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           |  | 
 The Real Cause Of Low Oil Prices:
 
 Arthur Berman Interviewed By James Stafford
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 15, 2015
 
 
 
 
  With all the conspiracy theories surrounding OPEC's November 
	decision not cut production, is it really not just a case of simple 
	economics? The U.S. shale boom has seen huge hype but the numbers speak for 
	themselves and such overflowing optimism may have been unwarranted. When 
	discussing harsh truths in energy, no sector is in greater need of a reality 
	check than renewable energy. 
 In a third exclusive interview with 
	James Stafford of Oilprice.com, energy 
	expert Arthur Berman explores:
 
 • How the oil price situation came 
	about and what was really behind OPEC's decision
 • What the future really 
	holds in store for U.S. shale
 • Why the U.S. oil exports debate is 
	nonsensical for many reasons
 • What lessons can be learnt from the U.S. 
	shale boom
 • Why technology doesn't have as much of an influence on oil 
	prices as you might think
 • How the global energy mix is likely to change 
	but not in the way many might have hoped
 
 OP: The Current Oil 
	Situation - What is your assessment?
 
 Arthur Berman: The current 
	situation with oil price is really very simple. Demand is down because of a 
	high price for too long. Supply is up because of U.S. shale oil and the 
	return of Libya's production. Decreased demand and increased supply equals 
	low price.
 
 As far as Saudi Arabia and its motives, that is very 
	simple also. The Saudis are good at money and arithmetic. Faced with the 
	painful choice of losing money maintaining current production at $60/barrel 
	or taking 2 million barrels per day off the market and losing much more 
	money—it's an easy choice: take the path that is less painful. If there are 
	secondary reasons like hurting U.S. tight oil producers or hurting Iran and 
	Russia, that's great, but it's really just about the money.
 
 Saudi 
	Arabia met with Russia before the November OPEC meeting and proposed that if 
	Russia cut production, Saudi Arabia would also cut and get Kuwait and the 
	Emirates at least to cut with it. Russia said, "No," so Saudi Arabia said, 
	"Fine, maybe you will change your mind in six months." I think that Russia 
	and maybe Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria and Angola will change their minds by the 
	next OPEC meeting in June.
 
 We've seen several announcements by U.S. 
	companies that they will spend less money drilling tight oil in the Bakken 
	and Eagle Ford Shale Plays and in the Permian Basin in 2015. That's great 
	but it will take a while before we see decreased production. In fact, it is 
	more likely that production will increase before it decreases. That's 
	because it takes time to finish the drilling that's started, do less 
	drilling in 2015 and finally see a drop in production. Eventually though, 
	U.S. tight oil production will decrease. About that time—perhaps near the 
	end of 2015—world oil prices will recover somewhat due to OPEC and Russian 
	cuts after June and increased demand because of lower oil price. Then, U.S. 
	companies will drill more in 2016.
 
 OP: How do you see the shale 
	landscape changing in the U.S. given the current oil price slump?
 
 Arthur Berman: We've read a lot of silly articles since oil prices started 
	falling about how U.S. shale plays can break-even at whatever the latest, 
	lowest price of oil happens to be. Doesn't anyone realize that the 
	investment banks that do the research behind these articles have a vested 
	interest in making people believe that the companies they've put billions of 
	dollars into won't go broke because prices have fallen? This is total 
	propaganda.
 
 We've done real work to determine the EUR (estimated 
	ultimate recovery) of all the wells in the core of the Bakken Shale play, 
	for example. It's about 450,000 barrels of oil equivalent per well counting 
	gas. When we take the costs and realized oil and gas prices that the 
	companies involved provide to the Securities and Exchange Commission in 
	their 10-Qs, we get a break-even WTI price of $80-85/barrel. Bakken 
	economics are at least as good or better than the Eagle Ford and Permian so 
	this is a fairly representative price range for break-even oil prices.
 
 But smart people don't invest in things that break-even. I mean, why 
	should I take a risk to make no money on an energy company when I can invest 
	in a variable annuity or a REIT that has almost no risk that will pay me a 
	reasonable margin?
 
 Oil prices need to be around $90 to attract 
	investment capital. So, are companies OK at current oil prices? Hell no! 
	They are dying at these prices. That's the truth based on real data. The 
	crap that we read that companies are fine at $60/barrel is just that. They 
	get to those prices by excluding important costs like everything except 
	drilling and completion. Why does anyone believe this stuff?
 
 If you 
	somehow don't believe or understand EURs and 10-Qs, just get on Google 
	Finance and look at third quarter financial data for the companies that say 
	they are doing fine at low oil prices.
 
 Continental Resources is the 
	biggest player in the Bakken. Their free cash flow—cash from operating 
	activities minus capital expenditures—was -$1.1 billion in the third- 
	quarter of 2014. That means that they spent more than $1 billion more than 
	they made. Their debt was 120% of equity. That means that if they sold 
	everything they own, they couldn't pay off all their debt. That was at $93 
	oil prices.
 
 And they say that they will be fine at $60 oil prices? 
	Are you kidding? People need to wake up and click on Google Finance to see 
	that I am right. Capital costs, by the way, don't begin to reflect all of 
	their costs like overhead, debt service, taxes, or operating costs so the 
	true situation is really a lot worse.
 
 So, how do I see the shale 
	landscape changing in the U.S. given the current oil price slump? It was 
	pretty awful before the price slump so it can only get worse. The real 
	question is "when will people stop giving these companies money?" When the 
	drilling slows down and production drops—which won't happen until at least 
	mid-2016—we will see the truth about the U.S. shale plays. They only work at 
	high oil prices. Period.
 
 OP: What, if any, effect will low oil 
	prices have on the US oil exports debate?
 
 Arthur Berman: The debate 
	about U.S. oil exports is silly. We produce about 8.5 million barrels of 
	crude oil per day. We import about 6.5 million barrels of crude oil per day 
	although we have been importing less every year. That starts to change in 
	2015 and after 2018 our imports will start to rise again according to EIA. 
	The same thing is true about domestic production. In 2014, we will see the 
	greatest annual rate of increase in production. In 2015, the rate of 
	increase starts to slow down and production will decline after 2019 again 
	according to EIA.
 
 Why would we want to export oil when we will 
	probably never import less than 37 or 38 percent (5.8 million barrels per 
	day) of our consumption? For money, of course!
 
 Remember, all of the 
	calls for export began when oil prices were high. WTI was around $100/barrel 
	from February through mid-August of this year. Brent was $6 or $7 higher. 
	WTI was lower than Brent because the shale players had over-produced oil, 
	like they did earlier with gas, and lowered the domestic price.
 
 U.S. 
	refineries can't handle the light oil and condensate from the shale plays so 
	it has to be blended with heavier imported crudes and exported as refined 
	products. Domestic producers could make more money faster if they could just 
	export the light oil without going to all of the trouble to blend and refine 
	it.
 
 This, by the way, is the heart of the Keystone XL pipeline 
	debate. We're not planning to use the oil domestically but will blend that 
	heavy oil with condensate from shale plays, refine it and export petroleum 
	products. Keystone is about feedstock.
 
 Would exporting unrefined 
	light oil and condensate be good for the country? There may be some net 
	economic benefit but it doesn't seem smart for us to run through our 
	domestic supply as fast as possible just so that some oil companies can make 
	more money.
 
 OP: In global terms, what do you think developing 
	producer nations can learn from the US shale boom?
 
 Arthur Berman: 
	The biggest take-away about the U.S. shale boom for other countries is that 
	prices have to be high and stay high for the plays to work. Another 
	important message is that drilling can never stop once it begins because 
	decline rates are high. Finally, no matter how big the play is, only about 
	10-15% of it—the core or sweet spot—has any chance of being commercial. If 
	you don't know how to identify the core early on, the play will probably 
	fail.
 
 Not all shale plays work. Only marine shales that are known 
	oil source rocks seem to work based on empirical evidence from U.S. plays. 
	Source rock quality and source maturity are the next big filter. Total 
	organic carbon (TOC) has to be at least 2% by weight in a fairly thick 
	sequence of shale. Vitrinite reflectance (Ro) needs to be 1.1 or higher.
 
 If your shale doesn't meet these threshold criteria, it probably won't 
	be commercial. Even if it does meet them, it may not work. There is a lot 
	more uncertainty about shale plays than most people think.
 
 OP: Given 
	technological advances in both the onshore and offshore sectors which 
	greatly increase production, how likely is it that oil will stay below $80 
	for years to come?
 
 Arthur Berman: First of all, I'm not sure that 
	the premise of the question is correct. Who said that technology is 
	responsible for increasing production? Higher price has led to drilling more 
	wells. That has increased production. It's true that many of these wells 
	were drilled using advances in technology like horizontal drilling and 
	hydraulic fracturing but these weren't free. Has the unit cost of a barrel 
	of oil gas gone down in recent years? No, it has gone up. That's why the 
	price of oil is such a big deal right now.
 
 Domestic oil prices were 
	below about $30/barrel until 2004 and companies made enough money to stay in 
	business. WTI averaged about $97/barrel from 2011 until August of 2014. 
	That's when we saw the tight oil boom. I would say that technology followed 
	price and that price was the driver. Now that prices are low, all the 
	technology in the world won't stop falling production.
 
 Many people 
	think that the resurgence of U.S. oil production shows that Peak Oil was 
	wrong. Peak oil doesn't mean that we are running out of oil. It simply means 
	that once conventional oil production begins to decline, future supply will 
	have to come from more difficult sources that will be more expensive or of 
	lower quality or both. This means production from deep water, shale and 
	heavy oil. It seems to me that Peak Oil predictions are right on track.
 
 Technology will not reduce the break-even price of oil. The cost of 
	technology requires high oil prices. The companies involved in these plays 
	never stop singing the praises of their increasing efficiency through 
	technology—this has been a constant litany since about 2007—but we never see 
	those improvements reflected in their financial statements. I don't doubt 
	that the companies learn and get better at things like drilling time but 
	other costs must be increasing to explain the continued negative cash flow 
	and high debt of most of these companies.
 
 The price of oil will 
	recover. Opinions that it will remain low for a long time do not take into 
	account that all producers need about $100/barrel. The big exporting nations 
	need this price to balance their fiscal budgets. The deep-water, shale and 
	heavy oil producers need $100 oil to make a small profit on their expensive 
	projects. If oil price stays at $80 or lower, only conventional producers 
	will be able to stay in business by ignoring the cost of social overhead to 
	support their regimes. If this happens, global supply will fall and the 
	price will increase above $80/barrel. Only a global economic collapse would 
	permit low oil prices to persist for very long.
 
 OP: How do you see 
	the global energy mix changing in the coming decades? Have renewables made 
	enough advances to properly compete with fossil fuels or is that still a 
	long way off?
 
 Arthur Berman: The global energy mix will move 
	increasingly to natural gas and more slowly to renewable energy. Global 
	conventional oil production peaked in 2005-2008. U.S. shale gas production 
	will peak in the next 5 to 7 years but Russia, Iran, Qatar and Turkmenistan 
	have sufficient conventional gas reserves to supply Europe and Asia for 
	several decades. Huge discoveries have been made in the greater Indian Ocean 
	region—Madagascar, offshore India, the Northwest Shelf of Australia and 
	Papua New Guinea. These will provide the world with natural gas for several 
	more decades. Other large finds have been made in the eastern Mediterranean.
 
 There will be challenges as we move from an era of oil- to an era of 
	gas-dominated energy supply. The most serious will be in the transport 
	sector where we are thoroughly reliant on liquid fuels today —mostly 
	gasoline and diesel. Part of the transformation will be electric transport 
	using natural gas to generate the power. Increasingly, LNG will be a factor 
	especially in regions that lack indigenous gas supply or where that supply 
	will be depleted in the medium term and no alternative pipeline supply is 
	available like in North America.
 
 Of course, natural gas and 
	renewable energy go hand-in-hand. Since renewable energy—primarily solar and 
	wind—are intermittent, natural gas backup or base-load is necessary. I think 
	that extreme views on either side of the renewable energy issue will have to 
	moderate. On the one hand, renewable advocates are unrealistic about how 
	quickly and easily the world can get off of fossil fuels. On the other hand, 
	fossil fuel advocates ignore the fact that government is already on board 
	with renewables and that, despite the economic issues that they raise, 
	renewables are going to move forward albeit at considerable cost.
 
 Time is rarely considered adequately. Renewable energy accounts for a little 
	more than 2% of U.S. total energy consumption. No matter how much people 
	want to replace fossil fuel with renewable energy, we cannot go from 2% to 
	20% or 30% in less than a decade no matter how aggressively we support or 
	even mandate its use. In order to get to 50% or more of primary energy 
	supply from renewable sources it will take decades.
 
 I appreciate the 
	urgency felt by those concerned with climate change. I think, however, that 
	those who advocate a more-or-less immediate abandonment of fossil fuels fail 
	to understand how a rapid transition might affect the quality of life and 
	the global economy. Much of the climate change debate has centered on who is 
	to blame for the problem. Little attention has been given to what comes next 
	namely, how will we make that change without extreme economic and social 
	dislocation?
 
 I am not a climate scientist and, therefore, do not get 
	involved in the technical debate. I suggest, however, that those who 
	advocate decisive action in the near term think seriously about how natural 
	gas and nuclear power can make the change they seek more palatable.
 
 The great opportunity for renewable energy lies in electricity storage 
	technology. At present, we are stuck with intermittent power and little 
	effort has gone into figuring out ways to store the energy that wind and 
	solar sources produce when conditions are right. If we put enough capital 
	into storage capability, that can change everything.
 
 Source:
	
	http://oilprice.com/Interviews/The-Real-Cause-Of-Low-Oil-Prices-Interview-With-Arthur-Berman.html
 
 By James Stafford of Oilprice.com
 
 
 *** 
		  
		  
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