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View Full Version : Saudi Arabia Faces Collapse As Oil Revenues Decline



Camilo
9th October 2015, 17:57
It seems like a boiling point is being reached by the oil industry...

http://www.mintpressnews.com/saudi-arabia-faces-collapse-as-oil-revenues-decline/210195/

A 'perfect storm' of interconnected crises could see the autocratic Saudi state disintegrate within ten years, argues Nafeez Ahmed.

Last September, a senior Saudi royal called for a “change” in leadership to fend off the kingdom’s collapse.

In a letter circulated among Saudi princes, its author, a grandson of the late King Abdulaziz Ibn Saud, blamed King Salman for endangering the monarchy’s survival.

Informed observers think such a prospect “fanciful”, but the letter’s analysis of Saudi Arabia’s predicament is startlingly accurate. The House of Saud is on the brink of a perfect storm of interconnected crises that could be the monarchy’s undoing within the next decade.

Saudi Arabia’s primary source of revenues, of course, is oil. For the last few years, the kingdom has pumped at record levels, keeping global oil prices low, and undermining OPEC rivals – who cannot afford to stay in business at such squeezed profit margins.

But Saudi Arabia’s spare capacity to pump like crazy can only last so long. A new peer-reviewed study in the Journal of Petroleum Science & Engineering anticipates that a peak in Saudi Arabia’s oil production, followed by inexorable decline, is due for 2028.

According to Texas petroleum geologist Jeffrey J. Brown and Dr. Sam Foucher, though, it’s not just about production. The key issue is translating production into exports, against rising rates of domestic consumption.

Brown and Foucher showed that the inflection point to watch out for is when an oil producer cannot increase the quantity of oil sales abroad, because of the need to meet rising domestic energy demand.

They found that from 2005 to 2015, Saudi net oil exports have experienced an annual decline rate of 1.4 per cent. Citigroup backs them up, recently predicting that net exports would plummet to zero in the next 15 years.

So Saudi state revenues, 80 per cent of which come from oil sales, are heading downwards, terminally.

Saudi Arabia is the region’s biggest energy consumer, domestic demand having increased by 7.5 per cent over the last five years alone.

Demographic expansion, estimated to grow further from 29 million people today, to 37 million by 2030, is a major driver of demand. As the larger population absorbs Saudi Arabia’s energy production, the next decade will see the country’s oil exporting capacity evermore constrained.

To wean domestic demand off oil dependence, Saudi Arabia decided to invest in renewable energy, hoping to free up capacity for oil sales abroad, thus maintaining state revenues.

But earlier this year, this prescient strategy was dumped for military adventurism. The kingdom announced an eight year delay to its €97bn solar programme, which was supposed to produce a third of the nation’s electricity by 2032.

Meanwhile, state revenues have been hit by rocketing military spending for the war in Yemen, as well as from declining profits from its own efforts to keep oil prices low to undermine competing producers.

Now Saudi Arabia’s considerable reserves are being depleted at unprecedented levels, dropping from a 2014 peak of €655bn to €597bn in May – falling by about €10.6bn a month.

At this rate, by late 2018 the kingdom’s reserves could drop as low as €177bn.

King Salman’s response has been to simply accelerate borrowing. What happens when over the next few years, reserves deplete, debt increases, while oil revenues remain strained?

In Egypt, Syria and Yemen, reduced subsidies and rocketing food and oil prices inflamed the grievances that generated the ‘Arab spring’ uprisings.

Saudi Arabia’s oil wealth underpins its ability to fend off the risk off civil unrest through lavish domestic subsidies. Energy subsidies alone make up about a fifth of Saudi’s GDP.

Declining revenues from declining oil exports will translate in the kingdom’s decreased capacity to keep a lid on rising domestic dissent.

About a quarter of Saudis are in poverty, while unemployment is at about 12 per cent, mostly young people – 30 per cent of whom are unemployed.

Climate change is pitched to heighten such economic problems, especially concerning food and water.

At 98 cubic metres per person per year, the kingdom is among the most water scarce in the world. About 70 per cent of domestic water supplies are met through desalination plants, accounting for over half of domestic oil consumption. As oil exports and state revenues run down amid increasing demand, costly desalination won’t be able to keep up.

Saudi Arabia is experiencing stronger interior warming and northern rainfall deficits due to climate change. By 2040, local temperatures could go as high as 4 degrees Celsius, while extreme weather events like droughts and flash flooding would worsen.

This of course could undermine agricultural productivity, already strained from overgrazing and unsustainable industrial agricultural practices that are intensifying desertification.

Most water withdrawal is from groundwater, 57 per cent of which is non-renewable, and 88 per cent of which goes to agriculture.

As 80 per cent of Saudi Arabia’s food requirements are purchased through heavily subsidised imports, the decline in state revenues mean the country will be increasingly vulnerable to global food price fluctuations.

In Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Egypt, the risk of conflict was compounded due to declining state power in the face of climate-induced droughts, agricultural decline, and rapid oil depletion – interconnected trends now unfolding apace in Saudi Arabia.

The implication is that on its current course, the kingdom is on the brink of protracted state-failure, a process likely to unfold over the next decade with increasing visibility.

idiit
9th October 2015, 18:41
The implication is that on its current course, the kingdom is on the brink of protracted state-failure, a process likely to unfold over the next decade with increasing visibility.

MAY BE MUCH QUICKER THAN THAT. JIM WILLIE HAS CONTACTS VERY FAMILIAR WITH THE MIDDLE EAST AND STATED:

1). Saudi Arabia is pumping mostly water out of her oil fields. running dry.

Yemen (south of Saudi Arabia) has untapped oil reserves. hmmmm.....

2). up to 1,000,000 yemen soldiers are parked at the Saudi Arabia border getting ready to do a little of their own regime change in Saudi Arabia.

THE MUSLIMS ARE PISSED AT THE SAUDI ZIONISTS. YEMEN MIGHT GET LOTS OF HELP.

rgray222
10th October 2015, 02:30
A 'perfect storm' of interconnected crises could see the autocratic Saudi state disintegrate within ten years, argues Nafeez Ahmed.



The oil problem in Saudi is masking a much larger problem in the middle east that very few people are talking about.

The perfect storm is forming over the entire region. Saudi is only one component (albeit an important one) in the storm. Nuclear weapons are already in Pakistan and India. Like Iran, at least twelve other Middle Eastern countries have either announced plans to explore atomic energy or have signed nuclear cooperation agreements: Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Egypt, UAE, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Turkey, Syria, Kuwait, Qatar, and Oman (Two other countries - Yemen and Libya - cancelled their nuclear programs). Each of these countries, like Iran as well, have explicitly stated that they are only interested in peaceful uses of nuclear technology. If anyone believes that these countries are discussing nuclear power to light up homes they need to have a reality check.

Russia has amassed heavy weapons on Syria's east coast, they have positioned nuclear subs (with nuclear weapons) between Turkey and Egypt and Obama has given the green light to the Iranian nuclear deal. Obama is using the same language, lies and strategies that Clinton used when signing the horrific deal with North Korea. There is one big difference, N. Korea was and is in a vacuum while the middle east is all connected. As everyone knows all to well what happens in the middle does not stay in the middle east.

The perfect storm is cresting over the horizon and nobody wants to acknowledge that the storm is heading right towards WWIII. People dance around the issues talking about the Saudi economy or the Russian white knights or the wonderful Obama deal with Iran. The truth is there is not one good actor on the stage and we are destined for a storm like the world has never seen before.

Nuclear weapons were a deterrent for war but those days are quickly coming to a close.

Take a look at Bill Clinton telling Americans how safe they will be now that he so courageously signed a nuclear deal with that country. I think we all know how well that turned out!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6TcbU5jAavw&feature=youtu.be

idiit
10th October 2015, 06:59
Nuclear weapons were a deterrent for war but those days are quickly coming to a close.


without intervention from higher extra-dimensionals the prospects would be bleak. the nucler weapons of mass scale appear to be disarmed every time they try to employ them. smaller local mini nukes appear to still have a role.

I just sit back and watch from as detached/neutral viewing position as I can muster. I gots skin in da game so i'm not impartial but I do want to get a well rounded accurate view of thangs.

idiit
19th October 2015, 13:03
Saudi Arabia is delaying payments to government contractors


Facing Dire Financial Straits, Saudi Arabia Delays Contractor Payments To Preserve Cash

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-10-19/facing-dire-financial-straits-saudi-arabia-delays-contractor-payments-preserve-cash