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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
Needed: three
1-billion-barrel oil banks
By GAL LUFT
The oil market is losing its shock absorbers.
It's too early to celebrate the recent decline in oil prices after they
nearly hit $50 a barrel. None of the reasons that created the price
spike -- the strong thirst for crude in China and India, the
dismemberment of the Russian oil giant Yukos, the terror strikes against
oil facilities in the Middle East -- has gone away. Like the hurricane
season in Florida, the oil market may be facing even more violent
storms. ADVERTISEMENT
The lesson from the recent price jump is that the oil market has too
little wiggle room to deal with supply disruptions. We have been told
for years that such disruptions could be offset by the spare capacity of
the 11-member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries -- the
ability of some producers, chiefly Saudi Arabia, to inject extra oil
into the market when other suppliers falter.
This spare capacity has been the oil market's main source of liquidity.
In 2002, spare capacity amounted to nearly 10 percent of the 76 million
barrel-a-day global oil market. A year later, with demand climbing to 78
million barrels, spare capacity dropped to about 5 percent. This cushion
was sufficient to prevent an oil crisis when a labor strike in
Venezuela, ethnic riots in Nigeria and a war in Iraq took major
producers out of the market for extended periods.
Now, mainly because of an increase in demand in Asia, OPEC is called on
to supply more crude than expected, biting into its spare capacity,
which has dropped to the dangerous level of 2 percent.
Despite Saudi Arabia's reassurance that it possesses an immediately
available spare capacity of 1.3 million barrels a day and is
accelerating plans to bring new oil fields into production, this is all
too little, too late. Demand for OPEC crude will rise by at least 2
million barrels a day by the end of next year, and production from new
fields might take a long time to be brought online.
At the same time, no oil-producing country outside of OPEC seems to be
willing to create new spare capacity by investing billions of dollars in
oil infrastructure that would sit idle most of the time. At about $45 a
barrel, oil countries prefer to cash in as many petrodollars by
producing at full throttle.
As a result, the oil market today resembles a car without shock
absorbers: The tiniest bump on the road can send a passenger to the
ceiling.
Worse, seven of the world's top 14 oil-exporting countries face some
degree of domestic unrest. Any disruption -- whether a terror attack
against a major Saudi oil installation, sabotage operations by
insurgents against Iraq's southern pipelines, a violent clash in the
Niger Delta, a business scandal in Russia or a new wave of protests in
Venezuela -- could send tremors through the global economy. Iran and
Algeria also are considered unstable oil producers.
Even natural disasters -- such as Hurricane Ivan, which caused the
evacuation of oil-drilling wells in the Gulf of Mexico and cut U.S. oil
production by at least a million barrels a day -- could have a
significant impact on prices in such a stretched market. [Last Thursday
the federal government agreed to lend oil from the SPR to a handful of
refineries to make up for the shortfall caused by Hurricane Ivan. The
companies will be required to repay the reserve with oil once supply
conditions return to normal].
Without liquidity, only one mechanism is left to bring the market to
equilibrium: rapid and uncontrolled price increases.
But there is another way.
To compensate for the erosion in OPEC's spare capacity, major oil
consuming countries should take steps to insulate their economies from
supply disruptions by creating liquidity mechanisms of their own.
At its current capacity of 700 million barrels, the U.S. Strategic
Petroleum Reserve, or SPR, barely suffices to tide the U.S. economy over
if there is a severe disruption of oil supplies.
If a further drawdown would be required to stabilize the oil market due
to additional disruptions -- only last week a rebel commander in Nigeria
threatened to attack oil wells and pipelines unless the army halted an
offensive there -- it might be perceived by the public in these
pre-election days as a political gimmick on President Bush's part.
However, were the SPR expanded beyond its current capacity, and were
Europe and Asia encouraged to establish similarly large oil banks, the
SPR could serve as a liquidity mechanism to replace that of OPEC's
capacity.
While certainly costly in the short term, expanding each of the U.S.,
European and Asian strategic reserves to contain 1 billion barrels would
have the long-term benefit of keeping the market liquid. The stored oil
could be released at will to compensate for supply reductions.
An expanded SPR also would signal to OPEC that the oil weapon can no
longer be used against oil-consuming countries.
How to stabilize the oil market should be the focus of the presidential
debate onenergy.
Sen. John F. Kerry's energy plan criticizes the Bush administration for
diverting oil from the market to fill the SPR. This, according to
Democrats, has a negative impact on consumers.
They may be right, but it is unclear how Kerry plans to mitigate the
impact of price spikes.
Pouring billions into an Energy Security and Conservation Trust Fund and
a Hydrogen Institute, as Kerry suggests, would not do the job in the
short term.
There is much to be done to make the world less dependent on oil
originating from unstable parts of the world by building more efficient
automobiles and producing next-generation fuels to power them. But this
will take many years.
In the interim, the world economy should not be at the mercy of oil
kamikazes determined to go for its jugular and unstable countries.
Building a robust oil bank and managing it responsibly is the only
short-term mechanism to bring about stability at gas stations.
Without such a mechanism, $50 a barrel for oil could well become a fond
memory.
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