Posted on 10/14/2013 4:45:55 AM PDT by thackney
The Gulf states are producing more oil than ever before, defying expectations that the US shale revolution would break their 40-year grip on the global oil market and diminish their importance to the worlds consuming nations.
Surging production in North America is expected to eat into the market for oil from Opec. But the quartet of Gulf kingdoms that dominate the cartel of oil exporters have so far emerged unscathed. Instead, they have expanded their share of the world market as political and social factors have reduced production from a number other members.
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar set aggregate production records in each of the last three months, according to fresh estimates from the International Energy Agency. In September they accounted for 18 per cent of global demand a level only matched twice in IEA data stretching back to the 1980s.
Despite the shale revolution, the Middle East is and will remain the heart of global oil industry for some time to come, Fatih Birol, the IEAs chief economist said.
US crude oil production has increased by 50 per cent since 2008 and the country is expected to meet the lions share of the worlds growing demand over the next five years. But while US companies tend to maximise production to generate more profits, the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia in particular invest heavily to maintain spare capacity.
That has allowed them to raise production to offset a run of disruptions across the Middle East and Africa in the last two years. US-led sanctions have reduced Iranian production by 1m barrels a day since the start of last year, while civil unrest has returned this summer to Libya and crude oil theft increased in Nigeria.
As a result Gulf states are capturing more of the fast growing Asian market. India imported 44 per cent of its crude from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE in July, up from 36 per cent in 2011, while China relies on the countries for a quarter of its imports compared to 21 per cent in 2007.
A rapid return to production among other Opec members, for example through a resolution to Irans nuclear standoff with the US, could yet leave the Gulf states exposed to the US shale revolution. And some analysts argue that Opec could yet need to discuss production cuts when its oil ministers next meet in Vienna in December.
The record output has provided a windfall for the oil-dependent monarchies. The 16.4m barrels a day produced by the four states during the third quarter was worth more than $150bn at todays prices of more than $100 a barrel.
The principal beneficiaries have been Saudi Arabia, which has increased output more than 10 per cent since the start of the year to a record of 10.19m b/d in August, and the UAE where the 2.77m b/d produced in September was a record, and 7 per cent higher than at the start of the year. Kuwait has also set a series of production records this year, but Qatar has been unable to raise production significantly.
It also means the region remains crucial to the worlds major powers. The US continues to import almost 60m barrels a month from the Gulf, a number that has actually increased in the last three years even as US imports overall have fallen.
Would this cause a glut of oil on the world’s markets ? tank the price of oil ?
Since this already happen, we know the answer is no.
Global demand has been rising as well.
The Chinese and other Asian markets would take up the slack... correct ?
That has allowed them to raise production to offset a run of disruptions across the Middle East and Africa in the last two years. US-led sanctions have reduced Iranian production by 1m barrels a day since the start of last year, while civil unrest has returned this summer to Libya and crude oil theft increased in Nigeria.
Much of the up in production was offsetting lower production mentioned in this paragraph.
-——defying expectations that the US shale revolution would break their 40-year grip on the global oil market——
Was there any such expectation? I don’t think the oil flowing east from the Gulf would be curtailed.
There was expectation that the USA market would be lost, but not the rest of the world, at least not in the short term
It means more global warming.
I don't think there has been the expectation OPEC would end. But as their production becomes a smaller percentage of the total, their ability to effect pricing with production quota's becomes more difficult.
It does not appear the data matched the title. While folks might have been expecting a big rise, this is not a big drop. I don't see the value in making headlines over month to month changes while ignoring the overall trend.
China passed the United States in September as the worlds biggest net oil importer, driven by faster economic growth and strong auto sales, according to U.S. government data released this week.
Chinese oil consumption outstripped production by 6.3 million barrels per day, which indicates the country had to import that much to fill the gap, the Energy Information Administration said this week.
Chinas steady growth in oil demand has led it to become the worlds largest net oil importer, exceeding the United States in September 2013, the agency said in a report. EIA forecasts this trend to continue through 2014.
http://fuelfix.com/blog/2013/10/10/data-show-china-passing-us-as-biggest-oil-importer/
I think the response is going to depend upon the cause and expected duration, just like it would for us. China has a crude oil strategic reserve, but smaller than ours. Short of World War 3, it is unlikely of many of their sources to be shut down for an extended period of time.
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