Oil & Gas Association: Where do we go from here?
posted on
Jan 04, 2009 04:58AM
Developing large acreage positions of unconventional and conventional oil and gas resources
Nicely written article which sums it up nicely. I agree it relates to the length of this global recession but eventually oil prices will rise and let's hope we fall in the category of projects which will proceed in 2009, for which i am quite confident of until the results of March /April....
____________________________________...
Don Briggs • news@theadvertiser.com • January 4, 2009
Oil prices settled year-end at $44.60 a barrel, down nearly 50 percent from the beginning of 2008, and down 30 percent from the July 2008 record high of $147 a barrel.
"Sometimes the market is overshooting upwards and downwards, and this time this is definitely happening downwards," said IEA's executive director.
Addision Armstrong, director of market research for Tradition Energy, says the oil price slide is about done.
"I expect crude prices to hold after the February contract expires on January 20th. The key factor for oil prices in '09 will be the depth and length of the global recession," Armstrong said.
In reality, predicting oil prices in 2009 is a guess on the global economy and geopolitical changes. Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist of Deutsche Bank, recently said that the demand for oil in 2009 would drop more than any other time in the last quarter of a century because of the weak economy.
Just how deep will the recession cut into the oil exporting countries' economies? Exporting countries such as Mexico, Russia, Iran, and Venezuela are heavily dependent on oil revenues to fund their economies and have based their budgets on crude prices above $70 a barrel.
Will the cuts in production proposed by OPEC bring balance to the supply and demand equation? World crude production is greater than demand and is causing the world to be awash with oil. OPEC's production cuts have yet to affect prices, mainly because the global recession is reducing demand faster than supply cuts can be made.
Low oil prices coupled with the lack of investment capital and credit, will cause oil and gas projects around the world to be scrapped or tabled in 2009. The independent oil and gas companies who depend on capital and credit to finance their projects, are slashing their 2009 budgets. Meanwhile, the majors or integrated companies who are sitting on plenty of cash, will continue with their 2009 projects.
And now for the good news - the lack of investment into exploration will cause a crude supply shortage and that could be as early as mid 2010. Prices will soar.
We often take for granted that oil is an unlimited resource like the air we breathe, but it's not. The world oil supply is fixed, embedded in our planet and is no longer being formed.
IEA (International Energy Agency) stated in its annual report that without extra investment to raise production, the natural annual global crude oil depletion rate is 9.1 percent. The report warned the world needed to make, "a significant increase in future investments just to maintain the current level of production."
It is difficult for anyone to predict the severity of the global recession. As for the price of crude oil, we can predict that without investment into exploration, a crude supply shock will occur and prices will soar.