Crude prices tumbled 70% since mid-2014 due to overproduction |
Captains of industry, movers
and shakers from the oil industry descended on London last week and expressed
optimism over a sharp rebound in the beleaguered crude market later this year.
Media
report continues:
Bob
Dudley, chief executive of British energy major BP, forecast at the
International Petroleum Week industry conference on Wednesday that “the daily
(oil) supply and demand” will be balanced in the second half.
“Every
storage tank and swimming pool will be full of oil,” Dudley told delegates,
acknowledging the vast global supply glut that sent prices plunging close to
13-year lows under US$27 (€24) per barrel last week.
“And
then… the market starts to pull the plug.
“And
I think we will begin to see the fundamentals (of supply and demand) take
over,” he said, indicating prices would pull higher in the third or fourth
quarter.
Dudley
cautioned however that US$100 oil would not return any time soon.
World
oil prices meanwhile rose Friday, with US crude rebounding from a 2003 low to
reach almost US$30 per barrel, on reports OPEC was willing to organize output
cuts that could curb global oversupply.
However,
prices have nevertheless slumped by about 70 percent since mid-2014 with the
market awash with crude.
Patrick
Pouyanne, chief executive of French oil and gas giant Total, agreed that prices
would charge higher towards the end of the year.
“I
think that the price will be higher at the end of the year 2016 than it is
today,” Pouyanne said Thursday at the IP Week conference.
– ‘It’s quite a crisis’ –
The
recent slump in the cost of oil has slashed the profits of energy companies,
prompting them to cut or defer investment and axe thousands of jobs.
Total
also revealed it would invest up to US$2 billion less in 2016 than originally
planned, as it grapples with ultra-low prices.
“It’s
quite a crisis that this industry is facing,” added Pouyanne.
Dudley
meanwhile estimated that about “US$400 billion of projects have been deferred or
cancelled” by the global energy sector in response to the market’s recent
collapse.
He
warned: “That’s going to lead to another reaction” in the oil market.
BP
recently posted the group’s biggest annual loss in at least 20 years, ravaged
by tumbling oil prices.
Energy
companies tended to over-invest in times of high price levels in the commodity
cycle, according to Pouyanne.
“When
the prices are high we over-invest, when the prices are high we have an impact
on the demand (but) when the prices are low we under-invest and we have a
positive (impact) on demand,” he told delegates.
Pouyanne
added: “Clearly we are today in a crisis of an excess of supply, an excess of
capacity, and also because the demand was lower than expected.”
The
Total boss said excess capacity stood at two million barrels per day (bpd),
which he added was “not so big” compared to a total market of 90 million bpd.
However,
he estimated that about 25 million bpd of new capacity was required between now
and 2020, and cited the impact of declining production from existing oil fields
and increasing energy demand.
Pouyanne warned there would
be an estimated shortfall of between five and 10 million bpd by 2020, which he
added would also push prices higher in the longer term.
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