Agency earlier on Monday gave OPEC reason to worry about shale oil, saying that total U.S. crude output, most of it from shale basins, will increase by 1.3 million barrels a day from 2015 to 2021 despite low prices. While U.S. production from shale is projected to retreat by 600,000 barrels a day this year and a further 200,000 in 2017, it will grow again from 2018 onward, the IEA said.

“Anybody who believes that we have seen the last of rising” U.S. shale oil production “should think again,” the IEA said in its medium-term report.

John Hess, chief executive officer of one of the largest lease-holders in North Dakota’s Bakken shale region, said shale might not respond as quickly as OPEC fears. There are logistical hurdles involved with returning enough rigs and workers back to the oil patch to start growing production again, in addition to financial hurdles.

“The balance sheets of shale producers are in disrepair,” said Hess, whose company recently reported its first annual loss in 13 years. “They’ve got to heal their balance sheets before they will start investing again.

OPEC launched a price war against U.S. shale and other high-cost producers, including Canadian oil sands and Brazilian deep-water oilfields, in November 2014 by not reducing output despite a global oversupply. Since then, oil prices have plunged by more than half, hitting a 12-year low of about $26 on Feb. 11.

In a rare admission that the policy hasn’t worked out as planned, El-Badri said that OPEC didn’t expect oil prices to drop this much when it decided to keep pumping near flat-out.

Strategy Shift

OPEC’s strategy began to shift last week, when the oil ministers of Saudi Arabia and Russia agreed to freeze their output at the January level, provided other oil-rich countries joined. El-Badri said the new policy will be evaluated in three to four months before deciding whether to take other steps.

“This is the first step to see what we can achieve,” he said. “If this is successful, we will take other steps in the future.” He refused to explain what steps OPEC could take.

El-Badri said low oil prices have caused companies to cut too much spending on developing new output, which could plant the seed for “a very high price” in the future.

“The concern is no investment now, no supply in the future. It’s as simple as that,” he said. “If there’s no supply coming to the market, prices will go up.”

Bloomberg



6 Comments on "OPEC Unsure How It Can ‘Live Together’ With Shale Oil"

  1. JuanP on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 11:00 am 

    The Evil Empire has the world in a death grip, http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/02/23/the-evil-empire-has-the-world-in-a-death-grip/

  2. Plantagenet on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 11:14 am 

    Tight Oil Shale has the desert kingdom in a death grip as shown by the current oil glut.

    Cheers!

  3. Dredd on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 11:17 am 

    They will die together even if the learn to live together.

  4. Kenz300 on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 1:16 pm 

    Fossil fuels are poisoning the air, land and water we all need to survive.

    Climate Change is real…… we need to deal with the cause (fossil fuels)

    100% electric transportation and 100% solar by 2030
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBkND76J91k

  5. dave thompson on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 3:08 pm 

    Shale fracking and the products it produces are not comparable to the conventional oil that OPEC produces. Just plain dumb comparison. This article is more US oil patch propaganda.

  6. rockman on Tue, 23rd Feb 2016 4:29 pm 

    It’s such a shame OPEC can’t figure out how to deal with the current 4.83 mm bopd coming from the US shales after it so cleverly figured out how to deal with the 10.14 mm bopd the Russians produce. Especially since the US is still a net importer/buyer of oil and Russia is a net EXPORTER/SELLER of oil.

    I really don’t think that most who write this garbage are really that dumb. They get paid to write and they only get paid if someone buys their crap. And since the news consuming public is so ignorant of even the basic facts (such as Russia is THE oil exporter competing with the KSA) they’ll believe such utter bullshit.

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