Oil firms warn US$60 oil threatens world supplies

Written by Writer on Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

warn US$60 oil threatens world supplies

11-NOV-2008 | Reuters
Nov 11, 2008 - 7:00:00 AM

The world’s biggest state-owned oil companies are weathering the and the dive in for now, top executives said on Friday, but they warned that US$60 oil could soon begin to stymie their investment.

and public that have ventured into higher-cost frontiers to grow their production are already beginning to pull back on projects as credit grows scarce and oil’s steep retreat in recent months threatens their profits.

But for now national - backed by political will and, in many cases, overflowing after a five-year - are holding the line, even though they say prices are nearing unprofitable levels.

“We’re not satisfied as a company with ,” Mohamed Meziane, chief of Algeria’s firm , told reporters in Beijing, where he was attending a closed-door for executives.

“We would like to have a higher oil price, at US$80 to US$100 a barrel, to satisfy all the concerned consumers and producers.”

But the risks are undoubtedly growing, and want to avoid setting up another volatile spike in prices if projects once global growth resumes in several years’ time.

“I think if this trend continues, of course many projects are going to be scrapped and in two-years we are going to be facing a real shortage in supplies and that will drive the prices as it did this year,” said Libya’s top oil official .

His stance was echoed by the head of Norway’s StatoilHydro, , who said projects with cash committed would go ahead, but those in the planning pipeline could be at risk.

“The projects that are already sanctioned and in the investment phase, these projects will continue,” he said.

“How long the recession or the last will I think decide to a large extent whether or not people are also delaying projects that are in planning today.”

The national oil companies are still largely cushioned by their oil reserves and recent fat earnings from the worst impact of the credit crunch that is squeezing other .

“Most have enough cash flow to finance most of the projects themselves,” said Johannes Benigni, at Vienna-based JBC Energy.

In a more critical condition, however, are those who adapted too rapidly to the summer’s massive price spike and counted on further rich pickings to fund the national budget.

“In several cases, it appears that, rather than treating the spectacular oil revenues of recent months as a windfall, some governments have been quick to adopt them as the new norm and are now finding it extremely difficult to tolerate prices at US$60-US$70 per barrel,” said Julian Lee at the Centre for Global Energy Studies.

Any difficulties are so far yet to show. The only state firm to put a project on ice is cashed-up Saudi Aramco, which said on Thursday it and partner ConocoPhillips had halted bidding on the construction of the 400,000 bpd, joint-venture Yanbu refinery in Saudi Arabia, citing uncertainties in the financial and contracting markets.

But others in the oil-rich Gulf are taking the opportunity to branch into new areas. The UAE’ oil investment vehicle IPIC is near a deal to provide US$1.1bn in funding for a Papua New Guinea liquefied natural gas project.

But for most global companies it will be a period of painful adjustments as firms that plumped for expensive developments like deepwater drilling during crude’s apparently unstoppable rise are forced to reassess whether they can even break even. “The marginal cost of expansion is probably today around US$60,” the chief executive of Petroleo Brasiliero SA Jose Sergio Gabrielli told reporters in Beijing, but added that the high cost of bringing new projects on line now meant current market levels were unlikely to last long.

“If you have a very low cost in the short run, then you reduce investments and as such we have an upswing in price in the mid term,” he said.

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