Bloomberg is reporting that Saudi Aramco has restored oil production levels at the crude-processing plants at Abqaiq and at the Khurais oil field. Multiple reports that Saudi's production would be back online quickly have helped push oil prices back down to where they were prior to the September 14 attacks.
Maximum production capacity still isn't at pre-attack levels, and Aramco said that won't be restored until late-November. Presently, Abqaiq capacity has been restored to 4.9 million barrels a day (BPD), versus a pre-attack capacity of 5.5 million BPD. Khurais is operating at 1.3 million BPD, versus a pre-attack capacity of 1.5 million BPD.
Aramco has reportedly continued to supply its customers, in part by drawing down its oil inventories. The inventory draw has been reported upon by Ursa, a geospatial intelligence company. I recently spoke with Ursa's global energy analyst, Geoff Craig, who explained the company's capabilities and findings.
Ursa measures tank levels from space using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellites. The data is then processed with a machine learning algorithm. The company also reports on flaring activity. These two pieces of information can provide a picture of Saudi Aramco's activities. Related: This Could End The World's Dependence On Oil
Geoff explained that three sites - Ras Tanura, Yanbu and Khafji - contain most of Saudi Arabia's domestic crude oil inventories. In the month prior to the attack, inventories were relatively stable. But the two weeks following the attacks saw inventories at these three sites fall by more than 20 percent.
Saudi crude inventories at Ras Tanura, Yanbu and Khafji.
In addition to drawing down inventories Aramco has reportedly been sourcing crude oil from nearby countries like Kuwait, and it has been offering some customers heavy crude instead of the light crude they normally receive.
What are the implications? The oil markets seem to have already discounted the geopolitical risk. Falling inventories don't seem to have concerned the market either, although Ursa's latest measurement showed that inventories finally increased at Ras Tanura and Yanbu.
Market intelligence provider Wood Mackenzie told the Wall Street Journal this week "In the past the Saudis have always been able to step up to the plate and meet what's missing. This is a different situation because the country with the greatest spare capacity is the one hampered." They added on Twitter "If there are any other outages, we are up a creek without a paddle, as they say."
That heightened risk certainly isn't reflected in the current price of oil.
By Robert Rapier
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Robert Rapier is a chemical engineer in the energy industry. He has 25 years of international engineering experience in the chemical, oil and gas, and… More
Comments
How much crude oil remaining in their inventory depends on whether Aramco has actually managed to restore its production capacity to pre-attack levels swiftly. If this is the case, then a puzzling question arises as to whether the Saudis have exaggerated the damage to their production capacity to incite the United States to retaliate against Iran or they were lying about the speedy repairs to the damaged infrastructure.
If they did indeed exaggerate the loss of production capacity, then it is possible that they would be able to restore it speedily. But then they would have failed to get the United States to retaliate against Iran thus weakening its strategic position vis-à-vis Iran and exposing a huge chink in their alliance with the United States.
If, on the other hand, there was truly a loss of 5.7 million barrels a day (mbd) of Saudi production capacity, then the damage would have been extensive and this means that the repairs would have taken months rather weeks to accomplish. In such a situation, they would deplete their inventory totally in less than a month even with crude oil purchases from neighbouring producers.
If oil prices start to surge to $70-$75 a barrel by end of October, we will get the proof that Saudi Arabia has neither been honest about the extension of the damage to its oil infrastructure nor about the restoration of production capacity.
Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Visiting Professor of Energy Economics at ESCP Europe Business School, London