Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 17 – Just how
disastrous Vladimir Putin’s decision to rely on the export of oil rather than
to modernize and diversify the Russian economy is going to become ever more
obvious in the coming years given that world prices of oil may fall to as low
as ten US dollars a barrel and Russia’s production of oil to fall by almost 30
percent over the next 25 years.
Those predictions are offered by the
new annual report of the International Energy Agency, and they point to a
disaster for Russia even if oil prices might occasionally spike upward from where
they are now unless Moscow takes step to end Russia’s dependence on oil exports
(ng.ru/economics/2016-11-17/4_6861_oil.html).
The
reason the IEA says oil prices will fall is rooted in lower production costs
brought about by the fracking revolution. Demand in fact will grow by 12.5
percent by 2040 to 103.5 million barrels a day, “Nezavisimaya gazeta”
journalist Olga Solovyeva says in reporting on the findings of the agency.
“For
Russia,” she says, “the IAE predictions are hard to call optimistic. Russian
oil production is slated to fall by 30 percent to 8.5 million barrels a day
from its current rate of 10.9 million.” While Russia’s oil companies may do all
right, the report continues, the Russian government is going to be constricted
by a decline in revenue from the sale of oil abroad.
The
situation may become even more dire as the world enters a period of extreme
volatility in oil prices because those countries in the West that are using
fracking can adjust their production levels at lower losses than those like
Russia that use this technology for a much smaller share of their production.
There
are three other trends which are likely to hurt Russian income from the sale of
oil in the short term, according to Azret Guliyev, an official of the Solid
Company. First, “the price of oil today does not depend [in this first
instance] on the real size of demand and supply. It is formed by the trade of production
instruments.”
Second,
he points out, “Trump’s election as president of the US almost certainly will
lead to the strengthening of the dollar and to an increase in key rates. As a
result, the price of a barrel of oil in dollars will be less than today.”
Moreover, increased US production as a result of his policies and the fracking
revolution will push prices down as well.
And
third, there is likely to be a slowing of economic growth in China and hence in
overall demand. Thus, “the price of a
barrel of oil will more likely fall than rise” and could even decline to less
than ten US dollars a barrel, a fifth of what it is now.
Another
Russian analyst, Georgy Vashchenko of the Freedom Finance Company, points to ab
additional reason why Russia faces ever more problems in this sector: there are
places in the US where the extraction of oil is profitable even at a price of
30 US dollars a barrel. There are far fewer such places in Russia.
And
today, there is an even more compelling reason to think that time is not on the
side of Putin’s Russia. American oil companies have announced the discovery of
a massive new oil field in Texas. Not surprisingly, Russian officials have done
their past to cast doubt on these reports (rbc.ru/business/17/11/2016/582d75c69a7947e822e3322a?from=main).
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