By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
June 13, 2014 ·
Iraq’s Civil War Threatens Structure of Global Energy Supply For Years
Brent crude jumped above $113 a barrel as the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant raced towards Baghdad
Spectacular advances by Jihadi forces across northern Iraq have raised
the spectre of a Sunni-Shia conflagration in the heart of the Middle
East, triggering a surge in oil prices and throwing into doubt the
structure of global energy supply for the next decade.
Brent crude jumped above $113 a barrel as the self-described Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) raced down the Tigris Valley
towards Baghdad with sophisticated weaponry, seizing on its momentum
after the historic capture of Mosul. Oil prices are approaching levels
last seen during the Arab Spring.
“Iraq is turning into a nightmare. There are real risks that this
movement will spread to other countries. Our economies are too weak to
pay for oil at $120, and they can’t stand $140 if it spikes that
high,” said Chris Skrebowski, a veteran oil analyst and former editor
of Petroleum Review.
Iraq is Opec’s second-biggest producer, though output has slipped 8pc
to 3.3m barrels a day (b/d) since February due to sabotage of the
Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline to Turkey. Ole Hansen, from Saxo Bank, said a
fall in Iraqi output to levels seen in the last Gulf war would cause a
$20 price spike. “The entire economic recovery could stall, and we
could even slip back into recession in some regions,” he said.
The International Energy Agency is counting on Iraq to provide 45pc of
the entire increase in global oil supply by the end of the decade,
badly needed to meet growing demand in China and India. This requires
vast investment – rising to $540bn by 2035 as output tops 8m b/d – but
such outlays are implausible as the state slides towards sectarian
civil war.
A risk alert put out on Thursday by IHS said the West Tikrit and Ajul
oil fields and other energy assets in the North are at “severe risk of
being raided or targeted for sabotage”.
The highways linking Baghdad to Basra are also at risk, and cargo
travelling almost anywhere in the north is vulnerable to bomb attacks.
The government claims to have stopped an assault on the country’s
biggest oil refinery at Baij but IHS said the plant is still at
“severe risk”.
Iraq’s oil minister, Abdul Kareem Luaibi, said most of country’s crude
was pumped from “very, very safe” regions in the Shia South. He
insisted that Iraq would meet plans to boost output to 4m b/d by the
end of the year, the highest since the late 1970s.
Such assurances count for little as the Iraqi security forces melt
away in the face of lightning strikes by the army of Sunni extremists,
a group of up to 5,000 warriors that is too radical even for Al-Qaeda
and harks back to the 8th century Caliphate.
ISIL forces have seized Tikrit, the stronghold of ex-dictator Saddam
Hussein, and were reported to be closing in on Dhuluiya, 50 miles from
Baghdad. The city of Fallujah has already fallen, a poignant reminder
of how little the US has achieved after spending $1 trillion on its
misadventure in Iraq. The city was captured by US and British forces a
decade ago with heavy casualties in the toughest battle since the
Vietnam War.
The army has abandoned the oil-rich region of Kirkuk in the north to
the autonomous forces of the Kurdish Peshmerga, leaving it unclear
whether the unitary state of Iraq actually exists.
Helima Croft, from Barclays, said ISIL has already conducted bombings
deep into the Shia south as far as Basra and may step up attacks on
energy infrastructure. “The south of the country is not beyond the
geographic reach of the extremist groups. We believe the government
will be hard pressed to devote funds to complete vital oil
infrastructure upgrades when it must devote ever-increasing resources
to stem the security threat,” she said.
Michael Lewis, from Deutsche Bank, said the pitched battles have
created a “new event risk” for global oil markets, leaving it far from
clear whether developments such as the West Qurna 2 field will be
completed as planned.
The unfolding drama comes at a time of near paralysis in Libya, where
militia conflicts have cut output to less than 200,000 b/d, barely a
fifth of the potential.
There is a tentative deal in the works but it will take months to
crank up output. “Libyan crude is very waxy. If you leave the taps off
for 12 months it precipitates out. You can’t just turn it back on
again,” said Mr Skrebowski.
China has been boosting its strategic petroleum reserve at a record
pace, tightening the global market just as disruptions in Azerbaijan,
Colombia, Mexico, South Sudan and other non-Opec suppliers cut output
by 500,000 b/d, enough to tip the balance in a global market of 92m
b/d.
The IEA called on Opec to raise output by 900,000 b/d even before the
drama in Iraq. The cartel has ignored the pleas, deciding on Wednesday
to keep its quotas unchanged at 30m b/d. Most Opec members need prices
near $100 just to cover their budgets.
Elizabeth Stephens, from Jardine Lloyd Thompson, said the ISIL Jihadis
fund themselves by control over Syria’s oil fields, selling $18m of
crude each month to the Assad regime. “Perhaps we should be
encouraging Assad to buy from the West, but that would be an
embarrassing change of policy,” she said.
The world is ever more dependent on bringing Iran back into the fold.
An end to sanctions would allow Tehran to sell an extra 1m b/d, with
potential for much more as investment revives.
Iraq’s breakdown is a tragedy, brought to a head by years of
corruption under premier Nouri al-Maliki and his failure to abide by
power-sharing accords with the beleaguered Sunnis.
Zaineb Al-Assam, from IHS, said the Iraqi army is too demoralized and
poorly equipped to defend the state, leaving to it Shia militias such
as the Mahdi Army of Sadr City to protect their zones. This in turn
risks setting off a sectarian spiral.
Iraq’s fragmentation greatly increases the risk of intervention by
Iran, Turkey and other outside powers, turning the crisis into a
full-blown struggle for dominance between Sunni and Shia Muslims.
The echoes of Europe’s Thirty Years War between Catholics and
Protestants in the 17th century are growing ever louder.
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