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Today’s Stunted Oil Prices Could Cause Oil Price Shock In 2020

by Haley Zaremba for Oilprice.com

As oil prices remain unsteady and OPEC continues to make headlines every hour, the world is focused on oil’s immediate future. As Saudi Arabia announces plans to slash production and move their economy away from oil dependency, many industry insiders are predicting that the now over-saturated market will reach an equilibrium with higher commodity prices by 2018 and U.S. shale production will continue to grow along with global demand.

Robert Johnston, the CEO of one of the world’s biggest political risk consultancies, is unconvinced. In a speech made at the Association of International Petroleum Negotiators’ 2017 International Petroleum Summit, Johnston laid out his concerns for the future of oil.

What I don’t hear people asking is, ‘then what?’ Are the Saudis going to maintain these production cuts forever, or at some point do they have to start reversing that? I think in 2018 they will be reversing those production cuts,” he said. These important questions aren’t getting enough attention according to Johnston, whose firm Eurasia Group foresees a fast-approaching supply gap that Saudi Arabia and U.S. oil may not be able to fill.

Eurasia Group forecasts about 7 million barrels per day (MMbbl/d) of new crude supply by 2022. This includes about 5 MMbbl/d of U.S. shale growth and about 2 MMbbl/d from oil sands and deepwater extraction. But by the year 2022, another 15 MMbbl/d of new supply may be needed, as demand trends predict an annual growth rate of about 1 MMbbl/d. With this kind of impending discrepancy between supply and demand, the industry needs to start looking for new sources of oil, and quickly.

Despite the recent dip in oil prices, industry experts have been predicting a supply-gap and rising oil prices for years. This is due in large part to an oil investment drought marked by two year of consecutive decline, a statistic that has no precedent in the oil industry. This year a report by the International Energy Agency concluded that if oil investment remains stagnant over the next few years, by 2020 we will see a significant increase in the price of oil as global demand continues to climb.

The IEA’s Executive Director Fatih Birol addressed these findings in a keynote address at the Atlantic Council Global Energy Forum in Abu Dhabi in January, announcing that no major oil projects were started in the last year and there were zero large oil discoveries “because there is no money for exploration. You find something if you look for it,” Birol said.

The potential supply gap has far-reaching implications that we are not ready to combat. Gas and oil are still fundamental to much of the world’s infrastructure, despite a steady increase of research and utilization of renewable energy resources. While electric cars continue to show a promising future, especially in the light of ambitious new green car policy initiatives in India and China, they still account for less than 2 percent of the world’s cars. And, as the global middle class continues to grow and exercise their buying power, the demand for oil will continue to grow alongside them.

The oil industry desperately needs new sources of oil, and they need new investors and technologies to find those sources quickly. There are currently a wide variety of techniques employed to find new deposits (seismic prospecting, well logging, gravity surveying, magnetic prospecting, and geochemical prospecting, etc.) but these are all methods with significant limitations in their ability to accurately estimate the size of new oil and gas deposits.

Many companies, including oil giant BP, have begun efforts to develop of artificial intelligence programs with algorithms that will allow them to find and drill with unprecedented accuracy in the future, but the technology is not yet ready. We can only hope that it will be ready by 2020 or that the IEA is wrong in their predictions.

Link to original article: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/US-Shale-Is-Immune-To-An-Oil-Price-Crash-In-2017.html

Comments

Roy_H

" And, as the global middle class continues to grow and exercise their buying power, the demand for oil will continue to grow alongside them."

Wrong, these new customers will buy EVs.

81Winfield

Most people forget that most plastics are oil products.
Therefore, as a growing middle class consumes more "stuff", the demand from them for oil-based products will also grow.

What the offset will be in oil consumption for transportation and energy production is what the debate is really about.

SJC

Modern agriculture depends on oil and fossil fuels for pesticides, herbicides and fertilizer. The crop yields we get today depend on it.

Brent Jatko

Roy H makes a good point here.

gorr

As i said before, the success do not depend on battery but efficient use of gas in low cost serial hybrid cars and big trucks where exhaust pressure and heat add-up to the main impedance system.

mahonj

"as the global middle class continues to grow".
The global middle class will hopefully grow, but they won't be able to afford EVs for some time, so I would expect them to use mainly ICE cars for the next 10-20 years.

[ I'd like to be proved wrong ]

Maybe when all the battery factories come on stream we'll be up to our chins in LiIon batteries and the cost of EVs will dramatically fall.
Then, you need a way to charge them from grids which may not have that much margin. Maybe they'll put in loads of solar and charge them during the day. All you need for that is a lot of charging stations at workplaces and shopping malls.
[ Not impossible by any means ]

Brent Jatko

mahonj has a good point.

I'd like to add that the spike in oil prices may happen around the same time as the cost of batteries (and therefore EVs) starts to fall below parity with gasmobiles.

That could lead to a true "tipping point."

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