Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 27 – Four days ago,
Reuters reported the enormous problems Moscow faces in cutting back its oil
production by two million barrels a day as required by the deal with OPEC (reuters.com/article/us-global-oil-russia-production/repair-abandon-burn-russia-explores-options-for-historic-oil-cut-idUSKCN2252RD).
The news agency focused on the
immediate tasks the Russian government must perform if it is to meet the May
deadline, but it devoted less attention to a reality the Kremlin is loathe to
acknowledge: For a variety of reasons, Russia can never expect to see a return
to the level of production that it had achieved as of only a month ago.
Two Russian analysts, Pavel Pukhov,
a longtime specialist on the country’s oil and gas industry, and commentator
Andrey Nalgin explain why that almost certainly is likely to be the case (newizv.ru/article/general/27-04-2020/obratnogo-hoda-net-pochemu-rossii-nelzya-sokraschat-dobychu-nefti).
Pukhov focuses primarily on
technical issues, albeit ones that are exacerbated by Moscow’s proclivity of
adopting a one-size-fits-all approach to fields in extremely different climatic
conditions and stages of development and exploitation. It has few fields, the expert says, where it
can simply stop pumping and hope to pump again at the same levels in the future.
On the one hand, suspending pumping
will change pressure gradiants in many wells and cause the oil reservoirs below
to be reabsorbed by the surrounding geological formations and also lead to the
flooding of the wells themselves with mud that may be difficult if not
impossible to remove, the oil specialist says.
As a result, and especially if
Moscow does not carefully distinguish among fields that are at very different
levels of exhaustion, the central authorities are likely to end pumping now to
meet the OPEC deadline only to discover that they can’t restart it, in some
cases physically and in others because the cost of doing so would far exceed
the value of the oil to be pumped.
After providing a technical
description of these problems in Russian fields, Pukhov concludes by saying
that his “main concern is concentrated on two points – the length of nay
shutdown and the variety of fields,” whose very diversity will present
particular challenges to any policy of shutting down now and reopening later as
Moscow hopes.
Nalgin in turn focuses on the
broader economic challenges in this area.
“Even if everything in the oil market is restored in the medium term,”
something he thinks is unlikely given the impact of the pandemic, “and the OPEC++
limitations are limited, a return to the former levels of extraction will be
problematic.”
That is the case not only for
technological issues but because of declining demand. Consequently, those in the
Kremlin who think they can simply wait out the crisis and return to the normal
of the past are mistaken. The new “normal” will be something quite different
than the one they want to return to, Nalgin suggests.
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