4 New Risks Could Influence Oil Market Dynamics Going Forward

 | Jan 23, 2020 05:04

Now that oil prices have fully recovered from the threat of escalating aggression between the U.S. and Iran, here are four important issues that will influence oil prices and market dynamics in the near-term and long-term:

h2 1. Brazil May Join OPEC In 2021/h2

Brazil’s energy minister, Bento Albuquerque, announced that the nation is seriously considering joining OPEC in 2021 and will begin discussions during his upcoming visit to Saudi Arabia In July.

Apparently Brazilian oil producers expressed concerns about OPEC membership in 2020 because the decision would mean cutting oil production to comply with the OPEC+ policy. Brazil seems optimistic that the production cuts will end by 2021 even though OPEC and Russia are actively working to extend the cuts—set to expire in March—through June 2020 and possibly through December 2020 .

In November 2019 Brazil's oil independent Brazilian oil companies and foreign International Oil Companies (IOC) participating that would make joining OPEC challenging.

This obstacle stems from the fact that over 1 million bpd of the nation's oil output is not controlled by Petrobras, but is spread amongst at least 25 companies, many of whom develop oil concessions in conjunction with IOCs like Equinor (NYSE:EQNR), BP (NYSE:BP), Shell (NYSE:RDSa) and Chevron (NYSE:CVX).

Adding to this issue, Brazil hopes to attract more foreign companies to develop its offshore oil resources. Its last offshore concession auction was considered a flop, with many companies shunning the auction altogether, so the possibility that future production could be subject to OPEC quotas and production cuts would add another reason for foreign oil firms to steer clear from investing in Brazil’s oil resources.

Brazil’s president and energy minister may seek to join the oil cartel, and OPEC would certainly benefit from Brazil’s membership. However, the potential pitfalls to Brazil’s future oil production will likely outweigh any benefits.

h2 2. Saudi, Kuwait To Restart Joint Oil Production/h2

Saudi Arabia and Kuwait share oil production along a swath of land and sea between the two countries called the Neutral Zone.

Production in this area has been halted since 2015, due to disputes between the nations. In December, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait finally signed an MOU (memorandum of understanding) to resolve these clashes and restart production. Kuwait’s Assembly voted yesterday to ratify the agreement with Saudi Arabia, eliminating yet another hurdle.

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Production in the Neutral Zone could restart as soon as March 2020. Oil fields in the region have the potential to add as much as 500,000 bpd to the global market eventually.

However, even if the Neutral Zone does start pumping in a few months, don’t expect full production anytime soon. According to Chevron, which co-manages the onshore Neutral Zone’s Wafra oil field with Kuwait Gulf Oil Co., full production from that field won’t be back online for at least a year.

h2 3. Coronavirus: Oil Demand Threat?/h2

The coronavirus, a highly contagious respiratory ailment that has already infected hundreds of people in China, is drawing comparisons to the SARS outbreak in 2003. In late 2002 and early 2003, China’s GDP fell by an estimated 0.5% to 2.0% because of that SARS outbreak.

That epidemic slowed air travel and caused jet fuel demand to drop significantly enough that China’s overall oil demand was affected. Many analysts are using the SARS epidemic as a benchmark to anticipate the coronavirus’s impact on China’s oil demand. In anticipation of less fuel use in China, both Brent and WTI dropped by over 2% on Wednesday.