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Page added on April 20, 2016

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OPEC Update

OPEC Update thumbnail

All charts are updated through March 2016

The latest OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report is out out. The charts are “Crude Only” production and do not reflect condensate production.

Also the charts, except for Libya, are not zero based. I chose to amplify the change rather than the total. OPEC is now 13 nations with the the addition of Indonesia.

All Data is in thousand barrels per day.

OPEC 13

OPEC production was up 15,000 barrels per day in March. But there has really been very little change since June of 2015.

Secondary Sources

OPEC uses secondary sources such as Platts and other agencies to report their production numbers. These numbers are pretty accurate and usually have only slight revisions month to month. The big gainer in March was Iran while the biggest loser was the UAE. Notice that the UAE says their production recovered in March, from their big drop in February. But OPEC’s “Secondary Sources” says they did not, they fell another 100,000 barrels per day.

Algeria

Algeria peaked in November 2007 and has been in a steady decline since that point.

Angola

Angola has been holding steady since peaking in 2008 and 2010.

Ecuador

Ecuador appears to have peaked last year. It is likely production will be down, but only slightly, in 2016.

Indonesia

Indonesia has shown an increase in recent months but their oil rig count has dropped from 35 in December f 2014 to 10 today. That does not bode well for their future oil production.

Iran

Sanctions were just lifted, in the middle of January, on Iran. Their production was up 208,000 barrels per day in February and another 139,000 bpd in March. I expect their production to be up by from 500 to 600 thousand barrels per day by year’s end. However I believe Iran will be the only OPEC nation with any significant production increase in 2016. Most other OPEC countries will, I believe, be flat to down slightly.

Iraq

Iraq, after first going over 4 million barrels per day in June 2015, has struggled to hole that level. I think it is very likely that Iraq has peaked, or at least peaked for several years. Iraq still depends on foreign investment to increase production and that seems to be drying up.

Kuwait

Kuwait has increased production slightly in the last three months but I don’t expect that trend to continue. Kuwait will take a huge hit in April due to the strike.

Libya

Libya is struggling. Their political problems are getting worse, not better.

Nigeria

Nigeria’s problems continue to increase. Their production dropped to 1,722,000 in March, their lowest level since August 2009.

Saudi Arabia

I believe Saudi is producing every barrel they possibly can. They will be lucky to hold this level for much longer.

Qatar

Qatar has lots of natural gas but their oil production has clearly peaked and is now in decline. Their production was unchanged in March.

UAE

I have no idea what is going on in the UAE. After peaking in January they have since dropped 227,000 barrels per day.

Venezuela

Not much can be said about Venezuela. Their conventional oil is in decline but their bitumen production is keeping production relatively flat. But their political and economic problems are getting worse. I look for them to suffer serious declines in the next year or so.

OPEC World Oil Supply

According to OPEC, World oil production peaked, so far, in November of 2015. I look for this downward trend to continue for at least the next two years.

Peak Oil Barrel



9 Comments on "OPEC Update"

  1. makati1 on Wed, 20th Apr 2016 8:47 pm 

    The latest lies from OPEC.

  2. Survivalist on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 2:41 am 

    standby for air conditioning season and Saudi Arabia consuming and extra million barrels a day.

    http://www.wsj.com/articles/as-saudis-keep-pumping-thirst-for-domestic-oil-swells-1435786552

  3. shortonoil on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 8:28 am 

    “The latest lies from OPEC.”

    Banks lie, big corporations lie, governments lie all the time about everything, but for some bizarre reason no one lies about oil production? It must be because it’s a magical substance put here by Santa’s elves!

  4. marmico on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 9:43 am 

    According to OPEC, World oil production peaked, so far, in November of 2015. I look for this downward trend to continue for at least the next two years.

    Patterson is merely another on the long list of Chicken Little Peakers. He is just blindly following the likes of Colin “ASPO” Campbell into dotage.

  5. PracticalMaina on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 9:57 am 

    Non-OPEC is set to fall hard, according the the IEA.
    http://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-oil-idUSKCN0XI03V

    I think we are at the peak, the money required to get non opec production back up and gaining would force energy prices to high, it would both depress economic activity extensively, and somewhat (how much is open for debate) force people into alternative transportation. Limiting a price increase and preventing more fracking and tar sands.

  6. PracticalMaina on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 9:59 am 

    *too high.

  7. shortonoil on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 12:28 pm 

    According to OPEC, World oil production peaked, so far, in November of 2015. I look for this downward trend to continue for at least the next two years.”

    Increases in conventional crude production have been abysmal for the the last decade, and that was during an era when oil averaged $78/ barrel. Between 2005 and 2014 conventional production increased at an average annual rate of 0.43% per year, compared to the 1960 to 2005 rate of 5.43%. CapEx in this low priced environment has fallen by 25 to 35%; there is now no chance of any substantial increase in production by any major producer.

    The main increases that have be publicized by the industry, and the media have been in NGLs and very light LTOs. Neither add significantly to the production of fuels. If prices do not increase substantially in the very near future (and they can’t, and won’t) world production can not increase past its present level, but will begin to fall rapidly as existing fields go into decline!

    http://www.thehillsgroup.org/

  8. Boat on Thu, 21st Apr 2016 1:39 pm 

    short

    http://www.indexmundi.com/energy.aspx

    More recent history shows a mb/d to be steady growth. Try 1990 to 2005 and compare 2010 to 2015.

    ps,

    World production will drop because drilling crews have been taken offline. Why? Big ass glut. Since 2014 the glut grew in spite of 1+ million consumption growth.

  9. Kenz300 on Sat, 23rd Apr 2016 8:49 am 

    Endless growth is not sustainable…………

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