By Anatole Kaletsky December 5, 2014
Reuters
The 40
percent plunge in oil prices since July, when Brent crude peaked at $115 a
barrel, is almost certainly good news for the world economy; but it is surely a
crippling blow for oil producers. Oil prices below $70 certainly spell trouble
for U.S. and Canadian shale
and tar-sand producers and also for oil-exporting countries such as Venezuela , Nigeria ,
Mexico and Russia that
depend on inflated oil revenues to finance government spending or pay foreign
debts. On the other hand, the implications of lower oil prices for the biggest U.S. and
European oil companies are more ambiguous and could even be positive.
In fact,
the shareholders of oil majors such as Exxon, Chevron, Shell, BP and Total
could be among the biggest beneficiaries of the price slump, if it forces their
corporate managements to abandon some of the bad habits they acquired in the
40-year oil boom when OPEC first established itself as an effective cartel in
January, 1974. If this period of cartelized monopoly pricing is now ending, as Saudi Arabia
has strongly hinted in the past few weeks, then it is time to re-focus on some
basic principles of resource economics that Big Oil managements have ignored
for decades, to their shareholders’ enormous cost.
The most
important of these principles is “diminishing returns”: The more oil that
corporate geologists discover, the lower the returns their shareholders can
hope to achieve, because new reserves will almost invariably be more expensive
to develop than the ones discovered earlier that were, almost by definition,
more accessible. This inherent flaw in the oil companies’ business model was
disguised for the past 40 years by the fact that oil prices rose even faster
than the costs of exploration and production. But this is where a second
economic principle now starts to bite.
Unless a
market is totally dominated by monopoly power, prices will be set by the most
efficient supplier’s marginal costs of production – in layman’s terms, by the
cost of producing an extra barrel from oil reserves that have already been
discovered and developed. In a fully competitive market, the enormous sums of
money invested in exploring for new oil fields could not be recovered until all
lower-cost reserves ran dry and there would be no point in exploring for
anywhere outside the Middle Eastern and central Asian oilfields where the oil
is easiest to pump.
That is, of
course, an over-simplification. In the real world of geopolitical conflicts and
transport and infrastructure bottlenecks, consumers want energy security and
will pay premium prices for supplies from their own oil-fields or from those
that belong to trusted allies. Nevertheless, the broad principle applies: The
vast sums spent on exploring and developing new reserves with production costs
much higher than in Middle East oilfields will
never be recovered if the oil market becomes even vaguely competitive.
Considering
that Western companies spend about $450 billion annually on exploration and
development according to the Ernst & Young oil reserves study, this could
be one of the worst capital misallocations in history. The fact is that Western
producers can never match the costs of oil pumped by Saudi Aramco, or even
Rosneft or other state-owned companies with exclusive access to the world’s
most accessible reserves. While Exxon or BP must spend billions drilling
through Arctic ice-caps or exploring 5 miles under the Gulf
of Mexico , the Saudis can pump oil from their deserts with
machines not much more expensive than old-fashioned “nodding donkeys.”
In a
competitive market the rational strategy for Western oil companies would be
stop all exploration, while continuing to provide technology, geology and other
profitable oilfield services to the nationalised owners of readily-accessible
reserves. The vast amounts of cash generated by selling oil from existing
low-cost reserves already developed could then be distributed to shareholders
until these low-cost oilfields ran dry. This strategy of self-liquidation could
be described euphemistically as “running the business for cash” in the same way
as tobacco companies or closed insurance funds.
There are
two reasons why this hasn’t happened thus far. Firstly, OPEC has sheltered
Western oil companies from diminishing returns and marginal-cost pricing by
keeping prices artificially high through output restraint and limited expansion
of cheap Middle Eastern oilfields (strictures reinforced by wars and sanctions
in Iraq and Iran ).
Secondly, oil company managements have believed with quasi-religious fervour in
perpetually rising oil demand. Therefore finding new reserves seemed more
important than maximising cash distributions to shareholders.
The second
assumption could soon be overturned, as suggested by rumours of a takeover bid
for BP. If private equity investors could raise the $160 billion needed to buy
BP, they could liquidate for cash a company whose proven reserves of 10.05
billion barrels would be worth $350 billion even after another 50 percent price
decline.
But what of
the first condition? The Saudis would surely want to stabilize prices at some
point by limiting production, but the target prices may now be considerably
lower than previously assumed. The Saudis seem to have realised that by ceding
market share to other producers they risk allowing much of their oil to become
a worthless “stranded asset” that can never be sold or burnt. With the global
atmosphere approaching its carbon limits and technological progress gradually
reducing the price of non-fossil fuels, the Bank of England warned this week
that some of the world’s oil reserves could become “stranded assets,” with no
market value despite the huge sums sunk into the ground by oil companies, their
shareholders and banks.
The Saudis
are well aware of this risk. Back in the 1970s, Sheikh Zaki Yamani, the wily
Saudi oil minister used to warn his compatriots not to rely forever on selling
oil: “The stone age didn’t end because the cave-men ran out of stones.” Maybe
the end of the “oil age” is now approaching, and the Saudis have understood
this better than Western oil-men.
PHOTO:
Shaybah oilfield complex is seen at night in the Rub’ al-Khali desert, Saudi Arabia ,
November 14, 2007. REUTERS/ Ali Jarekji
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