November
09, 2015
The 6th
Asian Ministerial Energy Roundtable
Chair’s Opening Remarks:
Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman Al-Saud,
Vice Minister of Petroleum & Mineral Resources, Saudi Arabia
Doha, Qatar, 8-10 November 2015
It
gives me a great pleasure to address this distinguished audience. I would like
to thank the Government of Qatar for hosting the 6th Asian Ministerial Energy
Round Table and the Government of Thailand for co-hosting this important event
in association with the International Energy Forum.
Globalization,
together with stronger trade and financial ties, means that each nation’s
prosperity has become closely intertwined with that of the rest of the world.
This cannot be seen more clearly than in the area of energy. Rather than
independence, the world of energy is one of interdependence, where the security
of supply – and that of demand – are two sides of the same coin. In such an
interdependent world, a constructive dialogue between consumers and producers
is essential to promote trust, cooperation, information exchange, and a deeper
understanding of each other’s policies. The Asian Ministerial Energy Round
Table has become a key feature of this global energy dialogue.
The last few months have been, without doubt, very unusual, if not unique, for
the oil market. After years of relative stability, the oil price started
falling in the second half of 2014, losing more than 50 per cent of its value
in a relatively short period of time. The sharpness and the speed at which the
price fell has fuelled many analysts’ imaginations, with some explaining the
fall in the oil price in terms of conspiracy theories and geopolitical games.
Others consider the current changes to be structural in nature – where we have
entered a ‘new oil order’ with oil prices staying at this level, or falling
even lower, for a long period of time; the cost curve for oil shifting
downwards; the US shale producers assuming the role of the swing producer; and
OPEC as an organization playing no, or only a limited, role in market
stabilization, with some even going so far as declaring the death of OPEC.
Virtually every oil price cycle in the past has generated its own narrative;
this one is no different.
Despite
their fundamental flaws, such narratives often dominate the energy discourse
and tend to shape market expectations and beliefs. For a major reserve holder,
oil producer, and exporter such as Saudi Arabia, our focus has always been on
the long-term trends shaping the oil market. Rather than being a commodity in
decline, as some would like to portray, supply and demand patterns indicate
that the long-term fundamentals of the oil complex remain robust.
One
fundamental flaw in the current narrative is the tendency to compare the
current price fall with that of the mid-1980s. But this comparison is simply
misguided. Market conditions now are fundamentally different from what they
were then. In 1985, global oil consumption stood at just over 59 million b/d
and the available spare capacity was at a historical level of over 10 million
b/d, and a ratio of spare capacity to global oil consumption was about 17 per
cent. In 2015, oil consumption is estimated to reach 94 million b/d, while
usable spare capacity, mainly held in Saudi Arabia, is estimated at 2 million
b/d – in other words, a ratio of spare capacity to oil consumption of about 2
per cent. This is one of the few industries in the world that is operating at
such a thin cushion. Spare capacity acts as an insurance policy against
unanticipated changes in oil market conditions and is key to maintaining oil
price and global economic stability.
There
is another fundamental difference from the mid-1980s. Despite all the
macroeconomic uncertainties engulfing the global economy, oil demand continues
to grow at a robust pace and set to increase by 1.5 million b/d in 2015, the
strongest growth seen in the past few years. This is in contrast to the early
1980s where global oil consumption fell between 1980 and 1984 by more than 2.3
million b/d.
There
may be some bumps on the road, and the phenomenal growth seen in the last three
decades in Asia may not be repeated, as growth in oil demand will be moderated
by efforts to efficiency enhancement and oil substitution. But the petroleum
industry should not lose sight of the fact that scale matters. Globalization,
industrialization, urbanization, and rapid development – all fuelled by energy
– will continue to lift hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and to
expand the size of the middle class from the current level of 1.8 billion to
3.2 billion in 2020, and to 4.9 billion in 2030, with the bulk of this
expansion occurring in Asia. The new emerging middle class will be made up of
people who are younger, and eager to increase their consumption. Such young
demographics amidst rising income levels will keep energy demand on an upward
trend.
The
current low levels of spare capacity, together with the robust growth in
demand, indicate that the current market fundamentals are different from those
of the early 1980s and that comparisons with that period are therefore
misplaced.
To meet
the expected increase in demand, the world needs all sources of energy –
including oil, gas, renewables, nuclear, and solar. The Kingdom has always been
of the view that there are plenty of resources to meet the projected increase
in demand. The peak oil theories that dominated the energy discourse few years
ago – insisting that global oil production had already reached a peak – have proved
to be simply wrong.
The
pendulum has now moved in the opposite direction, and expectations of
‘scarcity’ have been replaced with expectations of ‘abundance’. However, while
the availability of resources has never been the constraint, it is also true that
conditions must be put in place to provide the right incentives for the
industry to explore and to develop these reserves in an efficient and timely
manner. There is a sense of complacency and a misconceived perception that the
challenges faced by the industry few years ago – ranging from the small number
of new oil discoveries, to the sharp rise in industry costs, to the difficulty
in retaining talent, to the high decline rates in mature areas, and to the
increasing complexity of developing new finds – have all but disappeared
The
fast and sharp industry response to the current fall in the oil price, however,
has shown clearly that the sustainability of investment and output growth can’t
be achieved ‘at any price’. While it is true that underground resources are
abundant, the technical and human resources, and the financial resources needed
to develop these reserves, are not.
Both
the industry and the supply chain remain highly vulnerable to sharp price
movements. Around $200 billion of investments in energy have been cancelled
this year, with energy companies planning to cut another three to eight per
cent from their investments next year. This is the first time since the
mid-1980s that the oil and gas industry will have cut investment in two
consecutive years. The IEA describes the current decline as ‘the biggest in oil
history’. Under increasing fiscal pressure, many governments in key oil
producing countries are being forced to cut their investments in the energy
sector and to revise downward their expansion targets. The impact of the recent
cut in capital expenditure has not just been confined to oil exporters; it is
also being felt in importing countries, where the decline in oil prices has
increased the risks for firms in the Asian oil and gas sector, affecting their
investment plans.
The
potential impact of current cuts in expenditure on future oil supplies is both
substantial and long lasting. Nearly 5 mb/d of projects have already been
deferred or cancelled. Also, the reduction in capex at existing producing
fields – including investment in enhanced oil recovery projects – will only
accelerate the already high decline rates, especially in offshore ageing
fields.
In
fact, after three years of positive growth, non-OPEC supply is expected to fall
in 2016; only one year after the deep cuts in investment. Beyond 2016, the fall
in non-OPEC supply is likely to accelerate, as the cancellation and
postponement of projects will start feeding into future supplies, and the
impact of previous record investments on oil output starts to fade away.
An
important part of the current narrative is that these cuts in investment and
output can be quickly reversed when oil prices start rising again. This is
attributed to the view that investment cycles are becoming shorter and the
supply curve more elastic. But this is wishful thinking. Previous cycles have
shown that the impact of low oil prices is long lasting, and that the scars
from a sustained period of low oil prices can’t be easily ‘erased’. During
sharp downturns, the industry tends to lose talent, technical expertise,
financial resilience, and the confidence to embark on new investments.
Unfortunately, none of these adverse impacts on our industry can be quickly
reversed.
The
extreme price movements that we have witnessed recently are very harmful for
producers, consumers, and industry players. For producers whose economies are
highly reliant on oil revenues, they undermine their development plans and
complicate their macroeconomic management. For consumers, oil price volatility
induces uncertainty in the general macroeconomic environment, reducing
investment and capital formation, and undermining the viability of their energy
policies. For the oil industry, sharp price swings make future planning
extremely difficult, delaying much-needed investment in the oil sector.
The
impact of such price instability is not just confined to the oil sector; the
spill-overs are being strongly felt in other parts of the energy complex – such
as renewables and natural gas. This is because price instability undermines the
viability of energy policies – of both producers and consumers – that are aimed
at increasing the share of renewables in the energy mix, and enhancing energy
efficiency.
As we
saw back in 2008, high oil prices proved to be unsustainable, and the price
fell sharply following the great financial crisis. But this works in the
opposite direction. A prolonged period of low oil prices is also unsustainable,
as it will induce large investment cuts and reduce the resilience of the oil
industry, undermining the future security of supply and setting the scene for
another sharp price rise. Just as the assertions, heard a few years ago – that
the oil price would reach $200 a barrel – were proved wrong, so the recent
assertion that the oil price has shifted to a new low structural equilibrium –
will also turn out to have been wrong.
As a
responsible and reliable producer with long-term horizon, the Kingdom is
committed to continue to invest in its oil and gas sector, despite the drop in
the oil price. Concrete steps are also under way to reduce the energy intensity
of the Kingdom’s economic activity, through the implementation of energy
efficiency schemes. Saudi Arabia has also taken steps to diversify its use of
energy resources. These measures validate our belief in the strength of the
long-term fundamentals of energy markets, and demonstrate the importance that
Saudi Arabia attaches to maintaining its oil export capability and spare
capacity.
Saudi
Arabia plays, and will continue to play, a proactive role in stabilizing oil
market conditions by building on its close relationship and ongoing cooperation
with both producers and consumers, and through its effective and constructive
engagement in OPEC and the IEF. However, in an increasingly interdependent
world, achieving this objective is a shared responsibility. Both consumers and
producers have a common interest in working collectively to achieve a more
stable market; this is essential for sustaining much-needed investment and for
ensuring a stable, secure, and sustainable energy system to the benefit of all.
The International Energy Forum remains the only international energy body under
whose umbrella both producers and consumers can cooperate on energy issues,
exchange information, and gain deeper understanding of each other’s energy
concerns to enhance their common interests. The IEF should continue to organize
Round Table events and extend their reach to other regions.
Back in
2010 in Cancun, Mexico, I stated that the IEF “is an embodiment of the shared
views of producers and consumers and a recognition of the need for stronger,
broader and more effective cooperation.” This cannot be more true than it is
now, during these times of challenge and uncertainty.