黑料社区

US crude output to overtake 黑料社区 鈥渧ery soon鈥

Special US crude output to overtake 黑料社区 鈥渧ery soon鈥
An oil rig at sunset in Texas. US growth by shale producers will shortly knock 黑料社区 from second to third place among the world鈥檚 oil-producing titans. (Reuters)
Updated 20 January 2018

US crude output to overtake 黑料社区 鈥渧ery soon鈥

US crude output to overtake 黑料社区 鈥渧ery soon鈥

LONDON: The rapid growth of US shale producers will shortly knock 黑料社区 from second to third place among the world鈥檚 oil-producing titans, with only Russia ahead, the International Energy Agency said on Friday.
With Venezuelan output plummeting amid political and economic turmoil, the IEA indicated the Kingdom could lose its number two position in 2018.
鈥淰ery soon US crude production may overtake that of 黑料社区 and also rival Russia鈥檚,鈥 it said.
The backdrop is a tightening market amid a significant fall in Venezuelan production, geopolitical uncertainty, continuing falls in inventory levels and OPEC/Russia supply cuts.
But the upshot, said the agency, is likely to be a sizeable pick-up in non-OPEC production. After adding in barrels from Brazil, Canada and other growth countries, and allowing for falls in Mexico, China and elsewhere, total non-OPEC production will increase by 1.7聽million barrels per day (bpd), IEA said in its latest world oil market report.
The agency said: 鈥淭his represents, after the downturn in 2016聽and the steady recovery in 2017, a return to the heady days of 2013-2015聽when US-led growth averaged 1.9聽million bpd.
The factors contributing to investor interest in oil include the possible unraveling of the Iran nuclear deal and recent demonstrations in the country, disruption to the industry in Libya, and the closure of the Forties pipeline system.
Although these factors might have faded somewhat, there are others at work, said the IEA. 鈥淭he general perception that the market has been tightening is clearly the overriding factor and, within this overall picture, there is mounting concern about Venezuela鈥檚 production.
A plunge in Venezuelan supply cut OPEC crude output to 32.23聽million bpd in December, boosting compliance to 129 percent. Declines are accelerating in Venezuela, which posted the world鈥檚 biggest unplanned output fall in 2017.鈥
Said the IEA: 鈥淰enezuelan production is now about half the level inherited by president Chavez in 1999聽- and in December output was 490,000 bpd a day lower聽than a year ago, having fallen to 1.61聽million bpd.
The agency said it was reasonable to assume that the decline will continue, but it was impossible to say at what rate. But if output and exports sank further, it was fair to assume other producers would probably step in with the flexibility to deliver oil similar in quality to Venezuela鈥檚 shipments to the US and elsewhere, including China.
Market tightening in the final months of 2017 was evident and continued into 2018. OECD commercial stocks declined for the fourth consecutive month in November, by 17.9聽million barrels, with a large fall in middle distillates, said IEA. Preliminary data for December suggested a further fall of 42.7聽million barrels.
鈥淎dditionally, global crude oil markets saw an exceptionally tight fourth quarter in 2017聽as the large draw in OECD crude stocks coincided with a decline in Chinese implied crude balances.鈥
On the demand side, estimates for 2017聽and 2018聽were roughly unchanged at 97.8聽million bpd and 99.1聽million bpd respectively.
鈥淭he slowdown in 2018聽demand growth is mainly due to the impact of higher oil prices, changing patterns of oil use in China, recent weakness in OECD demand and the switch to natural gas in several non-OECD countries. Production was steady on a year ago as non-OPEC gains of nearly 1聽mb/d offset declines in OPEC.鈥
The price of Brent crude oil closed earlier this week above $70 for the first time since Dec. 2, 2014, and money managers have placed record bets on the recent upward momentum continuing. Whether or not the recent price rise has run out of steam and 鈥渟eventy really is plenty鈥 remained to be seen, said the agency.
鈥淗owever, such are the geopolitical uncertainties and the ever-dynamic prospects for US shale that we should expect a volatile year,鈥 it added.