An eventful 2019 wraps up a decade of turmoil in oil markets, in which Brent Crude prices fluctuated from as high as US$125 a barrel in 2012 to as low as US$30 per barrel in January 2016.
Geopolitical turmoil, economic growth, soaring U.S. shale production, and OPEC’s various policies to try to set the trends in oil prices marked the decade which is drawing to a close.
The reason is that the trade war has widened an already existing and relatively manageable glut in the market from 1.0-1.5 million barrels a day (mbd) before the war to 4.0-5.0 mbd. The glut was big enough to undermine OPEC+ production cuts, nullify the impact of geopolitics and outages on prices and even absorb the loss of half of Saudi production.
The global energy scene for the next decade and the decades after will be governed by four pivotal principles.
The first principle is that there will be no post-oil era during the 21st century and probably far beyond.
The second principle is that there will be no peak oil demand either. While an increasing number of electric vehicles (EVs) on the roads coupled with government environmental legislations could decelerate the demand for oil, EVs could never replace oil in global transport throughout the 21st century and far beyond.
The third principle is that an imminent energy transition is an illusion. And the fourth principle is that oil and natural gas will continue to be the core business of the global oil industry for the foreseeable future.
Oil prices in the decade beginning with 2020 will be determined by the above factors in the long term and by the following factors in the short term.
1-An Acceleration of the slowdown in US shale oil
Baker Hughes oil rig count has been telling a story of a US shale oil industry facing a steep oil rig count decline, confirmed production slowdown, declining well productivity and investments, bankruptcies and eventual demise. 2019 was the year in which the hype around US shale oil production finally burst. The US shale oil industry will be no more in 5-10 years.
US production is over-stated by at least 2 mbd. This means that US oil production will average this year at 10.8 -11.0 mbd and around 10 mbd in 2020 and will continue to decline until its demise in 5-10 years from now.
2-Saudi oil industry Is Now Hostage to the Houthis of Yemen & Iran
If the Saudi-led war in Yemen continues in 2020, retaliatory attacks by Iran’s allies, the Houthis, might resume targeting the most sensitive oil installations particularly the Ras Tannura loading terminal, the biggest in the world. A successful attack on Ras Tannura could cripple Saudi oil exports.
3- The Trade War
The hope now is that the de-escalation of the trade war continues and ends in a permanent settlement. However, I doubt that there will ever be a permanent settlement of the trade war issue between the United States and China since the war goes far beyond trade. It is about the new world order in the 21st century and who will emerge as the dominant power in the world. Still, we could expect some truce between the two titans from which the global economy will benefit.
4-A New Nuclear Deal with Iran
There are small indications that President Trump could be inching towards a new nuclear deal with Iran.
A moment of monumental importance for US-Iran relations took place a month ago when a high-level exchange of prisoners took place in Switzerland. The exchange of prisoners is being used by the United States as a fig leaf or a face-saving format to start negotiations with Iran. However, Iran will never accept any negotiations without a lifting of US sanctions against it first.
5-OPEC+ Cuts
OPEC+ current production cuts or any cuts in the future will hardly impact oil prices until the existing glut in the market which has been widened by the trade war into an estimated 4.0-5.0 mbd starts to decline steeply on continued de-escalation of the trade war.
Meanwhile, the only impact the cuts have had so far is to reduce the market share and revenues of OPEC members. Still, OPEC will continue to exert considerable influence over the global oil market and prices well into the foreseeable future.
6-Oil Prices
Only a continued de-escalation of the trade war and continued soaring Chinese crude oil imports could enable oil prices to surge beyond $75 a barrel in 2020.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London
I am not sure of what you mean by your "three principle" : that you decided them to hold true, and believe that the heaven will listen to you ? Or that this is what you put your faith in, and would feel betrayed if they turned wrong ? I mainly suspect that you call them "principles" because you have no way to prove them !
Anyway, the only principle I know is that nobody is stupid enough to pay more to get less. When electric cars will be cheaper than ICE, they will take 100% marketshare. Due to the fall in battery price, this will happen long before 2030 - a date when charging 200 miles in 10 minutes will be routine. When solar + battery will be cheaper than oil, oil is dead as a manner of producing electricity or heat. This will also happen around 2030.
Of course, implementing the change will be slow. But before we get there, we'll know that we'll be there and BP, Total, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela will be broke.
Best,