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Greenspan
on Oil
Brian
Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
It continues to be all about energy
these days. Following are the comments of Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan in a speech in Washington,
D.C., on October 15, 2004. The chairman has been way
too sanguine on the topic of oil's impact on the global
economy, in my book, though he adopts a more cautious
tone here. And of course his is an important voice
and an opinion well worth listening to, regardless
of whether you agree with him or not.
---
Owing
to the current turmoil in oil markets, a number of
analysts have raised the specter of the world soon
running out of oil. This concern emerges periodically
in large measure because of the inherent uncertainty
of estimates of worldwide reserves. Such episodes
of heightened anxiety about pending depletion date
back a century and more. But, unlike past concerns,
the current situation reflects an increasing fear
that existing reserves and productive crude oil capacity
have become subject to potential geopolitical adversity.
These anxieties patently are not frivolous given the
stark realities evident in many areas of the world.
While
there are concerns of seeming inadequate levels of
investment to meet expected rising world demand for
oil over coming decades, technology, given a more
supportive environment, is likely to ensure the needed
supplies, at least for a very long while.
Notwithstanding
the recent paucity of discoveries of new major oil
fields, innovation has proved adequate to meet ever-rising
demands for oil. Increasingly sophisticated techniques
have facilitated far deeper drilling of promising
fields, especially offshore, and have significantly
increased the average proportion of oil reserves eventually
brought to the surface. During the past decade, despite
more than 250 billion barrels of oil extracted worldwide,
net proved reserves rose in excess of 100 billion
barrels. That is, gross additions to reserves have
significantly exceeded the extraction of oil the reserves
replaced. Indeed, in fields where, two decades ago,
roughly one-third of the oil in place ultimately could
be extracted, almost half appears to be recoverable
today. I exclude from these calculations the reported
vast reserves of so-called unconventional oils such
as Canadian tar sands and Venezuelan heavy oil.
[Editor
note: The Canadian tar sands have huge potential.]
Gains
in proved reserves have been concentrated among OPEC
members, though proved reserves in the United States,
for the most part offshore, apparently have risen
slightly during the past five years. The uptrend in
world proved reserves is likely to continue at least
for awhile. Oil service firms still report significant
involvement in reservoir extension and enhancement.
Nonetheless, growing uncertainties about the long-term
security of world oil production, especially in the
Middle East, have been pressing oil prices sharply
higher.
These
heightened worries about the reliability of supply
have led to a pronounced increase in the demand to
hold larger precautionary inventories of oil. In addition
to the ongoing endeavors of the oil industry to build
inventories, demand from investors who have accumulated
large net long positions in distant oil futures and
options is expanding once again. Such speculative
positions are claims against future oil holdings of
oil firms. Currently, strained capacity has limited
the ability of oil producers to quickly satisfy this
markedly increased demand for inventory.
Adding
to the difficulties is the rising consumption of oil,
especially in China and India, both of which are expanding
economically in ways that are relatively energy intensive.
Even the recent notable pickup in OPEC output, by
exhausting most of its remaining excess capacity,
has only modestly satisfied overall demand. Output
from producers outside OPEC has also increased materially,
but investment in new producing wells has lagged,
limiting growth of production in the near term.
Crude
oil prices are also being distorted by shortages of
capacity to upgrade the higher sulphur content and
heavier grades of crude oil. Over the years, increasing
demand for the environmentally desirable lighter grades
of oil products has pressed refiners to upgrade the
heavier crude oils, which compose more than two-thirds
of total world output. But refiners have been only
partly successful in that effort, judging from the
recent extraordinarily large increase in price spreads
between the lighter and heavier crudes. For example,
the spread between the price of West Texas intermediate
(WTI), a light, low-sulphur crude, and Dubai, a benchmark
heavier grade, has risen about $10 per barrel since
late August, to an exceptionally high $17 a barrel.
While spot prices for WTI soared in recent weeks to
meet the rising demand for light products, prices
of heavier crudes lagged.
This
temporary partial fragmentation of the crude oil market
has clearly pushed gasoline prices higher than would
have been the case were all crudes available to supply
the demand for lighter grades of oil products. Moreover,
gasoline prices are no longer buffered against increasing
crude oil costs as they were during the summer surge
in crude oil prices. Earlier refinery capacity shortages
had augmented gasoline refinery-marketing margins
by 20 to 30 cents per gallon. But those elevated margins
were quickly eroded by competition, thus allowing
gasoline prices to actually fall during the summer
months even as crude oil prices remained firm. That
cushion no longer exists. Refinery- marketing margins
are back to normal and, hence, future gasoline and
home heating oil prices will likely mirror changes
in costs of light crude oil.
With
increasing investment in upgrading capacity at refineries,
the short-term refinery problem will be resolved.
More worrisome are the longer-term uncertainties that
in recent years have been boosting prices in distant
futures markets for oil.
Between
1990 and 2000, although spot crude oil prices ranged
between $11 and $40 per barrel for WTI crude, distant
futures exhibited little variation around $20 per
barrel. The presumption was that temporary increases
in demand or shortfalls of supply would lead producers,
with sufficient time to seek, discover, drill, and
lift oil, or expand reservoir recovery from existing
fields, to raise output by enough to eventually cause
prices to fall back to the presumed long-term marginal
cost of extracting oil. Even an increasingly inhospitable
and costly exploratory environment - an environment
that reflects more than a century of draining the
more immediately accessible sources of crude oil -
did not seem to weigh significantly on distant price
prospects.
Such
long-term price tranquility has faded dramatically
over the past four years. Prices for delivery in 2010
of light, low-sulphur crude rose to more than $35
per barrel when spot prices touched near $49 per barrel
in late August. Rising geopolitical concerns about
insecure reserves and the lack of investment to exploit
them appear to be the key sources of upward pressure
on distant future prices. However, the most recent
runup in spot prices to nearly $55 per barrel, attributed
largely to the destructive effects of Hurricane Ivan,
left the price for delivery in 2010 barely above its
August high. This suggests that part of the recent
rise in spot prices is expected to wash out over the
longer run.
Should
future balances between supply and demand remain precarious,
incentives for oil consumers in developed countries
to decrease the oil intensity of their economies will
doubtless continue. Presumably, similar developments
will emerge in the large oil-consuming developing
economies.
Elevated
long-term oil futures prices, if sustained at current
levels or higher, would no doubt alter the extent
of, and manner in which, the world consumes oil. Much
of the capital infrastructure of the United States
and elsewhere was built in anticipation of lower real
oil prices than currently prevail or are anticipated
for the future. Unless oil prices fall back, some
of the more oil-intensive parts of our capital stock
would lose part of their competitive edge and presumably
be displaced, as was the case following the price
increases of the late 1970s. Those prices reduced
the subsequent oil intensity of the U.S. economy by
almost half. Much of the oil displacement occurred
by 1985, within a few years of the peak in the real
price of oil. Progress in reducing oil intensity has
continued since then, but at a lessened pace.
***
The
extraordinary uncertainties about oil prices of late
are reminiscent of the early years of oil development.
Over the past few decades, crude oil prices have been
determined largely by international market participants,
especially OPEC. But that was not always the case.
In
the early twentieth century, pricing power was firmly
in the hands of Americans, predominately John D. Rockefeller
and Standard Oil. Reportedly appalled by the volatility
of crude oil prices in the early years of the petroleum
industry, Rockefeller endeavored with some success
to control those prices. After the breakup of Standard
Oil in 1911, pricing power remained with the United
States - first with the U.S. oil companies and later
with the Texas Railroad Commission, which raised allowable
output to suppress price spikes and cut output to
prevent sharp price declines. Indeed, as late as 1952,
U.S. crude oil production (44 percent of which was
in Texas) still accounted for more than half of the
world total. However, that historical role came to
an end in 1971, when excess crude oil capacity in
the United States was finally absorbed by rising demand.
At
that point, the marginal pricing of oil, which for
so long had been resident on the Gulf coast of Texas,
moved to the Persian Gulf. To capitalize on their
newly acquired pricing power, many producing nations
in the Middle East nationalized their oil companies.
But the full magnitude of their pricing power became
evident only in the aftermath of the oil embargo of
1973. During that period, posted crude oil prices
at Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia, rose to more than $11
per barrel, significantly above the $1.80 per barrel
that had been unchanged from 1961 to 1970. A further
surge in oil prices accompanied the Iranian Revolution
in 1979.
The
higher prices of the 1970s brought to an abrupt end
the extraordinary period of growth in U.S. oil consumption
and the increased intensity of its use that was so
evident in the decades immediately following World
War II. Between 1945 and 1973, consumption of petroleum
products rose at a startling 4 ? percent average annual
rate, well in excess of growth of real gross domestic
product. However, between 1973 and 2003, oil consumption
grew, on average, only ? percent per year, far short
of the rise in real GDP.
Although
OPEC production quotas have been a significant factor
in price determination for a third of a century, the
story since 1973 has been as much about the power
of markets as it has been about power over markets.
The signals provided by market prices have eventually
resolved even the most seemingly insurmountable difficulties
of inadequate domestic supply in the United States.
The gap projected between supply and demand in the
immediate post-1973 period was feared by many to be
so large that rationing would be the only practical
solution.
But
the resolution did not occur quite that way. To be
sure, mandated fuel-efficiency standards for cars
and light trucks induced slower growth of gasoline
demand. Some observers argue, however, that, even
without government-enforced standards, market forces
would have produced increased fuel efficiency. Indeed,
the number of small, fuel-efficient Japanese cars
that were imported into the United States markets
rose throughout the 1970s as the price of oil moved
higher.
Moreover,
at that time, prices were expected to go still higher.
Our
Department of Energy, for example, had baseline projections
showing prices reaching $60 per barrel - the equivalent
of about twice that in today's prices.
The
failure of oil prices to rise as projected in the
late 1970s is a testament to the power of markets
and the technologies they foster. Today, despite its
recent surge, the average price of crude oil in real
terms is still only three-fifths of the price peak
of February 1981. Moreover, the impact of the current
surge in oil prices, though noticeable, is likely
to prove less consequential to economic growth and
inflation than in the 1970s. So far this year, the
rise in the value of imported oil - essentially a
tax on U.S. residents - has amounted to about ? percent
of GDP. The effects were far larger in the crises
of the 1970s. But, obviously, the risk of more serious
negative consequences would intensify if oil prices
were to move materially higher.
***
In
summary, much of world oil supplies reside in potentially
volatile areas of the world. Improving technology
is reducing the energy intensity of industrial countries,
and presumably recent oil price increases will accelerate
the pace of displacement of energy-intensive production
facilities. If history is any guide, oil will eventually
be overtaken by less-costly alternatives well before
conventional oil reserves run out. Indeed, oil displaced
coal despite still vast untapped reserves of coal,
and coal displaced wood without denuding our forest
lands.
Innovation
is already altering the power source of motor vehicles,
and much research is directed at reducing gasoline
requirements. At present, gasoline consumption in
the United States alone accounts for 11 percent of
world oil production. Moreover, new technologies to
preserve existing conventional oil reserves and to
stabilize oil prices will emerge in the years ahead.
We will begin the transition to the next major sources
of energy perhaps before mid-century as production
from conventional oil reservoirs, according to central
tendency scenarios of the Energy Information Administration,
is projected to peak. In fact, the development and
application of new sources of energy, especially nonconventional
oil, is already in train. Nonetheless, it will take
time. We, and the rest of the world, doubtless will
have to live with the uncertainties of the oil markets
for some time to come.
Source:
Federalreserve.gov
Brian
Trumbore
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