The next thing that will happen in Iraq if protesters’ demands aren’t met is this: They will target oil facilities--the only thing that will force any major change, and indeed, the root cause of protests that have gone beyond anything Iraq has ever seen.
It is a possible scenario that should be on every oil trader’s radar, and has the potential to move oil prices more than President Trump, and more than OPEC—if markets interpret it correctly.
The reason is that the global oil market is facing an abnormal situation, namely a raging trade war between two titans. This trade war has widened an already existing glut from a relatively manageable 1.0-1.5 mbd before the war to an estimated 4.0-5.0 mbd and growing. The glut has been big enough to undermine OPEC+ production cuts, nullify the impact of geopolitics on oil prices and absorb a loss of half Saudi oil production. It will equally absorb even the loss of Iraqi production.
Only an end to the trade war will invigorate the global oil market and push oil prices above $75.
Still, it is extraordinary that a country which boasts spectacular oil reserves and the world’s cheapest production costs according to many world experts and the foreign oil companies helping it to enhance its oil production to more than 7 mbd by 2023/24 can’t provide basic services to its people like water and electricity and is afflicted by a corruption cancer squandering its wealth.
Even under the most intrusive sanctions in the history of mankind, the late Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was able to provide not only basic services to his people but also free education to university level, health care and even subsidized food. Furthermore, corruption was dealt with by hanging. How much the Iraqi people must be missing the late president’s regime.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London