Can Saudi Arabia keep its promise to pump more oil?
New book casts doubt on pledges to raise output

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8217587/

By John W. Schoen
Updated: 5:54 p.m. ET June 14, 2005

Don’t look for big headlines out of OPEC’s regular meeting in Vienna to discuss oil production: there’s not really much to discuss.

With global oil demand undeterred by a $50-a-barrel price tag, oil producers are pumping as fast as they can. So the semi-annual haggling over output quotas — ordinarily the gathering’s main event — is all but irrelevant.

Leaders of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said Tuesday they will try to lower soaring oil prices by raising the cartel's production target. But economists dismissed the move to lift the official quota to 28 million barrels a day, noting that the 10 member nations bound by it are already pumping that much. They said oil markets — and drivers suffering sticker-shock at the gas pumps — are unlikely to see much of a difference if the cartel takes the expected step at its meeting Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the discussion about what to do about high oil prices has already been overtaken by promises from Saudi Arabia — the only oil producer seen able to boost capacity from current levels — to raise production to keep prices from rising even further.

But a just-released book by veteran oil industry investment banker Matthew Simmons is raising questions about those Saudi promises. Based on research drawn from hundreds of technical papers spanning four decades, “Twilight in the Desert” argues that the kingdom's aging oil fields won't be able to sustain the higher levels of production needed to satisfy the world's growing thirst for oil.

“We’ve had an illusion for the last 40 years that there was so much oil in the Middle East that it would never run out,” Simmons said in a recent interview. “What I’m offering is evidence. And all the optimists are offering is hope.”

Simmons arrived at his assertions after a two-year review of hundreds of technical papers written by Saudi geologists and petroleum engineers. At the center of his argument is that the Saudis are relying heavily on just a handful of prolific oil fields that are now rapidly aging — with little evidence that new, untapped fields are waiting in the wings. To maintain production levels at those few, aging oil fields, Simmons writes, increasing amounts of water have to be pumped into the ground to force oil to the surface. “The picture that emerges,” he writes, “undermines the optimistic but unsubstantiated claims of Saudi officialdom.”

Not surprisingly, Saudi officialdom has been vigorously refuting Simmons' assertions ever since word of his book and its findings first started circulating in oil industry circles last year.

“The world is more likely to run out of uses for oil than Saudi Arabia is going to run out of oil,” Adel al-Jubeir, top foreign policy adviser for Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler Crown Prince Abdullah, told the Associated Press last week.

Saudi officials also have argued that refining bottlenecks — not a lack of crude supplies — is the real cause of the recent spike in gasoline and diesel fuel prices

Hard data on OPEC production has been scarce for decades; one of Simmons' central arguments is that the world needs a better mechanism for verifying the production capacity of all oil producers. But the arithmetic that is driving oil prices higher is fairly simple.

Despite the recent surge in prices, demand for oil continues to grow — especially from rapidly developing economies in China and India. Global demand is currently about 84 million barrels per day and growing by about 2 to 3 percent a year, which means another 2 million barrels a day or so will be needed by next year. If demand growth continues, even higher levels of daily production will be needed to meet that demand. If production fails to meet demand, oil-consuming nations face the prospect of even higher oil prices, shortages or both.

So where will the added production of millions of barrels a day come from? With all other OPEC members producing at capacity, Saudi Arabia, the world's largest producer, is widely believed to be the best hope for meeting increased demand. (Russia, the world’s second-largest producer, will be able to add a few hundred thousand barrels at day at best over the next few years, according to estimates by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.)

Saudi officials say they’re ready to boost production from current levels of 9.5 million barrels per day by drawing on some 1.5 million barrels per day of surplus capacity. And they’ve pledged to boost that capacity another 1.5 million — to 12.5 million barrels per day — by 2009. The kingdom’s oil minister said last month that production levels of 12.5 million to 15 million barrels per day can be sustained for up to 50 years.

But Simmons says a review of technical reports written by Saudi geologists and petroleum engineers paints a very different picture. These reports, he writes, detail massive injections of water needed just to sustain current levels of production. That process eventually causes an oil field to “water up,” he writes, as the injected water bypasses oil and supplants it in producing oil wells. When that happens, he writes, overall production levels can fall rapidly.

Saudi officials have countered that new technologies allow them to produce oil that was once deemed “unrecoverable.” Simmons argues that these new production techniques have become “super straws” that have increased the rate of depletion from aging wells, but won’t boost output.

Simmons also writes that the Saudi’s massive Ghawar oil field — which accounts for more than half of total production — is more than 40 years old, and he argues that the most productive areas already have been tapped. The past four decades of technical papers also show little evidence of promising new oil fields, according to Simmons. And past Saudi promises to boost output haven’t been backed up by actual oil shipments, he says.

“My guess is they're probably struggling to maintain 8 to 8.5 million a day of production and saying they’re doing 9.5 (million),” he said.

If Simmons' assertions are correct, the world faces an energy crunch at least as significant as the oil shocks of the 1970s. Alternative energy sources are beginning to play a significant role. But most analysts and industry experts concede it will take at least a decade before renewable sources like solar, wind or bio fuels make a significant dent in global energy demand. Even then, most of these alternative sources are being used to produce electricity; oil is primarily used as a transportation fuel, for which there are no readily available substitutes.

Simmons says he hopes his book will provide a “wake-up call,” at the very least pressuring oil producers to allow independent verification, oil field by oil field, of production levels and surplus capacity.

“I hope I’m being overly pessimistic,” he said.

If he’s not, and growing oil demand is about to overtake global production capacity, Simmons argues that governments around the world need to begin preparing for that event, which he says would amount to “the 9/11 of energy.”

“I really do believe that if we understand these problems and go to a war footing,” he said, “we can actually fix this thing.” But he says doing so will take, among other things, “a scientific expedition that exceeds what we did when we created radar and the atomic bomb.”

The Associated Press contributed to this story.