What
has caused oil prices to skyrocket?
In
order of influence:
1. Speculation
2. Refinery capacity
3. Western Consumption
4. Oil Peaking - the world is running
out of oil
How
have speculators contributed to the price rise?
Hedge
funds and investment banks were forced to make huge write-downs with the
collapse of the real estate market in the US due to the problems in the
sub-prime sector. In order to shore up such losses many speculators moved into
the last remaining commodities that could be betted upon - food and oil. A June
2006 US Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations report on "The
Role of Market Speculation in rising oil and gas prices" noted, "...
there is substantial evidence supporting the conclusion that the large amount
of speculation in the current market has significantly increased prices"
Refinery
capacity has not been part of any debate on the price of oil, how has this
affected oil prices?
Extracting
oil out of the ground is one matter, but then using the various elements that
crude oil contains requires refining. An oil refinery is an industrial process
plant where crude oil is processed and refined into more useful petroleum
products, such as gasoline, diesel fuel, heating oil, kerosene and liquefied
petroleum gas.
Oil
refineries operate on a 'just-in-time' basis; this has affected the building of
new refineries. The huge costs and the long lead times for building them
affects decision making and as a result they are built only when they're
needed. Both oil and gas prices were relatively low during the 1980's and
1990's; hence very few refineries were built. The surge in prices in the late
1990's was not expected to last hence refinery capacity did not increase -
since to finance refineries a 25 year forecast of supply and demand is used.
The rise of India and China happened too fast for an increase in refinery
capacity; this is why over the past few years there have been refinery bottlenecks,
which have contributed to the increased price in refined products such as
gasoline, naphtha and jet fuel etc.
The
Middle East has the world's largest oil reserves (61%) and pumps 31% of the
world's oil every year, but refines only 8% of it.
Although
Oil production has continued to increase and although consumption is set to
rise, for the last 30 years very few refineries have been built across the
world. The US - the world's top consumer of oil has built no new refineries
since 1976. The primary motive behind the lack of new refinery new builds is a
basic one, a lack of profits for oil companies. In the 1980s and 90s, the
fashion for American refineries was not to build more, but to close existing
ones. In 2001, Senator Ron Wyden authored a comprehensive report on the state
of the US refining industry. He noted that between 1995 and 2001 there were a
total of 24 refinery closures in the United States.
What
role is global demand playing in the price surge?
At
the turn of the 20th century the discovery of oil led to a
revolution in lifestyles as a shift occurred from using coal and
steam to oil for most machines. Since then with the invention of new technology
Western societies have become ever more reliant on oil.
Western
consumption and reliance on oil has played a direct role in oil price rises and
will continue to have a strong influence on future oil prices. As Western
economies are built upon consumption the need for oil based products such as
fuel for cars, fuel for air conditioners and fridges, lubricants, plastics and
food preparation will continue to rise and affect oil prices unless alternative
fuels are discovered.
A
lot of blame is being placed upon India and China, how true is this?
It's
hard to see what how a doubling in the price of oil in less than a year can be
blamed on China and India, the growth in China's oil demand has actually been
slowing down. China's first for oil has been known for 15 years whilst India's
development received attention when the 21st century began. Their
demand for oil would already have been factored into oil prices and in no way
explains the sudden price hike.
It
is also common practice by the US to blame all global phenomena on Indian and
Chinese development from global warming, food prices, metal prices and possibly
even terrorism in the future.
Is
the world running out of oil?
‘Oil
peaking' in simple terms, is when half of all oil production has been consumed
thereafter it continually declines. This theory was first proposed in the
1970's and was considered a fringe view at the time. However the end of the 20th
century production of oil began to outstrip oil discoveries. The most
recent large oil field was discovered in Mexico in 1985, while the majority of
today's producers have mature fields that were discovered in the 50's. The
world now consumes four times as much oil as is found. Oil companies are
spending a fortune on trying to find new oil reserves, but the ones that they
find are getting smaller and smaller, and therefore produce less oil.
The
peaking of oil has a number of unknowns and these will play a key part in
future oil prices, much of the commercially viable oil discoveries have been
discovered so it is hard to see where the next big fields will come from.
Although
this theory was considered a fringe one in the 1970's it is today a significant
factor in determining oil prices, all this means is the demand for oil will
increase, at the same time there are huge problems on the supply side.
How
much of the problem is Geopolitical and how much is Economic?
There
are some economic factors whilst Geopolitical factors will play a central role
in energy conflict.
Economically
the US dollar has partially caused the current price hike as global oil is
priced in dollars. Nations around the world would need to give up their own
currency in order to purchase dollars which can then be used to buy Oil. This
makes the exchange rate between such a country and the dollar a critical issue
as a slight change in the exchange rate will mean a nation may even need to
borrow money to purchase an essential commodity such as oil. The current surge
in Oil prices lay primarily in speculators moving out of the US housing market
and into commodities and with the US printing more and more dollars to inflate
its way out of the sub-prime crisis. With oil being priced in dollars, they
will continue to fluctuate as more and more dollars work their way onto the
markets.
The
purchasing power
of the dollar can be seen when compared to gold, gold has remained extremely
stable over the past century, indeed, over most of history. The price of 100
barrels of oil measured in ounces of gold has remained fairly stable between 5
and 10 ounces of gold for the last 100 years. From just 1973 to 2008, the price
of a barrel of oil in US Dollars increased by 3300%. Over the same period the
number of ounces of gold required to buy 100 barrels of oil only rose by only
18%. It is not necessarily oil prices that fluctuate but the value of the US
dollar, in which oil prices are quoted, that fluctuates. This is why some
nations are calling for oil to be priced in Euros'
Geopolitically
Iraq which has the world’s 3rd largest oil reserves continues with
instability which makes it impossible to bring the nation’s oil potential to
the international markets. Competition for dwindling global supplies of oil
between the EU, the US, Japan, China, India and Russia will have a huge
impact on future oil prices.
What
is the future for energy?
Currently
the world population is 6.7 billion and is projected to rise to 8 billion by
2050. This means there will be even more dependence on the worlds swindling
energy and with dwindling new oil discoveries this represents a significant
challenge for alternative energy sources.
Biofuels
has been touted as an alternative however this requires diverting the use of
agricultural fields for energy rather than food production. Biofuel technology
is still in its early stages and will need 20 years for its required technology
to come into the mainstream.
The
call for the use of renewable energy is only a discussion in the West and in
many cases is used to stifle Chinese development. For all the conferences and
meetings on energy use the West has not significantly developed technology
which can be make use of renewal energy.
This
means the reliance on oil will remain well into the future.
Or,
See this Link:
Q&A: Why are Oil prices so high?
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