Title: Economics, Demography & Oil
1Economics, Demography Oil
10/14/04
2Oil and the Middle EastFour Possible Questions
- Does 9-11 explain recent oil market moves?
- Do the current problems in Iraq explain the oil
market? - Is the world going to be more dependent upon
Middle Eastern oil? - What will this mean for U.S. Middle East
Policies?
31999 Year of Change
4A Closer Look Weekly 2002-2004
5Moving into the 40s
6Oil is different because it is Strategic
- Modern economies require oil
- Modern military power requires oil
- States intervene when dealing with oil because
price volatility creates distrust of markets and
politicians like to claim solutions
7Historical Notes
- Churchill and Admiral Fisherdont depend on coal
and the politics of coaling stations - GB Invests in the DArcy ConcessionAnglo Persian
Oil (now BP) is formed - Lawrence overturns the Mid East in WWI and oil
becomes the currency of Middle East Geopolitics
8Oil and the Cold WarThe Dark Side of Cheap Oil
- U.S. begins from a position of independence,
but gradually becomes a significant importer of
oil (after 1971) - The Soviet Unions interests in the Middle East
during the Cold War become the context for
resource nationalism. (Libya) US loses its
absolute control over Middle East Oil, but not
its interest in a stable oil supply - OPEC tries to regulate oil prices but the cartel
is unstable in the face of burgeoning non-OPEC
supplies. Saudi Arabia then imposes
discipline, and oil falls below 10/barrel in
1986 undermining longer term reserve development - The Soviet oil industry collapses under the price
pressure and revenue losses hasten the collapse
of the entire Soviet state - Energy Independence in the U.S. falls by the
wayside but lingers as a continuing political
theme
9The Post Cold War Oil Market
- From the end of the first Iraq War until 1996,
crude oil rises from about 20 to over 25 with a
pit stop at 15 in 1993 - The US economic boom begins after the Mexican
Crisis (1994) and oil moves above 25 - With the Asian Crisis of 1997, falling world
aggregate demand conditions push oil downward
toward 12/barrel, again undermining new capacity
expansion. - After the Russian default (September 1998), oil
essentially triples to an unsustainable
37/barrel during the Tech Boom - In the Bust of 2001, oil collapses once again,
climaxing with the 9-11 attack driving down
consumption, but the US recovery in 2002 moves
oil up again, this time over 50
10Government or Markets?Understanding Recurrent
Themes
- Oil demand is price inelastic and for fast
growing economies, highly income elastic - Over time, new sources of oil become harder to
find and more costly to develop - If oil were strictly a market commodity, oil
supply would be far more responsive to expanded
demand conditions, but oil is a strategic
resource - Sources of cheap reserves are under government
control, making it virtually impossible for
private companies to ignore governmental policies
regarding oil supply development - The SPR undermines private incentives to hold
private inventories (the law of unintended
consequences) creating conditions for even more
price volatility
11Crude Oil isnt the Only Thingpetroleum products
are the inflammables
- Crisis not only about crude supply but about
the supply of refined products. Can have
adequate crude and inadequate product supply, but
high product prices invite bad policy - Refined product supply very affected by NIMBY
sentiment - Balkanization of gasoline supply reflects our
Federal system - The US has insufficient cracking capacity to
use cheaper heavy, sour barrels. Why is refining
an area of underinvestment? - US energy policy is political parochialism in
extremis. Supply expansion or demand
restriction? Which party wins in November? - Only a crisis will stimulate political
cooperation but usually the wrong policies are
chosen
12Demographics of New Oil Demand
- New Sources of oil demand growth include China
and India - See next slide
- China is responsible for some 40-50 of
additional demand - Other Asian Demand is also rising (India, Korea,
etc) - Oil demands include transportation fuels and
space heating (or power generation). Oil demand
in the emerging markets is highly income elastic
and petroleum products are used less efficiently
than in the developed countries - These sources of new demand are likely to
continue rising - Oil price instability leads these governments to
adopt State-run oil reserve holding (adding to
demand) but undermining a market based solution
13 New Demands
14Why Cant the Market do the Job?Vicious Circles!
- Private Inventory Holding and the SPR
- New Government strategic reserves
- The financialization of oil markets
- Risk sharing and uncertainty
- Government can create uncertainty and undermine
markets by state reserve-holding - Financialization plus insufficient excess
capacity produces additional price volatility - Price volatility produces more political
intervention
15Why Are Prices More Volatile This Time?
- economists no spare capacity
- prices have upside volatility when excess
capacity drops below a critical value (3mb/d).
See slides 16-17-18. - financialization futures are heavily influenced
by traders and the marginal barrel is priced this
way - Financial optics attract bad politics
16Excess Capacity Problem
17Spare Capacity and Pricing
18DESPITE DEBATES PROBLEMS WILL REMAIN
19New Oil Supply is a long run proposition subject
to politics(all politics are local)
- Alaskan North Slope
- Gulf of Mexico
- Territories of the Former Soviet Union
- West Africa
- Venezuela
- Brazil
- Libya
- PG countries including Iraq, Iran and Saudi
Arabia - Global Warming and the Green Movement
20Oil and the Middle EastFour Possible Answers
- 9-11 heightened fears of terrorism, creating
uncertainty but not fundamental - Only superficially. Key is expanding capacity
- Yes, because it is the cheapest barrel and the
reserves are known - Inevitably, the geopolitics of energy cannot be
avoided
- Does 9-11 explain recent oil market moves?
- Do the current problems in Iraq explain the oil
market? - Is the world going to be more dependent upon
Middle Eastern oil? - What will this mean for U.S. Middle East
Policies?
21oil is a greasy businessCalouste Gulbenkian as
quoted in The Seven Sisters
- Calouste Gulbenkian Mr. Five Percent, long ago
discovered a basic truth about oil. Oil
generates a great deal of money. The pen may be
mightier than the sword, but money trumps the
pen! - Jessups Law politicians cant handle the truth
because they fear their electorates. The result
is almost always an inferior solution to an
energy dilemma - The CRICcycle (courtesy of Robert Feldman)
applies to Energy Policy in the US - Crisis
- Response
- Improvement
- Complacency