- It’s The Economy Stupid: Oil Demand Cut Again
- Consultant Challenged to Back Up Forecast With Cash
- Natural Gas Prices Rise – It’s All About Supply
- Californians Hit By 1970s Energy Legislation
- Kuwait, LNG and Future Oil Exports
- Rising Oil Prices Impact State and Local Governments
- Tidbits That Might Impact Energy Markets
Note: Musings from the Oil Patch reflects an eclectic collection of stories and analyses dealing with issues and developments within the energy industry that I feel have potentially significant implications for executives operating oilfield service companies. The newsletter currently anticipates a semi-monthly publishing schedule, but periodically the event and news flow may dictate a more frequent schedule. As always, I welcome your comments and observations. Allen Brooks
It’s The Economy Stupid: Oil Demand Cut Again
Both the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) have recently reduced their estimates of the amount of crude oil that will be used in 2008. We have focused in the past on the inability of the IEA, among others, to get its oil demand forecast right during this decade. The IEA’s forecast was either too low as in the early years that was manifest in the 2004 surge in global oil demand, up 2.9 million barrels per day or 3.6%. Or after being too low for those years, the IEA then began overestimating demand and has had to ratchet down its initial projections as each year unfolded.
As crude oil prices have jumped to nearly $100 per barrel, the importance of the world oil demand forecast has grown as an indicator of where future oil prices might head. What we have found most interesting and a little disconcerting, is that much has been made by the business media of the most recent demand reduction, but they paid little attention to the IEA’s earlier demand cuts. In Exhibit 1, we show the annual increase in crude oil demand since 1989 along with the initial IEA demand forecasts for 2005, 2006 and 2007 along with actual demand for those years. In every case, actual demand proved lower than the forecasts.
On that chart we also plotted the 2008 estimated oil demand increase forecasts issued in July 2007, December 2007 and February 2008. So far, the IEA’s 2008 oil demand forecast has been reduced by half a million barrels per day (mmb/d), from 2.2 mmb/d to 1.7 mmb/d. The most recent ratcheting down of the demand estimate was prefaced by commentary from the IEA about the recent reduction of world economic growth projections by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The 2008 growth estimate had initially been projected in October to be lower than the world’s performance in 2007 (+4.9%). But early this year, the IMF lowered its world economic growth forecast by 0.3% to 4.1% after it assessed the impact of credit market problems in the
Exhibit 1. Recent IEA’s Oil Demand Forecasts Have Been High
Source: IEA, PPHB
Another way of looking at the challenge the IEA has in trying to forecast oil demand is to look at the pattern of oil demand growth over historic periods. As displayed on the chart in Exhibit 1, over the ten years of 1989-1999, the average annual growth in oil consumption was 0.9 mmb/d. On the other hand, if you take a different ten-year period, 1994-2004, which includes the huge demand growth year of 2004, the annual average increase was 1.45 mmb/d.
The actual demand increase experienced in 2005 was 1.05 mmb/d. In 2006 it was 0.9 mmb/d. Last year the growth was 1.1 mmb/d. That three-year record suggests the world’s oil demand growth was closer to the average oil demand experienced during 1989-1999. In all three years, the IEA started the year with a substantially higher demand growth forecast. What one might conclude is that the demand growth experienced in 1994-1997 and in 2004, all of which was attributed to strong economic growth in Asia and/or
As a result of examining this performance record, we have been skeptical of the IEA’s forecast for 2008. The actual growth in oil consumption in 2005, 2006 and 2007 turned out to be much closer to the earlier ten-year average as well as the average experienced over the entire 19-year period, 1989 to 2007. World economic growth during 2005, 2006 and 2007 was very healthy at 4.4%, 5.0% and 4.9%, respectively. With weaker demand forecast and probably much lower oil demand growth, should one conclude that high crude oil prices have had some impact on consumption? To examine that question, we plotted world economic growth as reported by the IMF for each year of this decade, including the most recent estimate for 2008, against the annual increase in crude oil consumption. When one looks at the graph, it appears that oil demand growth in recent years has not reflected the health of world economies. That being the case, with world economic growth in 2008 projected to be lower than at any time other than 2001, 2002 and 2003, it is difficult to believe 2008’s oil consumption will be more than 15% higher than in 2003.
Exhibit 2. IMF 2008 Forecast Calls Into Question Oil Demand
Source: IEA, IMF, PPHB
Even though the IMF has lowered its economic growth forecast for 2008, that forecast is still at risk of being too high. There are growing signs that the credit market problems and their economic fallout in the
Another oil demand factor to be considered when discussing the question of the impact of high petroleum prices on consumption is what is happening in the domestic gasoline market. For the week of February 8, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported gasoline stocks of 229,236,000 barrels. This is the highest inventory since the 229,300,000 barrels reported for the week of February 19, 1999. Moreover, that one weekly high number had not been seen since the months of January and February of 1994 – fourteen years ago.
It is equally significant to note that gasoline inventories have risen steadily since the week of October 26, 2007. During the first six weeks of 2008, gasoline inventories have risen at an average rate of 3,566,000 barrels per week. If this pattern of gasoline inventories, especially in the face of huge vehicle fleet growth over the past nine or 14 years, doesn’t suggest that something is going on with demand, we are not sure what would. Again, let us caution that we are not predicting a collapse in global crude oil prices. However, we do believe that the evidence of global oil demand being impacted by high oil prices and weakening economic activity is growing. At some point, and we can’t forecast when that point is, crude oil prices will drop – or there will be a huge revival of economic growth to support current prices. We have a hard time betting that world economic growth will accelerate soon given the still uncertain condition of global credit markets.
Exhibit 3. Gasoline Inventories Highest Since Mid 1990s
Source: EIA, PPHB
Consultant Challenged to Back Up Forecast With Cash
One of the traditional criticisms about consultants is that they provide strategic advice to management and recommend actions to be taken but are seldom held accountable for the success or failure of their plans. We now have a Texas-sized challenge to the advice of one strategy firm regarding the future of global energy resources. The challengers believe the consultant’s advice is wrong and that relying on it could create serious economic and geopolitical consequences. The timing of this challenge came just as the consultants were convening their annual industry conference in
In June 2007, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) published a forecast that world oil production capacity will reach 112 million barrels per day (mmb/d) in 2017, which suggests that actual production will be 107 mmb/d, up from about 87 million barrels today. Many in the petroleum industry have been skeptical of that forecast (and many of those issued by the IEA and the EIA as well) believing that production cannot grow to anything close to that target due to the large number of producing countries that have reached or passed their peak oil production capacity. The critics have been questioning the decline rates of producing fields, in particular those of the world-class oil fields that account for a substantial amount of the global oil supply.
After much debate and criticism of the CERA report, a group of 11 people active in the broadly defined energy business decided to challenge the forecast by putting up a $100,000 bet. If CERA elects to call the bet, it must post a $100,000 letter of credit from the same bank the challengers are using. If global oil production does not exceed CERA’s forecast of 107 million b/d in 2017, the group of individuals will donate their winnings to an energy-focused non-profit organization.
Given how rapidly the world changes, we suspect the answer to the bet will be known well before the ten-year time period. What seems evident to us is that what happens in 2017 will be akin to opening a time capsule buried in a building’s cornerstone, but with a little less fun associated with the occasion. At that time, we will know the answer and there won’t be any historical items to ooh and ah over. We normally don’t do much with old, incorrect forecasts except discard them and ignore them. We are not sure the bet over the forecast will gain much greater respect even though there is $100,000 riding on the outcome.
Natural Gas Prices Rise – It’s All About Supply
The near month contract for natural gas futures prices have traded in the range of the high $7 dollars to mid $8 dollars per thousand cubic feet of gas for all of 2008, which is about a dollar higher than experienced last year. Yes, this winter has been slightly colder than last year, although not appreciably. According to the most recent
Exhibit 4. Gas Futures Prices Are Above Last Year
Source: EIA, NYMEX, PPHB
data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), this year (July 2007 through January 2008) the nation has experienced 2,455 heating degree days. That is 92% of the normal for the country for this time period based on the 1971 through 2000 data, or 2,656 days. Last year, at the similar time period, the country was at 90% of normal, or 2,390 heating degree days. Yet when we look at the most recent weekly natural gas inventory report for the week ending February 8, gas in storage has declined significantly and is almost back to the mid-point of the 5-year average range.
Exhibit 5. Gas Storage Volumes Are Dropping Rapidly
Source: EIA
The arctic winter temperatures that dipped into the
Exhibit 6. Domestic Gas Supply Has Been Growing
Source: EIA, PPHB
At the same time, we have seen a rise in the volume of natural gas that is being imported from
Exhibit 7. Natural Gas Imports From Canada Grew in 2007
Source: EIA, PPHB
The big supply story has been the sharp reduction in the volume of natural gas entering the
The strong demand for LNG in Japan due to its largest nuclear power plant being out of service due to damage from last year’s earthquake and Korea’s increased appetite because it has had several major LNG storage tanks out of service have boosted prices those two countries are willing to pay for gas supplies. The European market has also drawn LNG supplies from the Atlantic basin market as it too has been willing to pay higher prices than offered in the
Exhibit 8. LNG Volumes To
Source: EIA, Pan Eurasian, PPHB
According to the latest LNG import data, the amount of gas coming into the
Californians Hit By 1970s Energy Legislation
The state of
In 2006,
The objective of these solar initiatives is to drive the use of solar power in the state. As of 2005, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), 0.9 billion KWH of electricity, or less than 0.01% of the nation’s electricity, was generated by solar power. The projection for 2030 is that solar power will grow to 7 billion KWH, or between 2% – 3% of all power produced in the country.
With
The law, signed by then-Governor and now Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown in 1978, has been rarely used. Prosecutors say the
As with most legislation, the devil is in the details. We recently read a paper prepared by the
In the end, the
However, Frank Schiavo, a retired
Kuwait , LNG and Future Oil Exports
Early in February, Kuwait Petroleum Corp. (KPC) CEO Saad al-Shuwaib announced that his country is constructing a facility to allow it to import LNG. The country’s target is to begin importing supplies from
By switching to LNG to fuel the country’s power plants,
We have voiced concern about this issue for a number of years and believed that the natural gas exploration initiatives begun in the late 1990s in
Exhibit 9. Future Oil Export Volumes Could Fall Substantially
Source: CIBC
The situation in
As shown in Exhibit 10, all markets except
Exhibit 10. Oil Suppliers Are Consuming Greater Production
Source: BP, IEA, PPHB
Part of the explanation for the faster growth in oil consumption is the high level of fuel subsidies developing economies are providing to their citizens. That is demonstrated by Exhibit 12. Until these countries elect to reduce their fuel subsidies, they will face above average consumption growth that will force them to scramble to secure new and additional sources of global oil supplies.
Exhibit 11. Developing Countries Highly Subsidize Fuel Use
Source: CIBC
We will watch this development closely as it may signal the start of a trend with significant long-range implications for both the global oil and natural gas markets. But possibly more important, the changing oil and gas markets may apply greater pressure on oil importing economies to alter their consumption patterns. How they adjust, and what steps governments attempt to help changes along could have interesting and significant implications on the use of sovereign wealth funds and energy consumption mandates. There could also be social upheavals as a result.
Rising Oil Prices Impact State and Local Governments
One of the less visible results of the rise in global crude oil prices is their impact on state and local government budgets. In turn, those pinched budgets will come back to haunt citizens through either reduced municipal services or higher taxes, or both. One of the more prominent impacts of higher petroleum prices has been on the cost of operating local police forces and school transportation systems.
A less visible, but equally challenging issue for state and local governments is the cost of asphalt for paving roads. We were alerted to this issue by an email that directed us to the State of
The person writing the email wanted to make two points. First was the impact of rising oil prices on the cost of asphalt, and to demonstrate that point he selected several monthly index figures to show the sharp cost increase. In particular he selected January 1999 when the index was 40.2, January 2007 when it was 287.1 and December 2007 when it had climbed to 439.3. This trend shows clearly the impact of rising crude oil prices on the cost of asphalt. His other point was that given this impact from the oil price rise, which he attributes to the growing pressure from peak oil conditions limiting oil supplies, there likely will be a shortage of asphalt that will hurt state and local governmental efforts to maintain their transportation infrastructures.
On his first point, we decided to look at the performance of the index over the entire time period for which we could obtain data. The index value on the web site is first reported for January 1997 at slightly over 100, so we assume the index was started about that time. As one might think, since the index is based on the posted price for three significant oil fields in southern
Exhibit 12. Asphalt Price Adjustments Follow Oil Prices
Source: EIA,
On the issue of asphalt availability in the future, we find several interesting, and possibly conflicting, trends. Asphalt is a product made from the bottom (heavier) part of the barrel of refined crude oil. As the world’s crude quality continues to get heavier, the challenge for the petroleum industry is how to extract more light refined products from the heavier crude oil. More energy is required during the refining process to achieve this goal. But with prospects for even heavier crude oil streams in the future, the petroleum industry will need to upgrade refineries to make more light refined products from the barrel, thereby reducing the likely volume of heavy bottoms available to be processed into asphalt. If peak oil produces a significant reduction in future oil supply, then not only will crude oil prices rise, but there will be even greater pressure to produce more valuable light products, in particular transportation fuels, further pressuring the available supply of asphalt. Higher prices and less supply is not a winning recipe for state and local government highway maintenance departments. Asphalt may be one more unintended victim of high crude oil prices and reduced petroleum supplies. For consumers this could be a double whammy – higher taxes and increased vehicle maintenance expenses due to deteriorating roads. We wonder what renewable materials might make better road surfaces.
Tidbits That Might Impact Energy Markets
Rhode Island Has Good Environmental Record
To put the state into a perspective many of our readers may understand,
The policy staff of the state Senate for
These positives, several of which we were surprised about especially since we spend a meaningful amount of time in the state, got us to thinking.
According to this report,
India and China Raising Fuel Prices
Last week
Contact PPHB:
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Parks Paton Hoepfl & Brown is an independent investment banking firm providing financial advisory services, including merger and acquisition and capital raising assistance, exclusively to clients in the energy service industry.