The Denver Post

Saudi Arabia output hurts oil investment

- By Julian Lee

It’s just become a lot harder to make long-term investment decisions in the oil industry. And no, I’m not talking about the need to transition to a low-carbon economy, or the backlash from climate activists and investors. Any veneer of certainty about the future path of oil prices has evaporated.

This is the second time in six years that Saudi Arabia has embarked on a pump-at-will oil production policy that has hammered prices. Whether it’s aimed at Russia or the U.S. shale sector, producers everywhere — from OPEC members such as Angola to corporate behemoths like Exxon Mobil Corp. — have been warned that they can no longer count on the kingdom to keep a floor under oil prices. And that will impact decisions on future investment­s around the world.

Even if the de facto leader of OPEC steps back from its threat to boost oil supply by more than 2.5 million barrels a day next month, which seems unlikely, Saudi Arabia has shown that it is willing to use its production capacity as a weapon — not to restrict supply and raise prices, but to boost it and crash them. That introduces a whole new challenge for would-be investors in oil projects that might have a lifespan of decades and even for those in the U.S. shale patch, where initial investment­s can be recouped much more quickly.

Oil at $30 a barrel, or even at $20, won’t stop most fields that are already in production from pumping, no matter where they are. Some will certainly be in peril, but they are not the huge high-cost deep-water projects beneath the waters of the Atlantic Ocean or in the Arctic. The most vulnerable will be the socalled “stripper wells” in the U.S. that pump less than 15 barrels of crude a day. They accounted for 10% of all U.S. production in 2015, but their importance has diminished as production from shale deposits has boomed.

As long as prices remain above the cost of getting the next barrel out of the ground — the lifting cost — wells already in operation will keep pumping. And those costs can be pretty low. Saudi Aramco, the monopoly oil producer in Saudi Arabia, boasts an extraction cost of about $2.80 a barrel, according to the prospectus for last year’s initial public offering of its shares. Russia’s oil companies are not far behind, with Rosneft PJSC, Gazprom Neft and Lukoil PJSC all reporting production costs below $4 a barrel.

The supermajor­s including Exxon and Royal Dutch Shell Plc face higher bills. But even for them the cost of pumping oil and gas from fields already in production is below $15 a barrel before taxes. That suggests that there will be no rush to halt flows in the face of the Saudi surge.

Even if prices do fall below lifting costs, the expense of shutting down a field may make it more economical to keep it running at a loss for a while in the hope that they pick up again, particular­ly as the cost of restarting production later may be prohibitiv­ely expensive.

That’s not to say that some current output isn’t at risk if oil prices continue to fall. Projects in Canada face greater uncertaint­y than those elsewhere, with pre-tax operating costs of existing production around $20 a barrel. Outside of the U.S. stripper wells, this may be the first place to look for production being halted on economic grounds.

Shale production will also be hit, as a slowdown in drilling and completion combines with steep decline rates at new wells. The Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion cut its forecast for U.S. crude production in its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, published last week. It now sees output peaking at 13.2 million barrels a day in April and pegs December 2020 production back where it was at the end of last year, hastening the end of the second shale boom.

What will suffer across the board, however, is spending on maintainin­g flow rates of current production and investment in new projects. The impact of the former could be felt by the summer, if maintenanc­e programs at offshore fields are scaled back.

But production costs mean little when it comes to deciding whether to invest in new capacity — even in Saudi Arabia. And it’s the aversion to new investment­s triggered by the price collapse that will have a much longer-term impact, potentiall­y sending prices soaring again in the future.

Even if the kingdom backs away from its pump-at-will policy, the threat of a repeat will continue to hang over the industry. The Saudi safety net, which the global oil industry has come to take for granted, has just been ripped away. Julian Lee, oil strategist for Bloomberg First Word, previously worked as a senior analyst at the Centre for Global Energy Studies.

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