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OPEC, Russia and Iraq
Moscow Times ^ | September 25, 2002 | Chris Weafer

Posted on 09/27/2002 12:45:30 PM PDT by Shermy

In September 1960, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries was born at a conference in Baghdad. Over the following 42 years it has managed to avoid serious retaliation for operating the most significant pricing cartel the world has ever known, as well as frequent threats to its unity resulting from internal differences and disputes.

However, over the next 12 to 24 months it faces one of the most critical, and potentially dangerous, periods in its existence. A combination of having sustained the average oil price at too high a level for too long coupled with the aftermath of a likely second Gulf war may have an explosive effect on OPEC.

The global oil industry has thrived due to OPEC interventions in the oil market, and the only reason why Russia's economy still has a future is because of the supply reduction decision taken by OPEC in March 1999.

After several years of allowing uncontrolled supply growth among its members that brought the oil price down toward $10 per barrel, the decision to cut supply to just below demand and to continue cutting supply over the following three years forced a sharp price recovery, which led directly to both the recovery in the Russian economy and funded the growth in Russian oil production. This growth in oil production has certainly frustrated OPEC, but the war premium (currently about $8 per barrel) in the oil price over the past 12 months has prevented a more serious confrontation between OPEC and Russia.

Far from celebrating the fact that Russian oil companies are taking market share from OPEC countries, market participants and the Russian government should be praying for the survival of OPEC in order to avoid the supply free-for-all and price collapse that would be the inevitable legacy of its destruction.

Looking at the history of oil prices, there are several periods when the price has been sustained well above the average, and this has always been followed by a comparable period when the price has been below the average. The equation is relatively simple: High oil prices lead to increased competition, while encouraging substitution and conservation among consumers. This usually coincides with intensified internal squabbling among OPEC member states and an increase in quota cheating. And these factors historically have led to a fall in oil prices. Then the cycle starts again, almost irrespective of global demand.

Saudi Arabia tried to break this "boom-bust" cycle 20 years ago (when Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani was oil minister and Faisal was king) in favor of a "fair" price negotiated with the United States but found no support from other members who, even today, dispute Saudi Arabia's dominant role in OPEC. However, Saudi Arabia, with the largest quota share and over 50 percent of OPEC's total spare capacity, plays a critical role in supply restraint, and without its willingness to be the "swing-producer," it is certain that all current OPEC countries will follow the example of non-OPEC producers and turn the taps full on.

The threat of a second Gulf war, and the political and economic consequences such a war could have for the Middle East and Gulf countries, mean that a lot more is at stake for OPEC than at any other time in its history. It may have to deal with accommodating a rehabilitated "post-Saddam" Iraq in OPEC's quota structure. In addition, Saudi Arabia's attitude toward the United States may have to change to ensure the survival of the ruling House of Saud.

Iraq is currently thought to be producing about 1.6 million barrels per day against a capacity of about 3 million barrels per day. Assuming there is no significant destruction of oil facilities, a post-Saddam Iraq can be expected to increase exports toward capacity, and OPEC countries would have no choice but to allow this.

Iraq has made no significant expenditures on its oil infrastructure since the start of its war against Iran in the 1980s. Many industry observers now assume that the current proven oil reserves of 113 billion barrels (last validated 20 years ago) will be increased to around 250 billion barrels once access is allowed for modern exploration techniques. Iraq should be able to increase daily production to 4.5 million barrels relatively quickly based on current proven reserves and eventually to over 10 million barrels if the higher reserve base is proven.

The only way that Iraq can increase oil exports to capacity without making the oil price collapse is if Saudi Arabia can persuade other OPEC members to agree to a pro rata reduction or, more likely, if it is willing to bear the brunt of the required reduction itself. Although Saudi Arabia doubled its daily output just after the first Gulf War, it will not be easy for it to reduce output significantly now due to internal budget constraints resulting from high defence, social and debt service costs.

The other important factor is the attitude of the United States. The United States is the largest oil importer in the world (importing about 12 million barrels of its 20 million barrel daily usage) and, as such, it could quite happily live with the disintegration of OPEC as a major beneficiary of the resulting supply free-for-all and price collapse.

This year, consumer countries will depend on OPEC supplies for 36.5 percent of total requirements. Within five years, assuming long-term average growth in demand, that dependency will rise to roughly 40 percent and within 10 years, to over 50 percent. Thus, it is easy to see why major consumer countries are getting more nervous about future supply dependency. If current trends continue, within 20 years the world will be completely dependent on OPEC and Russian/CIS oil. This is a compelling reason to neutralize the cartel before it becomes even more powerful.

Of course, the oil industry has a very powerful lobby in Washington, and cheaper oil is definitely not in its best long-term interest. What is in its best long-term interest is access to Iraqi reserves and a stable, predictable supply and price regime under a more compliant OPEC structure. Failing that, having control through a friendly regime of the probable 250 billion barrels of Iraqi oil reserves provides a very considerable cushion against the growing risk of regime change in Saudi Arabia.

The Russian economy is still in transition and still very dependent on oil despite the progress of the past three years. The economy should not be expected to move away from oil dependency in any meaningful way until there is a substantial increase in investments to sectors other than oil and gas. This is unlikely to happen until well into President Vladimir Putin's (probable) second term in office, i.e. no earlier than in three to four years time. In the meantime, what happens to Iraq and OPEC is of critical importance to the Russian economy.

The ideal outcome for Russia is exactly the same as that for Saudi Arabia and OPEC, i.e. maintenance of the status quo and the sanctions regime on Iraqi oil. Thus, Russia's opposition to a U.S. invasion of Iraq is completely rational.

It would be an irony indeed if events in Baghdad this winter were to signal the end of the modern oil era and OPEC, just as 42 years ago they saw its start.

Chris Weafer is an adviser to OPEC on the Russian economy and until recently was head of research at Troika Dialog. He contributed this comment to The Moscow Times.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Russia
KEYWORDS: iraq; opec; russia; saudiarabia

1 posted on 09/27/2002 12:45:30 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Mitchell; marron

"The ideal outcome for Russia is exactly the same as that for Saudi Arabia and OPEC, i.e. maintenance of the status quo and the sanctions regime on Iraqi oil. Thus, Russia's opposition to a U.S. invasion of Iraq is completely rational."

Less oil from country "x", country "y's" oil becomes more valuable. This is especially true in a cartel market, where even those outside the cartel cooperate (Russia somewhat, Norway, Mexico)

Sanctions and pipeline bombings easier to do that backroom negotiations at OPEC meetings...I'd bet those can get hairy!

This article is an example of OPEC's effort at the time to change Russian thinking about increasing exports and become stronger against the Iraq war - despite US promises about debt payments and such.

BTW, Fegelhauer (?) at Moscow Times commented later that this was the reason for Putin's strong opposition to the war - though he didn't know at the time of the Al Mada oil voucher list!

This sure is a lonely thread... :)


2 posted on 06/19/2004 2:14:39 PM PDT by Shermy
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Moscow Times February 25, 2003

"Russia is not interested in the start of a war," said Sergei Markov, a Kremlin-connected political analyst.

Russia has long feared that a U.S. strike could open up Iraq's vast oil patch, leading to a sharp drop in oil prices.

Russia has also been attempting to secure the stakes of its oil majors in Iraq ahead of a possible regime change. Oil industry sources said Friday that Energy Minister Igor Yusufov was planning a secret visit to Baghdad this week in an attempt to seal new oil field contracts with Iraq, Reuters reported.



November 14, 2002

Deferent and Defiant Putin

Pavel Felgenhauer


After many months of protests, Russia approved an Anglo-American UN Security Council resolution that will apparently soon serve as legal backing for a U.S. -led military intervention to oust Saddam Hussein. Other long-time critics of U.S. plans of regime change in Iraq -- France, China and Syria -- also voted yes. But of all those nations, Russia has most to lose if an American viceroy replaces Hussein in Baghdad. Syria is an Arab nation that has for decades been one of Hussein's worst enemies and in 1991 sent two armored divisions to help evict the Iraqis from Kuwait. The fall of Hussein and the disintegration of his regime would surely be applauded in Damascus.

France and China have profited in recent years, by selling Iraqi oil on contracts granted by Hussein. But if, as many experts predict, the fall of Hussein and the opening of Iraq triggers a serious fall in oil prices, France and China may benefit as their oil import bills shrink.

Russia will surely lose either way. It will no longer have Hussein's oil export contracts, while low oil prices will wreck its budget. Of course, Moscow cannot stop regime change in Iraq. Still, unlike the French, the Russians did not participate seriously in the wrangling in the UN to try to defend their vital national interests. It seems Iraq is fully off the Kremlin radar screen, while Chechnya and the aftermath of the Moscow hostage-taking fully absorb President Vladimir Putin's attention.


3 posted on 06/19/2004 2:29:00 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Shermy
This sure is a lonely thread... :)

Out for a drive...

From the article:

The global oil industry has thrived due to OPEC interventions in the oil market,

The writer has fallen for OPEC's PR. OPEC controls nothing. As the article itself points out, they are responsible for only a third of the world's production, and the members of OPEC themselves cheat on their declared quotas, meaning that they do not control the price of oil, the can't even control their own production levels. Production levels are controlled by internal political and business considerations. Successful countries are struggling despite what they say to double production, and countries like Iran and Venezuela are doing well just to meet their quotas; actually Venezuela can't meet their quota so OPEC announces a production cut, as if it were a decision taken rather than just the acknowledgement of reality.

and the only reason why Russia's economy still has a future is because of the supply reduction decision taken by OPEC in March 1999.

The writer is delusional.

several years of allowing uncontrolled supply growth among its members that brought the oil price down toward $10 per barrel

Actually, recession in Asia caused the price of oil to tumble. The recovery of the Asian economies, especially the increasing industrial activity in China, coupled with Venezuela's inability to produce, has tightened up oil supplies.

, having control through a friendly regime of the probable 250 billion barrels of Iraqi oil reserves...

To this writer a commercial relationship and paying market prices is "having control".

...provides a very considerable cushion against the growing risk of regime change in Saudi Arabia.

Removing sanctions will create the cushion we need to reduce the importance of Saudi oil, whatever happens to the regime. Removing sanctions could have been done without removing Saddam, if oil were the only consideration.

It would be an irony indeed if events in Baghdad this winter were to signal the end of the modern oil era and OPEC

OPEC is not the oil industry. They have never had the kind of control over the oil market that the press has attributed to them. But a friendly government in Baghdad eliminates most of our need for Saudi basing and Saudi diplomatic support, which has been proved to be unreliable in any event.

This is what the events in Baghdad have done; they have exposed the fact that the Saudis are not much more reliable than the French, and they have ended our reliance on them. We don't need them any more.

That fact alone is sending shockwaves through the region.

As for OPEC, most new oil is non-OPEC. New Iraqi oil is coming on stream, unless the guerrillas can stop it. Caspian oil is ramping up by double digits per year. Russian oil is increasing by double digits. New African oil is on its way to market.

OPEC's only relevance is their fictional ability to control the markets but it is China's growing economy and the world's economic cycles in general that has more effect on fuel prices than anything OPEC does.

It is not a coincidence, though, that guerrilla attacks focused on oil infrastructure, and environmental obstruction of new energy development, are restricted to non-OPEC countries. You will never find Friends of the Earth worrying about critters in Iran endangered by a new pipeline. And you won't find Al Qaeda attacking Iranian oil pumping stations. They will be attacking Iraqi pipelines, and I expect to see the PKK reactivated to go after Baku Ceyhan. "Friends of the Earth" will organize and incite uprisings and lawsuits to stop latin american pipelines outside of Venezuela, while ignoring new Venezuelan oil projects.

4 posted on 06/19/2004 9:58:59 PM PDT by marron
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To: Fedora

"The ideal outcome for Russia is exactly the same as that for Saudi Arabia and OPEC, i.e. maintenance of the status quo and the sanctions regime on Iraqi oil. Thus, Russia's opposition to a U.S. invasion of Iraq is completely rational."


5 posted on 06/29/2004 6:02:56 PM PDT by Shermy
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To: Shermy
20M barrels/day @ $35/barrel = $256 BILLION/year spent on oil. A $10/barrel drop in oil prices saves us $73B/year

The long-term interests of the US dictate that we shift towards nuke power and energy independence

6 posted on 06/29/2004 6:18:39 PM PDT by SauronOfMordor (That which does not kill me had better be able to run away damn fast.)
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To: Shermy

Thanks! That's interesting.


7 posted on 06/29/2004 6:43:59 PM PDT by Fedora (Smeagol-Gollum 2004: "We can be our own VP, my Precious")
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