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OPEC’s
liquidity trap
Why higher oil-production quotas won’t make a
difference
From The Economist Global Agenda
Why higher oil-production quotas won’t make a difference
At its meeting in Vienna, OPEC, the oil-exporters’ cartel, has raised
its production quotas by 1m barrels per day. But oil will flow no more
freely than before
ONLY the words of Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve,
attract closer scrutiny than the hints and whispers of oil ministers and
officials from the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC). Fed-watchers must wait until September 21st for another
interest-rate announcement to pore over. But the OPEC cartel has
provided plenty of words in recent days for its followers to hang on.
Last week, the oil minister from the United Arab Emirates said that OPEC
was likely to consider raising the formal production quotas it sets for
its members, in response to an oil price that has remained stubbornly
above $40 per barrel. At the weekend, other OPEC delegates contradicted
him, saying a rise in quotas was unlikely and a cut in production was
quite possible before next spring. But at its meeting in Vienna on
Wednesday September 15th, OPEC announced that it would raise its quotas
by 1m barrels per day (bpd), to 27m bpd, with effect from November 1st.
It also decided to meet again sooner than scheduled, agreeing to
reconvene in Cairo on December 6th.
If OPEC’s signals are even harder to read than Mr Greenspan’s at the
moment, it may be because the cartel finds itself in a position the
central banker would dread. When Mr Greenspan sets his target for the
federal funds rate, he can be sure it will be met. But when OPEC
announces an output quota, it can be quite confident the target will be
missed—the cartel is currently exceeding its official limit by as much
as 2m bpd. Even worse, OPEC’s oil output is now almost as high as it can
go. Raising quotas may thus have no discernible effect on production.
Cartels exist to place artificial constraints on supply. But the
constraints on today’s oil supply are all too real. OPEC’s members,
excluding Iraq, produced 27.5m bpd in August, according to the
International Energy Agency (IEA), which advises oil-consuming nations.
The most they could sustain with their current capacity is just 27.8m
bpd, the IEA says. Only Saudi Arabia is said to have much spare oil
ready to pump, but no one knows exactly how much, how quickly it could
be brought to market, or indeed how marketable this sulphur-heavy
variety of crude would be.
With supplies stretched this tight, any disruption or disturbance can
move the oil price: the insurrectionist sabotage of pipelines in Iraq,
the court-ordered sabotage of the Yukos oil company in Russia, or the
meteorological sabotage wreaked by Hurricane Ivan in the Mexican Gulf.
News of another fall in America’s stocks of crude added almost a dollar
to the oil price during trading on Wednesday, leaving OPEC rather
upstaged.
The organisation’s current willingness to lift quotas counts for less
than its hesitance to invest in new wells and fields. The number of
wells drilled by cartel members last year fell by 6.5% from the year
before, according to an OPEC report. This reluctance is partly explained
by fear: members recall the lessons of the early 1980s, when
overcapacity in the industry flooded the world with oil and threw the
cartel into disarray.
Complacency is also a factor. OPEC’s nationalised oil companies make
their exploration and drilling decisions on fiscal, not commercial,
principles. As long as their oil revenues are keeping the government’s
budget in surplus, they see no need to expand.
The situation should improve this year and next. Two new oilfields in
Saudi Arabia will be ready to pump 800,000 bpd by the end of September,
according to the kingdom’s oil minister. These new developments were
commissioned to replace ageing facilities elsewhere, the retirement of
which may now be postponed. Both Kuwait and Algeria will also inflate
OPEC’s supply cushion by the end of the year, according to their oil
ministers.
But the new fields and wells touted on Wednesday will still fall short
of what is needed to restore OPEC’s power over the oil price. By its own
calculations, it would now need more than 3m bpd of spare capacity to
function as a genuine swing producer, able to hold the price down as
well as push it up. Until then, the physical limits on OPEC’s oil
production will bite before the cartel’s quotas do.
If supply does not catch up with it, oil demand may falter—high prices
tend to have that effect. The world economy is already slowing. China’s
demand for oil, 6.5m bpd in the second quarter, is forecast to slip to
6.3m in the third, according to the IEA. America’s petrol consumption,
seasonally adjusted, fell by about 200,000 barrels a day between April
and July. The soft patch America’s economy is currently suffering is due
“in large measure” to the steep rise in energy prices, Mr Greenspan has
said. He has also given warning that the future balance between supply
and demand in the oil market will remain “precarious”. OPEC-watchers,
tired of poring over the cartel’s empty pronouncements, should perhaps
mark the Fed chairman’s words instead.
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