Post-invasion oil scenarios vary widely
Posted by click at 10:24 PM
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Associated Press
WASHINGTON — If the United States invades Iraq, there could be oil shortages and gas lines — or an oil glut and falling prices.
Much depends on whether American troops can secure Iraqi oil fields and whether other producers continue the flow of oil uninterrupted.
In the growing drumbeat over war with Iraq, the Bush administration rarely mentions oil, even though Iraq has one-tenth of the world's oil reserves. But a military campaign almost certainly will have a major impact on world markets.
In the event of a war, Secretary of State Colin Powell said recently, "We would want to protect those fields and make sure that they're ... not destroyed or damaged by a failing regime on the way out the door."
The growing prospect of war, combined with the monthlong political strife in Venezuela that is hamstringing that country's oil production, already has caused unease among energy traders.
Last week, prices for crude to be delivered in February jumped to more than $33 a barrel, 65 percent higher than a year ago. The average price of gasoline has risen steadily to more than $1.40 a gallon. On Dec. 26, pump prices in several cities jumped by as much as 20 cents a gallon overnight.
World oil stocks have been tight and fell sharply last week, the Energy Department says.
"The loss of Venezuelan oil is beginning to hurt," says Robert Ebel of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "What people are beginning to worry about is suppose the loss of Venezuelan oil continues when we intervene in Iraq."
Together, Iraq and Venezuela produce about 5 million barrels a day. Ebel and other energy experts wonder whether increased production from other countries will be able to make up such a shortfall.
With global production at about 76 million barrels daily, a loss of several million barrels could cause prices to soar, economists say.
Furthermore, nearly 4 billion barrels of oil are in emergency stocks worldwide, including nearly 600 million barrels in a U.S. reserve. If withdrawn at 2 million barrels a day, the U.S. stocks could counter a disruption of 286 days, the administration told Congress this past summer.
A dollar a gallon or $5?: Iraq war could bring changes to oil market
Posted by click at 10:23 PM
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WASHINGTON (AP) - What price war with Iraq?
If the war goes well, gasoline prices might settle as low as $1.10 a gallon on average, by some estimates. If the oil fields burn, look for prices as high as $4.84, others say. Also possible: The market will simply adjust and prices will stay at today's $1.40-$1.60 range.
The wide variance illustrates how much is at stake any decision to attack a country holding at least one-tenth of the world's oil reserves.
But the subject of war and oil is a sensitive one, and the Bush administration has said little about the promise and peril for consumers from the gathering conflict.
"There are enormous ramifications for consumers, given that Iraq's reserves are second behind Saudi Arabia," said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who serves on the Senate energy committee. "Now is the time to find out how the administration is going to address this issue."
The frustration crosses the political spectrum.
"This needs to be done in an orderly fashion," said Ariel Cohen, an oil economist with the conservative Heritage Foundation who favors ousting Saddam Hussein - and then, a quick and open sale of Iraqi oil assets to private interests.
"If it's about oil, make the case," said Phyllis Bennis of the antiwar Institute for Policy Studies. "They haven't yet."
President Bush's then-chief economic adviser, Larry Lindsey, made part of the case in September.
"When there is a regime change in Iraq, you could add 3 million to 5 million barrels of production to world supply," he said. "The successful prosecution of the war would be good for the economy."
But those comments helped cost Lindsey his job. Bush advisers quickly backpedaled, and a couple of months later he was shown the door.
The problem with sizing up the economic and oil consequences is that much of the evidence is shifting. The length and cost of war would depend on support from regional allies - decisions not likely to come until the last minute - and oil payoffs would be easier to predict with accurate statistics, notably absent from Iraq's chaotic government.
Iraq now produces 2 million to 2.5 million barrels a day, with unknown additional amounts smuggled out.
In a world market producing 75 million barrels daily, an extra 3 million to 5 million barrels from a friendly postwar Iraq could bring pump prices in the United States down to $1.10, some economists say.
Once Iraq is producing, "someone else will have to give up something to keep prices at $25 a barrel, the OPEC ideal," said Tom Drennen, an economist at Hobart and William Smith College in Geneva, N.Y. "That means someone will probably cheat, and gas prices will drop to the $1-$1.20 range."
Then there is the worst-case scenario - actually two of them: Saddam levels his oil fields as a final vengeful act, a prediction with a 1991 precedent in Kuwait; and Iraq's fractious population makes governance next to impossible, plunging the entire region into instability.
George Perry, a Brookings Institution economist, recently analyzed bad, worse and worst-case oil disruption scenarios, drawing his conclusions in part from the "price shock" engendered by the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. His worst-case prediction, which factors in the collapse of neighboring governments friendly to America: gasoline at $4.84 a gallon.
Others see too many unknowables to venture a guess.
"It's premature to say we're heading for any price spiral, up or down," said Yasser Elguindi, an analyst with Medley Global Advisors in New York.
A functioning Iraqi government with friendly Western companies pumping wells at capacity is not likely to happen soon, said John Felmy of the American Petroleum Institute, an oil industry group.
Lacking the most modern equipment for a dozen years, Iraq probably has been using "aggressive production techniques, which can damage wells," Felmy said.
"We haven't been in the country for years," he said, "We don't know what the geology is," especially in the western Desert, where the optimists speculate new wells would allow Iraq to overtake Saudi Arabia as the country with the largest reserves.
Such predictions also assume a world exactly as it is today - something belied by current unrest in Venezuela.
"The loss of Venezuelan oil is beginning to hurt," said Robert Ebel of the private Center for Strategic and International Studies.
A defeated Iraq would be expected to make good on outstanding debts to former enemies and allies - Russia alone is expecting a $7 billion payment. The payoffs that would inhibit the rapid development of a free-market economy.
The pessimists' prediction of a price shock is similarly based on unknowables, for instance in presuming that war would automatically stoke revolution in the region - or that Saddam would have the time to destroy Iraqi wells.
The U.S. government says protecting Iraqi oil fields is a priority.
Most oil producers also have been increasing storage as a cushion.
"It's standard inventory policy," said Henry Lee, an energy specialist at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government. "Like building up reserves throughout the winter for the driving season, from Memorial to Labor Day."
The U.S. strategic reserve also offers limited protection - the government says it would cover a disruption of 286 days.
Schumer Says Bush Needs To Release Oil Reserves
Posted by click at 10:18 PM
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By WILLIAM KATES
Associated Press Writer
January 6, 2003, 2:52 PM EST
SYRACUSE, N.Y. -- It will cost upstate New Yorkers hundreds of dollars more this winter to drive their cars and heat their homes unless President Bush agrees to dip into the nation's oil reserves to help check soaring prices, U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer said Monday.
"This is something we cannot choose to ignore, certainly when people are having to spend hundreds of dollars out of their pockets," said Schumer, standing next to a gas pump at a service station just off the New York State Thruway.
"With oil prices continuing to rise and the possibility of further disruptions, I'd call that an emergency," Schumer said.
Schumer said he was renewing his call on the Bush administration to release oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The New York Democrat joins a growing number of lawmakers from both parties who are asking the president to use the emergency government reserve to help consumers.
Last week, Bush ruled out using the reserve, which was created in 1975 to deal with oil emergencies and has nearly 600 million barrels of oil.
The president said the reserve should be used only to combat severe supply shortages and not to influence prices. No one at the White House was immediately available Monday to comment about Schumer's remarks.
"For the president to simply tell the world that he will put that oil out there if prices continue to go higher will stabilize prices and bring them down. The prices of oil products are going through the roof," said Schumer, noting that oil futures were up 25 percent since November and at a two-year high.
A month-old strike in Venezuela and unrest in the Middle East, now agitated further by a looming U.S.-Iraq war, have combined to tighten supplies and vault prices higher and higher, Schumer said. Venezuela is the fourth-largest exporter of oil to the United States, providing about 1.5 million barrels a day, or about 14 percent of the nation's total imported oil.
In central New York, that choked market has pushed the average cost of a gallon of gas to $1.56, which is nearly 40 percent higher than last year and is expected to climb another 10 cents a gallon.
"It's cut into my business about 10 percent already," said gas station owner Arthur Hayes, who hosted Schumer on Monday.
"There's not a whole lot I can do about it. I'm on a fixed budget. I can't absorb the increase, I have to pass it along. I hear the complaints from my customers. I know they're hurting but so am I," Hayes said.
Meanwhile, Schumer said the average cost of residential heating oil in central New York was $1.38 per gallon, a 21 percent increase over last year. Federal regulators predict the cost will likely reach as much as $1.50 to $1.55 a gallon this winter.
"Together, this is maybe $600, $700 of real money coming out of the pockets of average people. Over the course of a winter, these increases add up and could really hurt hard working families already struggling in a soft economy," the senator said.
In fall 2000, President Clinton bowed to repeated requests from Schumer and other legislative leaders to tap into the reserve by releasing 30 million barrels over 30 days. Prices quickly fell by over 10 percent and helped stabilize gas prices for nearly a year, Schumer said.
(updated: January 6th, 3:15pm) Senator Chuck Schumer continues to urge the president to reign in the rising cost of fuel. Today he was in Colonie to release new data on Capital Region gas and heating oil prices.
According to Schumer's office, the average home heating bill in the Capital Region will go up $265 this winter. Heating oil prices are already up 18%, and that number is expected to double. Gas prices are expected to increase as much as 50 cents per gallon. The price at the pump is already up 37% compared to last year. Much of the increase is being blamed on the deepening oil strike in Venezuela and the increasing likelihood of war with Iraq.
The numbers do not bode well for local wallets, but Schumer has at least one idea to lessen the impact. The senator wants President Bush to consider tapping the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The stockpile was created in 1975 to deal with oil emergencies in the United States. Schumer says we are getting there, but the White House does not agree. The Bush administration says it won't even consider using the reserve.
Senator Schumer was at the Super Mart Gas Station on Central Avenue in Colonie to release new price statistics for the Capital Region.
It appears the senator is trying to sway New Yorkers in an effort to get the president's attention.
Algeria's assistance to Venezuela's PDVSA 'coincidence'
Posted by click at 10:02 PM
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Vienna, Jan 6, OPECNA/IRNA -- The departure of Algerian experts to assist the Venezuelan national oil company, Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA), is a 'coincidence' and not tied 'directly or specifically' to the events facing the Venezuelan oil industry, according to Algerian Energy and Mines Minister Dr Chakib Khelil.
Khelil was quoted by the OPEC News Agency as saying here Sunday that PDVSA had asked, a long time ago, for assistance from the Algerian national oil and gas company, Sonatrach, within the framework of a mutual assistance accord binding the two firms.
Khelil noted that such action was normal between the two
companies, whose countries were both members of OPEC and committed to stabilizing the oil market.
He pointed out that such assistance would apply to the research,
exploration, production, and marketing of hydrocarbons, including
transportation, and stocks.
www.irna.com
OPEC Dec Output -2: Venezuela Oil Output Dn By Two Thirds
Posted by click at 9:56 PM
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Monday January 6, 11:50 PM
LONDON (Dow Jones)--Oil output from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, excluding Iraq, fell by 1.639 million barrels a day in December to 22.604 million b/d largely due to a strike in Venezuela that has reduced oil production by two thirds, a Dow Jones Newswires survey found Monday.
Total OPEC output was down 1.705 million b/d in December at 24.914 million b/d compared with 26.619 million b/d in November.
A crippling general strike in Venezuela, now entering its sixth week, reduced December oil output in the country to 0.933 million b/d - a decline of 1.964 million b/d compared with November, the survey showed.
However, other OPEC members continued to produce over their individual quotas despite the Dec. 12 agreement to rein in output over the group's official 21.701 million b/d ceiling, which is valid until Jan. 1. OPEC's official target from Jan. 1 is 23 million b/d.
According to the survey, the OPEC-10 were 0.903 million b/d over their 21.701 million b/d output target in December.