Shell boss sees world oil supply lagging demand
In excerpts from a speech Shell Chief Executive Ben van Beurden is to give at the International Petroleum Week dinner on Thursday evening, he said he expected oil prices to remain volatile in 2015 as the market struggles to find a balance.
"Seeing today's prices, supply will probably not keep pace with this growth. It may even decline, as prices are close to cash costs, according to consultants like Wood Mackenzie," van Beurden said.
As projects are postponed and cancelled around the world due to the low oil prices, new supply could fall in 2 or 3 years, failing to catch up with the expected economic growth.
"The market could tighten quickly," he said. But at the same time, if US shale oil production, the main driver of the rise in global oil supplies in recent years, proves resilient in the face of the lower prices, the oil price recovery could take longer.
"Either way: The market will remain volatile in 2015, if only because for now, OPEC shows no sign of wanting to resume its role as swing supplier," van Beurden said.
Oil prices have halved to around \\$55 a barrel since last June. Prices took a sharp dip after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) decided not to cut output in November. Most major oil companies have slashed exploration spending in 2015 by more than 10 percent compared to last year as they adjust to the low-price environment.
Shell, the largest European energy major, announced a relatively modest three-year, \\$15 billion cut in potential spending last month as van Beurden warned against over reacting.
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