The Battle for Energy Dominance
“Foreign Affairs”, March/April 2002
Edward L. Morse and James Richard
Edward L. Morse is Executive Adviser at Hess Energy Trading Company and was Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for International Energy Policy in 1979-81. James Richard is
a portfolio manager at Firebird Management, an investment fund active in eastern Europe,
Russia, and Central Asia.
RUSSIA VS. SAUDI ARABIA
The American campaign against terrorism may be grabbing the headlines,
but another battle is being waged with perhaps equally significant long-term implications:
the contest for energy dominance between the world's two largest oil exporters, Saudi
Arabia and Russia. This battle will have fundamental consequences for the world's economy,
U.S. energy security, Russia's global role, the future relevance of Saudi Arabia, and the
clout of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
The contest emerged suddenly and unexpectedly. For each of the past two
years, Russia has quietly but persistently increased its annual oil output at a rate of
nearly half a million barrels a day (mbd) -- the largest single increment of increased
output of any country in the world. With the world economy and world oil demand
stagnating, Saudi Arabia and its OPEC partners therefore opted to reduce their output by
3.5 mbd. Then, on January 1, 2002, OPEC cut output by another 1.5 mbd to stave off a price
collapse. Even though Moscow made a symbolic cut in output as well, OPEC has not welcomed
Russia's gain at the cartel's expense.
Russia and the Soviet successor states can easily continue to increase
oil output at this rate for years to come. The victims of that increase, in all
likelihood, will be Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and other oil producers with state monopoly
companies that disallow foreign investment. The only oil not threatened by Russia's rise
is the petroleum developed by international companies outside of the key OPEC countries of
the Middle East.
The Russian increases have come as a surprise, especially for OPEC. As
recently as 1996, oil output from the post-Soviet states amounted to barely 7 mbd. Many
people forgot that Moscow's state-owned enterprises once produced more than 12.5 mbd
before the Soviet collapse -- the largest amount of oil ever produced by a single country,
representing one-fifth of global production. That sum is one-third more than Saudi
Arabia's peak share at the end of 2000.
After undergoing tremendous transformation since the fall of the Soviet
Union, Russia's firms have arrived on the world stage. Although vast room for improvement
remains, Russia's oil leaders have largely transcended their robber-baron days. Backed by
improved rule of law, they are seeking to protect their new wealth and meet the
performance criteria dictated by the financial markets, especially because their firms'
shares are now publicly offered. As a result, they are beginning to reinvest capital at a
rapid rate. Thanks to them, Moscow is poised to assume a far more significant position in
the world petroleum sector than ever before.
Russia's oil revival has coincided with a downturn in the global
economy and the first major reduction in the global demand for oil since the early 1980s.
The nearly 1 mbd increase in its production over the last two years came at a time when
OPEC cut output, thus losing market share, to put a floor under prices. Not surprisingly,
Moscow's motivations are being questioned and are often seen as an attempt to grab power
in the global arena. But Russia's petroleum revival has also coincided with the terrorist
attacks of September 11, which have provided Moscow a chance to displace OPEC as the key
energy supplier to the West. Moscow's political leaders, as well as its corporate leaders
in oil and gas, are portraying Russia's oil firms as stable sources of supply, willing to
add output to the market to keep prices reasonable and thus revive the global economy. In
the eyes of these leaders, the new geopolitics of energy can help Moscow gain both
economically and politically. In economic terms, energy production lets Russia integrate
itself into the industrialized West. In political terms, energy resources can be used to
buttress Moscow's goal of becoming a key partner of the United States.
KING OF THE HILL
Even before September 11, concerns had been raised over American
reliance on Middle East oil. Global oil demand has been increasing by between 1.5 and 2
mbd each year, a rate of growth with alarming long-term consequences. The U.S. Department
of Energy and the International Energy Agency both project that global oil demand could
grow from the current 77 mbd to 120 mbd in 20 years, driven by the United States and the
emerging markets of South and East Asia. The agencies assume that most of the supply
required to meet this demand must come from OPEC, whose production is expected to jump
from 28 mbd in 1998 to 60 mbd in 2020. Virtually all of this increase would come from the
Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia.
A simple fact explains this conclusion: 63 percent of the world's
proven oil reserves are in the Middle East, 25 percent (or 261 billion barrels) in Saudi
Arabia alone. As the largest single resource holder, Saudi Arabia has a unique petroleum
policy that is designed to maximize the benefit of holding so much of the world's oil
supply. Saudi Arabia's goal is to assure that oil's role in the international economy is
maintained as long as possible. Hence Saudi policy has always denounced efforts by
industrialized countries to wean themselves from oil dependence, whether through tax
policy or regulation.
Saudi strategy focuses on three different political arenas. The first
involves the ties between the Saudi kingdom and other OPEC countries. The second concerns
Riyadh's relationship with the non-OPEC producers: Mexico, Norway, and now Russia.
Finally, there is Saudi Arabia's link to the major oil-importing regions -- most
importantly North America, but also Europe and Asia.
Given the size of the Saudi oil sector, the kingdom has a unique and
critical role in setting world oil prices. Since its overriding objectives are maximizing
revenues generated from oil exports and extending the life of its petroleum reserves,
Riyadh aims to keep prices high as long as possible. But the price cannot be so high that
it stifles demand or encourages other competitive sources of supply. Nor can it be so low
that the kingdom cannot achieve minimum revenue targets. The critical balancing act of
Saudi foreign policy, therefore, is to maintain oil prices within a reasonable price band.
Stopping oil prices from falling below the minimum level requires cooperation from other
OPEC countries and occasionally from non-OPEC producers. Preventing oil prices from rising
too high requires keeping enough spare production capacity to use in an emergency.
This latter feature is the signal characteristic of Saudi policy. The
kingdom can afford to maintain this spare capacity because of the abundance of its oil
reserves and the comparatively low cost of developing and producing its reserve base. In
today's soft market, in which Saudi Arabia produces around 7.4 mbd, the kingdom has close
to 3 mbd of spare capacity. Its spare capacity is usually ample enough to entirely
displace the production of another large oil-exporting country if supply is disrupted or a
producer tries to reduce output to increase prices. Not only does this spare capacity help
the kingdom keep prices in check, but it also serves to link Riyadh with the United States
and other key oil-importing countries. It is a blunt instrument that makes policymakers
elsewhere beholden to Riyadh for energy security. This spare capacity is greater than the
total exports of all other oil-exporting countries -- except Russia.
Saudi spare capacity is the energy equivalent of nuclear weapons, a
powerful deterrent against those who try to challenge Saudi leadership and Saudi goals. It
is also the centerpiece of the U.S.-Saudi relationship. The United States relies on that
capacity as the cornerstone of its oil policy. That arrangement was fine as long as U.S.
protection meant Riyadh would not "blackmail" Washington -- an assumption that
is more difficult to accept after September 11. Saudi Arabia's OPEC partners must also
cooperate with the kingdom in part to prevent Riyadh from producing a glut and having
prices collapse; spare capacity also serves to pressure key non-OPEC producers to
cooperate with Saudi Arabia when necessary. But unlike the nuclear deterrent, the Saudi
weapon is actively used when required. The kingdom has periodically (and brutally)
demonstrated that it can use its spare capacity to destroy exports from countries
challenging its market share. This tactic is the weapon that Saudi Arabia could use if
Moscow ignores Riyadh's requests for cooperation.
Saudi Arabia has triggered its spare capacity twice in recent history,
once when prices were especially low. Both cases demonstrated that the kingdom will accept
those low prices so long as it suffers less than its targets do. In 1985, Saudi Arabia
successfully waged a price war designed to force other oil producers to stop "free
riding" on Saudi oil policy. That policy meant that those states had to cooperate
with the kingdom by reining in production enough to allow Saudi Arabia to produce the
minimum level that it targeted. Oil prices fell by more than half within a few months, and
Saudi Arabia immediately regained the market share it had lost in the preceding four
years, mainly to non-OPEC countries.
Then, in the 1990s, OPEC member Venezuela challenged Saudi Arabia by
deciding to maximize its production. Although Venezuela had an OPEC quota of 2.3 mbd,
Caracas embarked on an ambitious policy designed to eventually triple its production
capacity. Caracas knew it could not do this on its own, so it reopened its nationalized
resource sector to foreign investment. By the winter of 1996-97, Caracas was producing 3
mbd, knocking Saudi Arabia from its position as number one supplier to the United States.
In response, Riyadh first tried reasoning with Caracas. When diplomacy failed, Saudi
Arabia raised its production by close to 1 mbd and induced the oil price collapse of 1998.
Riyadh's actions were tough but effective. By engineering a price drop, it had to
withstand a painful drop in income -- but it achieved its main goals. Saudi Arabia
reasserted its OPEC leadership, reestablished itself as the prime supplier of oil to the
United States, and induced non-OPEC producers Mexico and Norway to support OPEC's
revenue-maximizing goals.
UNCLE SAM NEEDS THEM
Riyadh's relations with Washington are much more complex than they
appear on the surface, because they involve unspoken understandings and a number of useful
fictions. September 11 has complicated these understandings, because the publics in both
countries are suspicious of the cooperation between the two governments. Washington
recognizes Saudi Arabia's critical role in the global oil sector, especially Riyadh's
price moderation. Saudi Arabia, in turn, plays its Washington cards diligently. The
kingdom has protected its position as the top U.S. supplier. Today, Saudi Arabia supplies
around 1.7 mbd of the roughly 10 mbd imported into the United States -- a market share
higher than that of any competitor. The kingdom maintains this share to show how important
Saudi supplies are to the United States. The Saudi leadership can thus ensure that
Washington will help defend Saudi Arabia, which means not only the defense of the
kingdom's oil fields and territorial integrity but the defense of the House of Saud.
This role does not stem directly from Saudi Arabia's position as the
world's largest supplier. Indeed, if oil trading were left to market forces, the kingdom's
oil exports to the United States would fall by half. Instead, Saudi Arabia pays a price
for its market share, a price that fluctuates each month as market forces change. Saudi
Aramco, the state oil company, earns about $1 a barrel less on sales to the United States
than on sales to the countries of Europe and East Asia. That discount translates into a
subsidy to U.S. consumers of $620 million per year. In return, the United States deploys
military forces in the Persian Gulf, which is of course also expensive. And given U.S.
sensitivity to Riyadh's policy concerns on an array of issues, from the Arab-Israeli peace
process to Kosovo to Central Asia, Washington pays the additional price of being
constrained in its own foreign policymaking.
One of the hidden aspects of the relationship is the Saudi dependence
on the United States for providing an expanding market. Although Asian demand for oil is
expected to grow dramatically in coming decades, no other economy rivals that of the
United States for the growth of its oil imports. Over the past decade, the increase in the
U.S. share of the oil market, in terms of trade, was higher than the total oil consumption
in any other country, save Japan and China. The U.S. increase in imports accounts for more
than a third of the total increase in oil trade and more than half of the total increase
in OPEC's production during the 1990s. This fact, together with the fall in U.S. oil
production, means that the United States will remain the single most important force in
the oil market. The hope of Saudi Arabia and OPEC for an increased market and for greater
market share is uniquely dependent on growth in U.S. demand. Hence it is not for security
alone that Riyadh depends on the United States but for the very economic basis of the
Saudi regime, which relies almost entirely on oil for revenue.
Although the U.S.-Saudi axis is often neglected, it can be blown out of
proportion. When the ties between the two countries appeared to fray after September 11,
some press reports asserted that this separation of interests was unprecedented. It is
true that Riyadh had expressed considerable displeasure with the Bush administration over
the U.S. abstention from its former active role in the Arab-Israeli peace process. But
even before then, Washington and Riyadh clashed over oil prices; the Clinton
administration even pressured other key OPEC countries into increasing oil production.
It would be more accurate, in sum, to see the common interests of
Washington and Riyadh as the intersection of two large and unwieldy sets of goals. In both
countries, the size and value of that connection have been undergoing serious review since
September 11. To the degree that Washington decides to take action to reduce the U.S.
economy's dependence on oil, it can greatly affect the scale of increased oil production
over the next few decades. It is because of that opportunity that the Russian challenge to
Saudi Arabia has become tremendously important.
BUST AND BOOM
It did not take long after the Soviet collapse for Western oil firms,
investment banks, and policymakers to begin eyeing the oil reserves of Russia and Central
Asia as a competitive alternative to Middle Eastern crude oil. But the region's promise
quickly evaporated as investors became bogged down in a swamp of corruption and the
difficulties of doing business in rapidly changing economies.
By the early 1990s, as oil exports from the former Soviet states
plummeted, Middle Eastern producers started promoting their own energy resources as a
cheaper alternative to redeveloping the oil infrastructure of the former Soviet Union.
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait even spoke of opening their oil and gas sectors to foreign
investment as a way to attract investors who might otherwise look to the post-Soviet
Commonwealth of Independent States (cis). Assisting OPEC's efforts were high-profile
scandals in Russia and Central Asia and the lack of protection of minority shareholder
rights in the Russian oil sector. A wary Western media even questioned the initial
estimates of Russian and Caspian oil reserves.
But today, two advantages for the cis are clear. First, its reserves
are much larger than previously assumed. Second, oil production capacity in the Middle
East has stagnated for 20 years. Indeed, overall OPEC production capacity is actually
lower today than in 1980. The Middle East producers have no proven ability to exploit
their resources beyond the levels that international companies achieved before they were
nationalized in the 1970s. Meanwhile, as exploration and production advance in such places
as Kazakhstan, the reserve potential of the cis will enlarge substantially. Eni,
ExxonMobil, and others are developing what may be a giant field at Kashagan, estimated to
contain 50 billion barrels. Lukoil, Russia's largest oil producer, recently discovered a
field of 5 billion barrels of proven reserves in the Russian part of the Caspian shelf;
seismic data suggests that the field's vast size could triple the initial estimates inside
the license area alone. The discovery rate in Azerbaijan has been, in any case,
disappointing, but conservative forecasts show that the Caspian shelf holds 75 billion
barrels of oil -- 115 percent of what bp Amoco credited to the entire cis in 2000.
Meanwhile, the Russian oil industry accelerated its consolidation after
the 1998 financial crisis ended in a devalued ruble, which in turn enabled Russia to
rapidly increase exports. As a result, the industry could focus on developing its known
core assets and exploring new assets more efficiently. Russian oil exports began to rise
in 2000 for the first time since the Soviet era. By the time Vladimir Putin was elected
president in March 2000, Russian firms were ready to capitalize on the internal reforms
that they had begun years earlier. Russia's producers also benefited from long-term
relationships they had developed with foreign firms, including Conoco, bp Amoco,
ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, Halliburton, and Schlumberger.
Thanks to this process, the cis oil sector is now expected to increase
exports by at least 2 mbd between 2002 and 2006. The Baltic Sea's export capacity could
grow by as much as 0.4 mbd by 2004, mostly from Russia's four biggest producers through
the Baltic Pipeline System. The Caspian Pipeline Consortium, which links Kazakhstan's oil
fields to the Russian ports on the Black Sea, will likely add 1.5 mbd by 2006-8. Exports
from ExxonMobil and Shell projects in Sakhalin, in Russia's Far East, should add another
0.2 mbd by then as well. Indeed, the resources along Russia's Asian frontier might be as
vast as those in Central Asia. And Yukos, Russia's second-largest producer, is preparing
to export to China about 0.5 mbd from its fields in eastern Siberia.
To compete with international oil firms and meet the demands of
minority shareholders (including foreign investment funds), Russian producers have begun
to improve their often awful corporate governance records. The migration toward
internationally accepted financial reporting standards has forced them to adopt better
managerial and production practices. Efficiency tools such as better software now enable
many Russian managers to rationalize production, thereby increasing profitability and the
effectiveness of long-term corporate investment. Recently implemented judicial reforms and
tax harmonization should translate into a better business environment for all Russian
firms.
ROLL OUT THE BARREL
If the concrete plans of Russian and Central Asian oil companies and
their international partners come to fruition, total cis exports from the former Soviet
Union could equal Saudi exports within four years. The threat of a "northern"
oil boom that Middle East producers first feared in the early 1990s is now real.
The one factor that constricts the ability of Russia and Kazakhstan to
increase exports more than production capacity is infrastructure -- namely, inadequate
pipelines and port facilities. But since September 11, export infrastructure has been
enlarging and will accelerate. Most of the increased exports of the past two years have
come from increased loading capacity on the Black Sea and in various terminals in the
three Baltic states, but this imbalance, too, is changing. In 2001, oil began flowing from
the 1,000-mile Caspian pipeline, which provides a direct route for Kazakh crude oil
exports to world markets via the Black Sea. Controlled by Lukoil, Chevron, Shell, and
ExxonMobil, the pipeline is expected to handle 1.5 mbd for export by 2012. And in the
Baltic, Moscow is pursuing extensive plans for shipping out more oil. The new Baltic
pipeline will deliver oil from Russia's far north and western Siberia, much of which is
intended for Western markets, including the United States.
All of Russia's major oil firms are competing for European and U.S.
market share, but it is Lukoil that is furthest along. The company has a long-term plan to
become an international contender and sees itself as the legitimate "fourth
sister" of industry leaders ExxonMobil, Shell, and bp Amoco. Lukoil expanded
operations to southern Europe a few years ago by purchasing refining assets, pipelines,
and ports in Bulgaria and Romania; it recently started to negotiate purchase of a refinery
from Hellenic Petroleum in Greece. In 2000, it bought Getty's 1,300 gas stations in the
United States. Although the stations are already partially supplied from Lukoil's refinery
in Bulgaria, the company intends to acquire a large refinery in the United States to
increase Russian deliveries to Getty's pumps.
But Russia's international acquisitions have not always gone smoothly.
In 1997, three Russian companies, led by Lukoil, signed a $3.5 billion agreement with Iraq
to develop the West Qurna field, which has an estimated 7.8 billion barrels of reserves.
By 1999, the consortium was lobbying the Russian government to end U.N. sanctions on Iraq,
which were hindering development. Several other Russian producers also have contracts with
Iraq that cannot be implemented until the U.N. sanctions regime is over. Iraq has
threatened to cancel all these concessions unless Russia starts developing. Complications
have also arisen in Europe. In December 2001, Yukos failed to reach an agreement to
purchase a stake in a refinery and offshore terminal on Lithuania's Baltic coast. The
terminal would enable Russian producers to ship high-quality, low-cost refined oil
products in large tankers to New York from Lithuania, a possible future NATO member.
Whether or not the obstacles in Lithuania and Iraq can be cleared, however, Russian
producers will continue to expand their influence into historical markets and beyond. In
the coming months, several Russian firms will compete in privatization tenders for
downstream oil assets in Poland, Latvia, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Croatia.
A NEW STRATEGY
Until September 11, the United States pursued two often conflicting
goals: encouraging Russia to better protect U.S. corporate investments in the Russian
energy sector, and assisting the Caspian countries in developing and exporting their own
hydrocarbons, thereby avoiding pipeline routes through Russia.
Events are now squaring the circle. Russian companies and the Russian
government are moving rapidly on improving the rule of law, but they are not providing
significant advantages to U.S. and other foreign direct investors in the oil sector;
Russian firms want to keep the "crown jewels" to themselves. Yet these same
firms, intent on expanding abroad, are becoming more open to joint ventures with
international firms when they require Western technology, particularly in the offshore
areas of the Arctic Ocean. Meanwhile, the new environment of cooperation and Russian
corporate interests in the Caspian countries have moved Moscow to support the independent
export pipelines that expedite development schemes in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan.
Even so, significant room remains for U.S. influence, whether good or
bad. If it takes the wrong track, the U.S. government could prevent Russian industry from
becoming more transparent. Unilateral economic favors dispensed by Washington, for
example, could bankroll Russia's major oil firms with undeserved credit as a way to lessen
OPEC's influence in the oil market. Such a politically motivated move would
institutionalize the status quo by sheltering Russian companies from the demands of the
marketplace. Ill-conceived investments enable corrupt managers to continue their
mistreatment of shareholders and mismanagement of assets without sanction.
If the U.S. government desires to get more involved in supporting
Russian oil exports, it must move beyond the knee-jerk reaction of siding with American
firms in their disputes with their Russian counterparts, as was often the case before
September 11. Equally important, U.S. overseas trade and development agencies as well as
international financial institutions should ensure that the rule of law, including
minority shareholder rights, has been honored before promoting credit lines to Russian
producers.
The United States can also support legislation that further promotes
property rights in the region. Transfer-pricing legislation, already implemented in
Kazakhstan and under consideration in Bulgaria, can help stop domestic and foreign
strategic investors from moving profits out of publicly traded subsidiaries. Such
atrocious (and all too common) corporate behavior not only destroys minority shareholder
value at the subsidiary level; it can also devastate burgeoning tax bases in emerging
economies. In addition, Washington can aid the effort to stop such practices by improving
the educational and training programs for tax officials and the legal systems that are
required to implement such legislation.
In the oil and gas sector, Americans must help the Russians and the
Kazakhs determine the most efficient export routes for Russian and Caspian oil and arrange
financing for these capital-intensive projects. This move would be radically different
from the policy pursued in the 1990s, when the United States pushed export routes that
tried to free the Central Asian states from Russian and Iranian control rather than
pursuing the most economically viable options. Moreover, Lukoil recently stated it would
even consider participating in the U.S.-backed Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, which will bring oil
from the Caspian to Turkey's Mediterranean coast. As elsewhere, global investors should be
free to pick winners and demand corporate reform and increased production when
economically justified. Investors remain the best positioned to make demands on those
managers who still do not understand that the company's interests are aligned with the
interests of its shareholders.
HOW LOW CAN YOU GO?
The emerging battle for market dominance between Russia and Saudi
Arabia is a clash between two extremely different cultures and involves radically
different agents. True, both the Russian and the Saudi governments are unusually dependent
on the revenues generated by oil or gas exports. But this dependence aside, the Russian
oil sector is a lot more like the United Kingdom's than it is like Mexico's or Norway's --
let alone that of the former Soviet Union. The Russian government has extremely limited
powers over how Russian firms allocate their sales or investments. Moscow can encourage or
limit access to pipelines under government control, but it cannot control what companies
do.
In contrast, Saudi Arabia is governed by a royal family that sees its
interests as part and parcel of the state it rules. The national oil company, Saudi
Aramco, is the state's sole instrument for pursuing its aims. Saudi Aramco's commercial
interests are those of its shareholder -- the state -- and the society over which its
shareholder governs. On the Russian side, however, the state has become increasingly a
representative institution that provides for the public good through taxes. Yet it owns a
rapidly decreasing amount of the country's energy resources and enjoys no monopoly over
the Russian oil industry. The state has ceded this terrain to a group of publicly traded
companies eager to expand rapidly in a competitive international environment.
When Saudi Arabia and other OPEC members sought Russian cooperation
last fall in managing the international oil market, they had a simplistic and wrong-headed
view of Moscow's position. Encouraged after gaining the cooperation of Mexico, Norway, and
Oman in a previously oversupplied market in 1998, the Saudis did not understand the new
Russia. It was becoming better off financially, but its government remained too weak to
actively limit the country's oil exports. Nor was Moscow so dependent on oil revenue that
it had to cooperate with the Saudis. Thus Riyadh made a tactical error: it tried to
blackmail Moscow by threatening a price war.
Russia did not take kindly to the threat. First, its biggest companies,
which had worked so hard in raising oil production over the past two years, especially
Yukos and Surgutneftegas, resented any attempts to limit their exports as unwarranted
state intervention into corporate plans. They also saw the move as a violation of an
explicit agreement between the government and the private sector, in which companies would
become more transparent and pay taxes but remain free to grow with less government
interference. Second, there was widespread Russian anger at the blunt OPEC effort to
blackmail Moscow. Riyadh's oil policy was seen as an extension of Saudi support for
Afghanistan's anti-Russian rebels in the 1980s, the independence movement in Central Asia
in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Chechnya conflict, and Islamic educational
institutions in Russia -- all considered threatening to Russian interests. But Moscow's
reaction was also calculating. Both Moscow and the Russian companies knew that Russia
depended far less on the international price of oil than did Saudi Arabia. Some Moscow
officials therefore welcomed a price war, which they saw Russia as outlasting. (The income
and capital expenditures of Russian firms are ruble-based, so these companies benefit from
a ruble depreciation against the dollar.)
Like Saudi Arabia, OPEC was also miffed. Russia's initial rebuff of the
approaches of OPEC's leaders, when they sought Russia's cooperation in reducing output,
angered virtually all its members. The OPEC countries were annoyed that Russia was
increasing its output so aggressively at a time when OPEC countries were restraining
themselves. And just as the Russians equated Riyadh's position on oil with Riyadh's
support for anti-Russian institutions, the OPEC world saw a direct attack on its own
values. From OPEC's perspective, Russia was stealing market share that rightfully belonged
to countries with far deeper oil reserves.
From Moscow's perspective, however, Russia was reclaiming lost market
share. Indeed, Moscow sees the history of oil in the 1980s as one of a price war declared
by Saudi Arabia on all other oil-producing countries. The aforementioned Saudi-engineered
price collapse of 1985-86 led to the implosion of the Soviet oil industry -- which, in
turn, hastened the Soviet Union's demise. From this perspective, Moscow's companies were
simply reclaiming the international market share that had been stolen by Riyadh 15 years
earlier.
In any event, both sides decided to declare a truce by the end of 2001.
Russia concluded that cooperating with OPEC and other independent oil producers was in its
best interest -- for now. In the end, Moscow felt that a price collapse would be bad for
the world economy and the stability of oil exports.
Despite the truce, however, the battle is not over. When it comes to
compliance in preventing overproduction, Moscow and Riyadh remain suspicious of each
other. Russia is increasingly convinced that it could withstand a price collapse better
than any of the OPEC countries. Moscow has made no excuse for its inability to fully
enforce compliance, but it knows that nature is on its side; tanker loading at the Black
Sea and Baltic terminals is always reduced during the harsh winter months. Moscow also
believes (rightfully) that its exports are far more transparent than those of OPEC
members, whose exports are measured by journalists rather than by government customs data.
And Moscow knows that Saudi Arabia has been exceeding its export quotas over the past year
far more egregiously than anyone else has. Recriminations will fly from both sides in the
months ahead.
In the long term, Moscow may have far more going for it than Riyadh.
Yukos, Lukoil, and other companies are dynamic and growing, and they are now poised to
recapture and expand on the production base of the former Soviet Union. Furthermore, they
are highly integrated and are forming alliances with international companies, and so they
can sell their growing output to enlarging networks in Europe, Asia, and the Americas.
Through their joint ventures, they can tap the technology and capital of Western firms in
developing new resources, especially in the Far East and the Arctic Ocean.
Riyadh, on the other hand, might have vast known reserves, but it also
has a closed state monopoly. Most alarming, Saudi Arabia has been unable for 20 years to
increase its production capacity. Nor is its position unique: few OPEC countries in 2002
have more production capacity than they did in 1990 or 1980. The exceptions are countries
such as Algeria and Nigeria, whose governments have encouraged foreign investment in the
petroleum sector. History does not look kindly on monopoly-company countries. Riyadh has
only one clear weapon left: the spare capacity that can be unleashed whenever it chooses
to punish those who would challenge its oil supremacy.
WINNERS AND LOSERS
Thanks to the potential growth of Asian and U.S. demand, there could be
room in the future for both Saudi and Russian producers to gain market share if they
cooperate. But it is more likely that the policies pursued by Moscow and by Washington
will restructure the battlefield.
Although Russian oil is not nearly as large in its reserve base or as
cheap to produce as Saudi crude, it remains vast and far greater than is generally
recognized. Market forces have unleashed a dynamic transition in its oil sector that will
allow Russia to challenge OPEC and Saudi Arabia. In an economy governed by market forces,
Russian companies are poised to capture the lion's share of growth in demand in China,
India, and even the United States, through joint ventures.
The cost structure of the Russian energy industry is a significant
factor in the equation. As long as costs are largely ruble-denominated and the ruble is
stable, Russian industry is protected from low oil prices, while capital investment flows
are sheltered from price volatility. For the Russian government, the situation is more
complex, but Russia is also more sheltered from low oil prices than are other exporting
countries. Like OPEC exporters, it depends on revenues from export taxes. But unlike OPEC
countries, it also takes in significant revenue from domestic sales and from taxes on huge
natural gas exports to Europe. Thus the major question is whether Saudi Arabia can afford
a sustained price war to block Russian and cis oil development. That feat might require
oil at $10 a barrel for two years or more -- a situation as frightening for Riyadh as it
is for other OPEC countries.
The critical element that Washington can add is a policy mix that would
arrest the growth of U.S. oil demand by adopting a transportation policy that forces
greater efficiency. This effort would take the post-September 11 world seriously. If both
Washington and Moscow encouraged what their companies and publics already do -- increasing
production in both countries while restraining demand in the United States -- the stage
could be set for a very new petroleum world. The time has come to recognize that September
11 has opened new vistas for Russia, the United States, and OPEC.
“Foreign Affairs”, March/April 2002
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/articles/Morse0302.html |