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Economic crises continue to haunt Saudi Arabia

March 20, 2018 at 3:16 am

Prince of Saudi Arabia Mohammad Bin Salman Al-Saud on 7 March, 2018 [Kate Green/Anadolu Agency]

Saudi Arabia’s domestic crises which prompted the reform drive will continue to stifle Riyadh’s progress in the Vision 2030 project launched by Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman, according to the Financial Times.

One of the main reasons which prompted Bin Salman to steer the Kingdom towards a new direction was the boom in US shale gas. The newcomer to the global oil market posed a major challenge for traditional oil producing countries and forced Riyadh to find solutions for its own oil dependency.

During the last big drop in oil price, seen in 2014, major oil producers reacted to the slump by reducing output. The decision was a reaction to the oil glut but it was also a desperate attempt to snuff out new challengers like US shale gas, which had higher break even cost and needed oil to remain at a higher price to survive in the congested market.

While US shale boom was stopped in its tracks, it is beginning to grow faster and stronger as oil price recovers. According to the FT “the rebound in crude prices to over $60 a barrel has brought shale oil producers roaring back to life again, but the industry has not simply returned to where it was before the collapse. Geographically and technologically, it has evolved, and the companies that have survived are more capable, more efficient, and better able to survive lower crude prices”.

This presents a big dilemma for the Saudi’s who according to industry experts have little room for manoeuvre. The Kingdom may have boasted that it could survive if oil price went down to $20 dollars a barrel a few years ago but that no longer seems to be case.

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Riyadh is banking its future on raisings funds from the Aramco sale. Its $2 trillion estimated of the value of the oil company is said to be over optimistic especially during uncertainty over oil price. Bin Salman’s vision requires oil price to recover in order to increase the valuation of the initial public offering of state oil company Saudi Aramco. But higher prices, industry experts point out, can bring shale supplies back even stronger.

It’s a dilemma which the Saudi’s may be unable to resolve especially since they have cut production and gone down the pecking order in key markets like China. Beijing is now the second largest destination for US crude oil exports; a trend that is set to increase. The US is likely to cover most of the world’s demand growth over the next three years while the forecast for OPEC is said to fall below current production rates in 2019 and 2020.

Saudi Arabia has downplayed the growth of US shale predicting that it will be unable to meet rising demand for oil in the long term.