石油价格


自从哈马斯去年 10 月 7 日对以色列发动多次协同攻击以来,中东地区一直处于陷入失控的地区冲突甚至全球冲突的边缘。对于该地区以及通过政治、经济或能源价格与其相关的国家来说,现在可能比任何时候都更加危险。7 月 27 日,伊朗支持的黎巴嫩恐怖组织真主党在以色列占领的戈兰高地的一个运动场上发射火箭弹,造成 12 名儿童和青少年死亡。7 月 30 日,以色列空袭炸死了真主党高级军事指挥官、该组织领导人哈桑·纳斯鲁拉的亲密顾问福阿德·舒克尔。7 月 31 日,以色列军队暗杀了巴勒斯坦哈马斯恐怖组织的政治领袖伊斯梅尔·哈尼耶,当时哈尼耶正在伊朗参加新总统 马苏德·佩泽什基安的就职典礼。哈马斯、真主党和伊朗都发誓要进行报复。

以色列与哈马斯的冲突目前已进入白热化阶段,因此该组织暴力升级的可能性似乎小于真主党或伊朗。对于黎巴嫩真主党来说,情况则完全不同,其战斗部队约有 10 万人,武器库庞大,包括多达 20 万枚火箭弹和导弹,所有这些都直接部署在以色列北部。伊朗还帮助黎巴嫩训练其战士,并提供短程、中程和远程非制导弹道导弹和短程制导弹道导弹,这些导弹能够打击以色列所有主要人口中心。黎巴嫩与以色列的战争历史在其中东邻国中尤为突出,2000 年成功将以色列军队赶出黎巴嫩,2006 年再次与以色列交战,当时双方陷入僵局。如果真主党全面动员起来对抗以色列,同时以色列在另一条战线上与哈马斯持续发生冲突,那么以色列的防御能力将面临极大的压力——如果再加上伊朗对以色列的空袭,或者伊朗军队及其代理人支持下从叙利亚向以色列东北部派遣更多的军队,这种压力将更加巨大。

伊朗方面还有其他几种报复性选择,这与伊朗最高领袖阿里·哈梅内伊在哈尼耶遇刺后表示以色列已准备好接受“严厉惩罚”的评论一致。从能源行业的角度来看,伊朗可能威胁进一步破坏霍尔木兹海峡的航运,历史上全球约 30% 的石油都通过该海峡运输。过去类似的威胁曾导致油价大幅上涨。一个不那么直接的威胁是利用其在也门的胡塞武装代理部队加强对红海地区其他地区石油运输的攻击,这也将给油价带来上行压力。胡塞武装还可能直接袭击沙特阿拉伯的石油设施,正如该组织最近威胁的那样,如果沙特阿拉伯继续允许美国战机利用其领土对也门叛军进行军事打击,胡塞武装将这样做。胡塞武装上次对沙特本土发动大规模协同攻击——2019年9月14日,针对阿布盖格石油加工厂和胡赖斯油田——导致沙特石油产量减半,导致以美元计价的油价出现1988年以来的最大日内涨幅,我在最新一本有关 全球石油市场新秩序的书中对此进行了全面分析。

或者,伊朗可以扩大其先前要求欧佩克伊斯兰成员国对以色列盟友和以色列本身实施的石油禁运。这将与沙特阿拉伯在 1973/74 年对在赎罪日战争期间支持以色列与埃及和叙利亚的国家所做的一模一样。随着全球石油供应下降,油价急剧上涨,而欧佩克成员国在此期间逐步削减石油产量,加剧了油价上涨。天然气价格也上涨,因为历史上约 70% 的天然气价格由石油价格组成。到 1974 年 3 月禁运结束时,油价上涨了约 267%,从每桶约 3 美元上涨到近 11 美元。这反过来又加剧了全球经济放缓,西方净石油进口国尤其感受到了这种影响。

10 月 7 日哈马斯袭击事件发生后不久,世界银行就曾概述了此类升级可能对油价产生的影响  。它表示,如果发生“小规模中断”,即全球石油供应量减少 50 万至 200 万桶/日(大致相当于 2011 年利比亚内战期间的减产量),油价最初将上涨 3-13%。如果发生“中度中断”,即供应量减少 300 万至 500 万桶/日(大致相当于 2003 年伊拉克战争的减产量),油价将上涨 21-35%。而“大规模中断”——供应量下降 600 万至 800 万桶/日(与 1973 年石油危机时的降幅相似)——将使油价上涨 56% 至 75%。以目前布伦特原油基准价格每桶约 77 美元计算,这意味着油价将跃升至每桶约 120 美元至 135 美元。

尽管如此,OPEC 伊斯兰成员国对以色列及其主要支持者实施任何重大石油出口禁令都可能导致全球石油供应大幅减少,从而对油价产生比 1973 年石油危机期间和世界银行计算的更大影响。OPEC 伊斯兰成员国包括阿尔及利亚(平均原油产量约为 100 万桶/日)、伊朗(340 万桶/日)、伊拉克(410 万桶/日)、科威特(250 万桶/日)、利比亚(120 万桶/日)、沙特阿拉伯(900 万桶/日)和阿联酋(290 万桶/日)。这些国家的原油产量总计略高于 2400 万桶/日,约占目前全球平均总产量 8200 万桶/日的 29%。除了实施这样的禁运之外,伊朗肯定还会呼吁其胡塞代理部队加强对红海地区及其周边石油运输的攻击,以进一步推高油价。

一个可能减轻升级失控风险的关键因素(自 2023 年 10 月 7 日以来已经多次失控),是这场中东冲突主要对立双方的主要超级大国赞助者都不希望油价比现在高得多。正如我在关于全球石油市场 新秩序的最新著作中所全面分析的那样,以色列的主要赞助者——美国——长期以来一直希望将布伦特油价保持在每桶 75-80 美元以下。超过这个价格会大大增加经济陷入衰退的可能性。历史先例是,原油价格每桶每变动 10 美元,就会导致每加仑汽油价格变动 25-30 美分,而每加仑汽油平均价格每上涨 1 美分,每年就会损失超过 10 亿美元的消费者支出。如果距离重大选举(总统选举或中期选举)还有两年,美国经济陷入衰退,那么执政党获胜的机会就会大大降低。自 2018 年第一次世界大战结束以来,现任美国总统在七次连任中只有一次成功连任(而且连一次都值得商榷)。

伊朗的主要超级大国中国与美国一样,希望油价能维持在近期水平的低端。自 2017 年以来,中国一直是世界上最大的原油进口国,而原油是推动伊朗 从灾难性的疫情时期复苏的关键 。因此,尽管中国享受到俄罗斯、伊朗和伊拉克(仅举三个主要供应国)提供的大幅油价折扣,但折扣前的原价越低,对北京越有利。对中国来说,至少与此同样重要的是,西方经济体仍然是其主要的出口集团,美国仍占其出口收入的 16% 以上。据OilPrice.com独家采访的一位欧盟高级能源安全人士称,如果布伦特油价在一年中超过一个季度的时间内维持在每桶90-95美元以上,对中国造成的经济损失(直接通过其自身的能源进口以及间接通过对其西方主要出口市场的经济造成损害)将危险地增加。

作者:Simon Watkins,Oilprice.com


原文链接/OilandGas360

Oil Price


Ever since Hamas launched multiple coordinated attacks against Israel on 7 October last year, the Middle East has been on the verge of spiraling into an out-of-control regional and perhaps global conflict. Perhaps no time has looked potentially more perilous for the region and for those countries connected to it through politics, economics, or energy prices than right now. On 27 July, Iranian-backed Lebanese terrorist organization Hezbollah killed 12 children and young adults in a rocket strike on a playing field in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. 30 July saw an Israeli air strike kill Fuad Shukr, a senior Hezbollah military commander, and close adviser to the group’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah. On 31 July, Israeli forces assassinated the political head of Palestine’s Hamas terrorist organization, Ismail Haniyeh, who was in Iran to attend the inauguration of the new president, Masoud Pezeshkian. Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran have all vowed revenge.

Israel’s conflict with Hamas is now well advanced, so the opportunity for a dramatic escalation in violence from the group appears less likely than from either Hezbollah or Iran. For Lebanon’s Hezbollah, it is a different matter entirely, with around 100,000 in its fighting force, a huge arsenal of weapons including up to 200,000 rockets and missiles, and all of this positioned directly to Israel’s north. It is also a key beneficiary of help from Iran in the training of its fighters and in the supply of short-, intermediate-, and long-range unguided ballistic missiles and short-range guided ballistic missiles capable of hitting all of Israel’s major population centers. Its history of warfare against Israel stands out among its Middle Eastern neighbors, having successfully driven Israeli forces out of Lebanon in 2000 and having fought them again in 2006, that time to a stalemate. A full mobilization of Hezbollah against Israel, at the same time as ongoing conflict on another front against Hamas could significantly stretch Israel’s defense capabilities – even more so if augmented by aerial attacks on Israel by Iran, or by additional forces from Syria to Israel’s northeast supported by the Iranian military and its proxies.

In Iran’s case, several other retaliatory options are available, in line with the comment from its Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei after the Haniyeh assassination that Israel had set itself up for “harsh punishment”. From the energy sector’s perspective, Iran could threaten to further disrupt shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, through which around 30 percent of all the world’s oil has historically transited. Similar threats in the past have caused big spikes in the oil price. A less direct threat would be using its Yemeni Houthi proxy forces to step up the level of attacks on oil shipping elsewhere around the Red Sea region, which would also put upward pressure on oil prices. The Houthis could also be used to launch direct attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities, as the group threatened to do recently if Saudi Arabia continued to allow U.S. warplanes to use its territory for military strikes against the Yemeni rebel group. The last time the Houthis launched major coordinated attacks against the Saudi Arabian mainland – on 14 September 2019 against the Abqaiq oil processing facility and Khurais oil field – Saudi Arabia’s oil production was halved, causing the biggest intra-day jump in oil prices in U.S. dollar terms since 1988, as analyzed in full in my latest book on the new global oil market order.

Alternatively, Iran could widen out its previously called-for embargo by Islamic members of OPEC on oil exports to Israel’s allies as well as to Israel itself. This would mirror exactly what Saudi Arabia did in 1973/74 to countries that supported Israel during the Yom Kippur War with Egypt and Syria. As global oil supplies fell, the price increased dramatically, exacerbated by incremental cuts to oil production by OPEC members over the period. Gas prices also rose, as historically around 70 percent of them are comprised of the price of oil. By the end of the embargo in March 1974, the price of oil had risen around 267 percent, from about US$3 per barrel (pb) to nearly US$11 pb. This, in turn, stoked the fire of a global economic slowdown, especially felt in the net oil-importing countries of the West.

Precisely where such escalations might drive the oil price was sketched out by the World Bank shortly after the 7 October Hamas attacks. It stated that a ‘small disruption’ – with the global oil supply being reduced by 500,000 to 2 million bpd (roughly the same as the decrease seen during the Libyan civil war in 2011) – would see the oil price initially rise 3-13 percent. A ‘medium disruption’ – involving a 3 million to 5 million bpd loss of supply (roughly equivalent to the Iraq war in 2003) would drive the oil price up by 21-35 percent. And a ‘large disruption’ – featuring a supply fall of 6 million to 8 million bpd (similar to the drop seen in the 1973 Oil Crisis) – would push the oil price up 56-75 percent. On the current Brent oil benchmark price of around US$77 per barrel, this would mean a jump to about US$120-US$135 per barrel.

That said, any significant embargo on oil exports from the Islamic members of OPEC to Israel and its key supporters would likely result in a much bigger loss of global oil supplies – and consequently have a much greater effect on the oil price – than occurred during the 1973 Oil Crisis and that the World Bank has calculated. The Islamic members of OPEC are Algeria, with an average crude oil production rate of around 1 million bpd, Iran (3.4 million bpd), Iraq (4.1 million bpd), Kuwait (2.5 million bpd), Libya (1.2 million bpd), Saudi Arabia (9 million bpd), and the UAE (2.9 million bpd). This totals just over 24 million bpd – or about 29 percent – of the current average total global production of about 82 million bpd. Alongside such an embargo, Iran would certainly call upon its Houthi proxy forces to step up attacks on oil shipping in and around the Red Sea region to push oil prices even higher.

One key factor that may mitigate the risks of escalation spiraling out of control – as it has already done on several occasions since 7 October 2023 – is that neither of the principal superpower sponsors of the main opposing sides in this Middle East conflict wants oil prices to go much higher than they already are. As analyzed in full in my latest book on the new global oil market order, Israel’s key sponsor – the U.S. – has a longstanding interest in keeping the Brent oil price below US$75-80 per barrel. Prices over this significantly increase the chance of the economy slipping into recession. Historical precedent has been that every US$10 per barrel change in the crude oil price results in a 25-30 cent change in the price of a gallon of gasoline, and for every 1 cent that the average price per gallon of gasoline rises, more than US$1 billion per year in consumer spending is lost. And if the U.S. economy is in recession two years out from a major election (presidential or mid-terms) then the chances of the incumbent party in power winning are dramatically reduced. Since the end of World War I in 2018, the sitting U.S. president has won re-election only once out of seven such occasions (and even the one is debatable).

Iran’s key superpower sponsor, China, has the same desire as the U.S. for the oil price to be trading at the lower end of recent levels. Since 2017, it has been the world’s largest gross importer of crude oil, which is key to powering its still-stuttering economic recovery from its devastating Covid period. Consequently, although it enjoys substantial discounts on the headline oil prices offered to it by Russia, Iran, and Iraq, to name but three of its key suppliers, the lower the original price before the discount is applied the better for Beijing. At least as important as this to China is the fact that the economies of the West remain its key export bloc, with the U.S. still accounting for over 16 percent of its export revenues on its own. According to a senior European Union energy security source exclusively spoken to by OilPrice.com, the economic damage to China – directly through its own energy imports and indirectly through damage to the economies of its key export markets in the West – would dangerously increase if the Brent oil price remained over US$90-95 per barrel for more than one quarter of a year.

By Simon Watkins for Oilprice.com