IEA says Iran, Venezuela oil output could slump by almost 30%
LONDON (Bloomberg) -- OPEC members Iran and Venezuela could lose almost 30% of their oil output next year due to U.S. sanctions and economic upheaval, requiring extra supplies from the group’s Gulf members, the International Energy Agency said.
In its first detailed forecast for 2019, the IEA said new oil output from outside OPEC -- in particular U.S. shale -- should be enough to cover growth in demand, but nations such as Saudi Arabia may still need to boost output to compensate for lost supply from other members.
OPEC will meet next week and debate whether to restore production it halted last year. The IEA, which oversees the use of emergency oil stockpiles in major economies such as the U.S. and Japan, made a prominent statement in its monthly report about its readiness avert supply disruptions.
“Even if the Iran-Venezuela supply gap is plugged, the market will be finely balanced next year, and vulnerable to prices rising higher in the event of further disruption,” the Paris-based agency said. “It is possible that the very small number of countries with spare capacity beyond what can be activated quickly will have to go the extra mile.”
Contentious Debate
OPEC faces intense political pressure as oil’s rally to a three-year high above $80/bbl has spurred warnings about the threat to the global economy, and drawn fire from U.S. President Donald Trump. Saudi Arabia says it’s ready to temper prices by raising supply, setting the stage for a clash with fellow OPEC members when they gather in Vienna on June 22.
American foreign policy is upping the ante for the kingdom, as President Trump re-imposes sanctions on Saudi Arabia’s political foe, Iran, that will almost certainly strain global oil supplies.
Iranian output could be curbed next year by about 900,000 bpd, or about 23%, the IEA said. The agency stressed the estimate is a “scenario” rather than a forecast, based on the impact of previous sanctions.
Venezuela, where production has already collapsed to the lowest in decades as an economic crisis batters oil infrastructure, could see its output fall by a further 550,000 bpd, or 40%.
OPEC’s Middle East producers, led by the Saudis, are capable of filling that gap “in short order” with an additional 1.1 MMbpd if they return to the record levels pumped in late 2016. Next year, they may have to go even further.
Shale Growth
In theory, meeting the growth in world oil demand next year shouldn’t be a problem as U.S. shale-oil production continues to rise. Consumption will increase by 1.4 MMbpd in 2019, the same pace as this year, while producers outside OPEC will add 1.7 MMbpd, according to the IEA.
As a result, about 31.6 MMbpd will be needed from OPEC in 2019, slightly less than the amount they pumped in May.
Yet as Iran and Venezuela decline, maintaining total supply levels will require extra effort from the Saudis and other Gulf members. Oil stockpiles in developed nations have fallen to their lowest in three years, and will shrink further if the Gulf nations keep output steady, the agency said.
The IEA’s message that it “stands ready to advise its member governments on any action that might be necessary” will likely have resonance for OPEC policy makers. In 2011, when the cartel didn’t respond to the agency’s recommendation for more supply during Libya’s civil war, IEA nations unlocked their emergency stockpiles.