Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Iraq and the Oil Crunch?

Update: See Alan Richards's reply at end

Jim Krane of the Associate Press quotes analysts who seem to blame the high price of petroleum in part on the shambles in Iraq. Iraq could be exporting nearly 3 million barrels a day (bbd) if the guerrilla war was not resulting in massive sabotage. In 2005, Iraq did only 1.4 million bbd on average, down from 2.8 mn. bbd before the American invasion. Not only is Iraqi production way off (less than a million bbd per day on average in January of this year!), but Iraq actually imports over $4 billion a year in petroleum products, taking them off the market for other consumers.

I have to be very careful how I say this, because the oil market is a complicated subject and I am not an economist. But I can't imagine that Iraq really is much of a factor here. The world petroleum production is on the order of 86 million barrels a day. so the lost 1.4 million bbd of Iraq is about 1.6% of the total. Even if you factor in Iraq's imports (and remember it doesn't have much of an economy at the moment), I can't imagine that Iraq production issues account for very much of the current price spike.

Some economists argue that there is a lot of speculation, including a security premium, built into the current price, because you have war and rumors of war (i.e. Iran) going on in the Oil Gulf. A ten percent security premium is the difference between paying $3.00 a gallon for gas and $2.70. A 10% security premium of a speculative sort, deriving from nervousness about the future of Iraq and Iran, is actually much more consequential than the 1.6% reduction in world production because of sabotage in Iraq. The NYT implies that petroleum today, like the South Seas stocks or the tulips of the 18th century, is characterized by speculative investment bubble, just because the run-up in prices attracts investors. That really isn't an Iraq effect.

Although I am not an economist, primary commodity markets are pretty sensitive to simple things like supply and demand that most of us can grasp without greek letters. Troubles in Nigeria, Venezuela and Mexico have taken 2 million barrels a day off the market, i.e. a good 2 percent. So with Iraq, that is a 3 1/2 percent production shortfall.

The main bottleneck in supply isn't raw petroleum production but a shortfall in world refining capacity (in other words we have more crude oil than we have gasoline). And the rapid rise in demand is partially seasonal, with Americans and Europeans hitting the road in the summer (and the anticipation of it), along with an ongoing secular upward pressure on prices coming from the with heated economies in China and India.

So you know me. If I thought Iraq was a big cause of our frustration at the pump, I'd have no hesitation in saying so. I doubt it is all that important in this regard.

One of the economists seems to be arguing that over five to ten years, Iraq could have had an impact, if there hadn't been all that sabotage and if $30 bn. had been invested in the industry. This is true. But for this summer, there are other and bigger phenomena driving Americans' sticker shock at the pump.

The fact is that if Americans did some serious conservation, they could reduce consumption by 1/3. Since they use about 20 million barrels a day of petroleum, they could replace the production of both Iraq and Iran (Iran produces 4 million bbd and exports 2 of it) all by themselves, just by going on the kind of diet Europe did in the early 1980s. But the last politician who dared tell you that was Jimmy Carter and no one will ever, ever go on television and talk that way again, who aspires to hold public office.

=========

Alan Richards, a real economist, at UC Santa Cruz, replies:


' Dear Juan:

On the question of oil prices: I think you are underestimting the impact of the actual and threat of war in the Gulf on oil prices in your discussion today in your invaluable blog.

http://www.juancole.com/

. The key is that the price of oil is an "asset price". That is, the price of a barrel of oil is like the price of your house. It reflects, certainly, conditions of current supply and demand. But because oil, like your house, can be stored, forecasts of the future are critical to its current price.

The war in Iraq and, even more, the saber-rattling around Iran have deeply spooked the market. They are right to be spooked--if the U.S. persists in its confrontational stance in the region, there will be more violence, more instability, more potential oil off the market (al-Qaeda did, after all, try to attack Abqaiq...).

Even more important from an expectations perspective is that for supply to be able to keep up with demand in the future, most analysts agree that there must be much investment in oil production IN THE GULF. This is basically for reasons of geology--it's where the oil is. Violence scares this off (as, of course, does continued nationalism and other policies already in place).

Consider the following back-of-the-envelope consideration.

1) Let's say, as you plausibly do, that the quantity reduction is some 3.5%

2) Price has risen from (about) $26/bbl in the run-up to the war to some $73/bbl today.

3) Conventional studies of short-run price elasticity (percentage change in quantity divided by percentage change in price) are usually somehwere between 0.2 and 0.4.

So: take the midpoint estimate for elasticity: 0.3

Then: 0.3 = % change in quantity/%change in price.

So, 0.3 = .035 (= % change in quantity)/%change in price.

so: % change in price = .035 / 0.3 = 11.6%

But: the observed % change in price is roughly 94% ($73-$26/($73 + $26)/2 = 0.94. The so-called, "mid-point arc elasticity", which uses the average of the starting and ending points as the basis for the percentage change in price calculation). Result? The observed change in price is over 800% larger than what one would expect based on previous market behavior (which is where estimates of elasticity come from).

There are then several possibilities: a) previous estimates of elasticity do not reflect current conditions--this is tantamount to saying that the oil market today is somehow fundamentally different from the way it was from 1972-2003. Maybe so, but one would then want to know how, exactly, the market has been so transformed. War and related stupidities would surely play a role here.

b) A much more plausible, and simpler, hypothesis: expectations, as argued above.

Calling these expectations, as the press often does, "speculative" leads to ideas of "herd behavior" and manias, evildoers in eyeshades, etc. Without denying that bubbles exist (I think they do), one can just say, as most economists would: "The price of an asset reflects the collective judgement--right now--of all market participants about future demand ans supply conditions".

In short, I think you are selling short the impact of the neo-cons' lunacy on the oil market.

And, you are, of course, entirely correct that we could, and must for other reasons, get serious about conservation.

Alan Richards



Cole: I'm deeply grateful for Professor Richards' intervention. Just to say that the oil analysts tell me that the market is in fact radically different now than in the 1970s-1990s, and that a key difference is the massive and continuing rise in demand from South and East Asia. I did say that I thought the "security premium" was likely a much bigger part of the price rise than the reduction in Iraq production. I am persuaded that the security premium is a central part of this story and is of course deeply related to Bush administration aggressiveness in the Oil Gulf region.

5 Comments:

At 8:00 AM, Blogger Keith Akers said...

I agree with Juan Cole's comments that the Iraq situation is not affecting the price of oil as much as other factors (Nigeria, Iran, etc.).

So far as publicly commenting on the need for conservation, you might be interested to know that Roscoe Bartlett, a conservative Republican representative from Maryland who is the co-founder of the "Peak Oil" caucus in Congress, has appeared on TV and has made statements recommending conservation. "Certainly, we need to conserve, and we certainly need to be more efficient."

I am unable to find any direct comments that he's made on President Carter, but he has made comments like "If we're going to get through this crisis period without an awful lot of pain, we're going to have to have the equivalent of a Manhattan-like Project."

Since I'm a Democrat, I'm not quite ready to say "Roscoe Bartlett for President," but he certainly is a politician who has gone on TV and called for conservation, and deserves our thanks for that.

 
At 10:12 AM, Blogger Charlie said...

My understanding is that the prices at the pump (gasoline and diesel) are not as tied to the price of crude oil as they were in previous years. The fuel markets have their own supply and demand problems that have developed, regardless of how oil is currently priced.

First, our (American) fuel production is being outstripped by demand. American fuel consumption continues to rise every year by a few percent, and it is hitting the production levels earlier and earlier every year. Last year, as you might recall, there was already a fuel crisis developing in the Summer before the hurricanes began hitting us. This year, the situation is worse because some of the fuel production is still offline from the hurricanes of last year, and so the crunch is hitting sooner.

Then, there is the whole problem of MTBE being abandoned and replaced by ethanol, which is in short supply. This is why the price of fuel in major cities with pollution regulations on gasoline formulation have gone through the roof. The suppliers to those markets are having major problems delivering the new ethanol fuel (eg, ethanol fuel cannot be transported to market by pipeline).

Then, with all of that, which are real problems, you have speculators trying to make a buck on futures markets. They drives the prices up for no reason other than they have a ton of investment cash to buy contracts with.

But Iraq not producing the 1.5 or so million barrels a day that it *could* be producing does hurt the markets. The supply and demand of crude is getting pretty tight these days. I think the latest run-up in crude prices, though, were a result of pretended hysteria -- the idea that it was possible that a war could happen at the end of April and that Iran could close down all or most of the oil exported out of the Gulf. It would have been catastrophic. You'll notice that now that it is becoming clear a war is not going to happen imminently, the prices have peaked and are selling down.

The major hedge funds are happily cashing in the profits on the run-up, probably having been "in the know" enough to not be very concerned the whole time. The US military is not prepared for a war yet, even if they are dead certain on having one with Iran. (Ie, they are not in position for an offensive.) The only real danger was whether Iran would start one (in my mind at least), especially after the Askariya Shrine demolition.

 
At 10:43 AM, Blogger Sam Charles Norton said...

It's unlikely that speculation (or lack of refining capacity) is as significant as some commentators allege. The underlying problem is the supply/demand imbalance - oil production is either at or near its peak (soon to decline - see Mexico), and the massive rise in demand from Asia.

For why the high oil price isn't a bubble, see here and here.

 
At 1:14 PM, Blogger Juan Cole said...

Joe:

Iraq doesn't account for a 3.5 reduction in supply by itself. More like 1.6 percent as I figure it. Things were no better in Iraq the last time petroleum was in the $40s.

 
At 1:59 AM, Blogger Hans Wall said...

Dear Professor Cole,

I think that the deteriorating security situation is only part of the picture. Declining crude oil qualities and increased "water cut" (damaging intrusion of water into oil reservoirs) are likely the result of overpumping as Iraq attempted to sell as much oil as possible in the months leading up to the March/April 2003 war. In
addition poor reservoir management practices during the Saddam Hussein years --including reinjection of excess fuel oil (as much as 1.5 billion barrels by one estimate), refinery residue, and gas-stripped oil -- may have seriously, even permanently, damaged Kirkuk and other fields.

At least that was the Energy Information Administration says in the Dec 2005 Country Brief. http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Iraq/Full.html

On the other hand the U.S. Department of Commerce still entertains the idea of an eventual output of 6 mbd of Iraqi oil(in 2010) but this might be just another of those miscalculations this administration is famous for. http://www.export.gov/iraq/bus_climate/sector_overview.html

 

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