Title: THE WORLD OIL MARKET
1THE WORLD OIL MARKET
- Where does our oil come from?
- How much of it do we use?
- How much of it do we produce?
- Who controls the world oil market?
- How are prices set?
2To paraphrase Will Rogers
- Buy land (oil)they aint
- making any more of it.
3OIL RESERVES AND PRODUCTION( redOPEC blue
non-OPEC)
4TEN MAJOR OIL EXPORTERS 1991 and 2000(1,000
BARRELS PER DAY)
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8OIL IMPORTS TO U.S.
9OPEC AND NON-OPEC
- The members of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) are Algeria,
Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and
Venezuela. - In addition, seven countries produce more than 2
million barrels per day yet are not part of OPEC.
These are the U.S. (the world's largest total
oil producer for 2001), Russia, Mexico, China,
Canada, Norway, and the United Kingdom (Britain).
10U.S. OIL IMPORTS AND EXPORTS
11SELF SUFFICIENCY?DOMESTIC USE AND PRODUCTION OF
OIL
12U.S. OIL USE AND IMPORTS
13SOURCES OF US PETROLEUM IMPORTS
14And how much will drilling in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge Help us with our importing of oil?
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16SHARE OF TOTAL U.S. ENERGY USE, BY SECTOR (1999)
17Average Gas Prices 2000(U.S. Dollars per Gallon)
Japanthe worlds second largest per capita
importer of oil.
U.S.the worlds largest per capita importer of
oil
18U.S. ENERGY CONSUMPTION OVER TIME
19TIME SERIES OF CRUDE OIL AND GASOLINE COSTS
CRUDE OIL COSTS
GASOLINE COSTS
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21WHAT ABOUT STATE LOCAL GASOLINE TAXES 2001?
2003 in WISCONSIN 28.5 cents 3 cents
environmental tax 31.5 cents.
22WHAT ABOUT FEDERAL GASOLINE TAXES?
NOW 18.4 CENTS
23GAS MILEAGE
24What is in A Barrel of Crude Oil?
- Products Gallons per barrel
- Gasoline 19.5
- Distillate fuel oil(Includes both home heating
oil and diesel fuel) 9.2 - Kerosene-type jet fuel 4.1
- Residual fuel oil(Heavy oils used as fuels in
industry, marine - transportation and for electric power
generation) 2.3 - Liquefied refinery gasses 1.9
- Still gas 1.9
- Coke 1.8
- Asphalt and road oil 1.3
- Petrochemical feedstock's (primarily for
plastics) 1.2 - Lubricants 0.5
- Kerosene 0.2
- Other 0.3
- Figures are based on 1995 average yields for
U.S. refineries. One barrel contains 42 gallons
of crude oil. The total volume of products made
is 2.2 gallons greater than the original 42
gallons of crude oil. This represents "processing
gain."
25The Crude Economics of Crude Oil
- Notice that a barrel of oil costing 30 will
yield approximately 20 gallons of gasoline and 22
gallons of other products. - A rough calculation would suggest that this
implies a cost of 15 for 21 gallons of crude oil
that will yield 20 gallons of gasoline - That is approximately 0.71 per gallon. Of
course there are processing costs required to
bring forth that 20 gallons of gasoline, and then
transportation costs to get it to your corner gas
station (or PDQ store..) - At the moment (March 27, 2003), crude oil prices
are hovering around 28 per barrel.
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27FUEL ECONOMY
28TRENDS IN END USES OF PETROLEUM
29TEN HIGHEST NATIONS IN PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION OF
OIL (BARRELS PER YEAR)
30THE TEN LARGEST OIL IMPORTERS 1991 and 2000
(1,000 BARRELS PER DAY)
31World Oil Price Chronology 1970-2000
32Legend to Figure of World Oil Prices 1970 - 2000
- 4 Arab oil embargo begins (October 19-20, 1973)
- 6 Arab oil embargo ends (March 18, 1974)
- 17 Iran takes hostages President Carter halts
imports from Iran Iran cancels US contracts
Non-OPEC output hits 17.0 million b/d - 23 First major fighting in Iran-Iraq War
- 40 Exxon's Valdez tanker spills 11 million
gallons of crude oil - 42 Iraq invades Kuwait Oil embargo ends (March
18, 1974) - 43 Operation Desert Storm begins 17.3 million
barrels of SPR crude oil sales is awarded - 44 Persian Gulf war ends
- 51 Extremely cold weather in the US and Europe
- 59 Oil prices triple between January 1999 and
September 2000 due to strong world oil demand,
OPEC oil production cutbacks, and other factors,
including weather and low oil stock levels. - 60 President Clinton authorizes the release of
30 million barrels of oil from the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve (SPR) over 30 days to bolster
oil supplies, particularly heating oil in the
Northeast. -
33A CLEANER VERSION
34The Economics of World Oil Markets
- Recall from our discussion of world timber that
the world market is assumed to have several
(many) suppliers and several (many) buyers. - This condition gives us the sort of diagram shown
below
35THE INTERNATIONAL TIMBER MARKET
PW
XS
MD
QW QUANTITY
36This figure depicts a somewhat competitive
situation in which more timber can be sold on the
world market only if suppliers are willing to
lower their price.
- And of course this would require some change
since they are now unwilling to sell more timber
unless the price is higher than at present
(notice this from the existing supply curve XS).
37Returning to world oil markets, the existence of
OPEC means that eleven of the worlds major oil
producers are united in efforts to control
production in the interest of controlling price.
- Recall that the members of OPEC are Algeria,
Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria,
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and
Venezuela.
38How Does OPEC control world oil prices?
- It controls price by controlling the production
and sale of oil by its members. - That is, the OPEC Ministers meet regularly to
coordinate exactly how much oil in total, and
also how much from each of the eleven countries,
will be offered for sale over the coming 3-4
months.
39We have here the world demand for oil at various
priceslower prices leading to greater total oil
sales, and higher prices having the opposite
effect. Now consider the OPEC suppliers. They
wish to shift the supply curve UP thereby
restricting supply and thus raising prices from
PW to POPEC.
SOPEC
POPEC PW
XS
DW
QOPEC QW
Quantity of Oil
40Notice that the action to restrict production and
thus crude oil coming onto world markets does
indeed give them a higher price. They are able
to maintain this happy situation only by imposing
strict compliance on the part of their 11 members.
41Holding Together A Cartel
- The most difficult challenge is to keep the
solidarity of a cartel. - This is hard because each member has a strong
incentive to defect and offer more of its oil
for sale at the prevailing higher price. Most
members could not add to sales enough to drive
down price and so they could possibly gain some
significant short-run advantage by, perhaps,
increasing their own sales by 20 to reap this
higher price.
42Two key factors render OPEC a successful cartel
- 1. Oil is not a perishable commodity (such as
fish that have been caught, or grain that has
been harvested) and oil can be easily controlled
by holding it in storage tanks or releasing it
for sale as needed. - 2. Saudi Arabia is the trump player. That is,
Saudi Arabia has so much oil that it can punish a
defector who decides to exceed agreed-upon sales
limits by immediately dumping (or indeed by
threatening to dump) enough oil on the market to
sink the price and defeat the hoped-for profit of
the rogue country (one who threatens to defect
from the agreement over production targets).
43OIL RESERVES AND PRODUCTION( redOPEC blue
non-OPEC)
44So OPEC has survived for a very long time by
exercising tight control over its members and, in
essence, forcing them to remain loyal to the club.
45One sure way to wean ourselves from the gasoline
habit is to raise the price of that habit.
- At 1.60 per gallon, we pay 1.416 per gallon
NOT including the federal gas tax of 0.184 per
gallon. - Let us see what would happen if gas prices were
to rise by 10 each year over the next decade. - This increase would come in the form of an
increased federal tax (moving from 0.184 to
2.734 per gallon). - The revenue from this tax would be devoted
exclusively to increased mass transit options. - Research suggests that the price elasticity of
demand for gasoline is approximately -0.025.
This means that a 10 increase in the price of
gasoline will induce a drop in gasoline sales of
2.5.
46If this gradual increase in the price of gasoline
were implemented each year over the next ten
years, it would only then bring U.S. gasoline
prices in line with current prices in the U.K.
(5.13), Norway (4.88), Netherlands (4.26),
Sweden (4.22) and Finland (4.17).Consider the
following picture
471.84
1.81
1.79
1.76
1.74
1.72
1.69
1.67
1.65
1.62
1.76
1.94
2.13
2.34
2.58
2.83
3.12
3.43
3.77
4.15
By 2013 we would use 51.3 billion gallons LESS
per year than we would otherwise use. This
amount is 40 of our CURRENT use. This reduction
is close to our current dependence on imported
oil.
48New federal tax revenue
Federal tax revenue with no increase is gasoline
tax
49In 2000, federal transportation grants to state
and local governments totaled 32.5 billion.
This was allocate as Highways 26.1
billion Air 1.9 billion Busses 4.5
billion Rail 0.061 billion