OPEC has enough spare oil
capacity to compensate for a full loss of Iranian supply if Israel knocks out
that country’s facilities but the producer group would struggle if Iran
retaliates by hitting installations of its Gulf neighbours.
In
retaliation to Iran’s missile strikes, Israel’s options include targeting
Iranian oil production facilities, among other strategic sites. Iran is an OPEC
member with production of around 3.2 million barrels per day, or 3% of global
output.Iranian oil exports have climbed this year to near multi-year highs of
1.7 million bpd despite U.S. sanctions. Chinese
refiners buy most of its supply. Beijing says it doesn’t recognise unilateral
U.S. sanctions.
OPEC+,
which includes OPEC and allies like Russia and Kazakhstan, has been cutting
production in recent years to support prices amid weak global demand. So the
group is sitting on millions of barrels of spare capacity.
Cuts by OPEC+ producers
currently total 5.86 million bpd. Analysts estimated Saudi Arabia is able to
raise output by 3 million bpd and the United Arab Emirates by 1.4 million.
OPEC+ met
on Wednesday to discuss compliance with cuts. The group did not discuss
the Israeli-Iranian conflict, according to OPEC+ sources.
While
OPEC has enough spare capacity to compensate for the loss of Iranian supplies,
much of that capacity is in the Middle East Gulf region and potentially
vulnerable should the conflict escalate further.
Israel
has so far refrained from attacking Iranian oil facilities. Oil analysts and
security experts have said Israel could target Iran’s oil refining sites and
the Kharg Island oil port, which handles around 90% of the country’s crude
exports. During the Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s, Baghdad regularly attacked
tankers around Kharg Island and threatened to destroy the oil terminal.
In 2019, a drone attack by
Iranian proxies on Saudi oil processing facilities briefly knocked out 50% of
the kingdom’s crude production.
Riyadh
and Tehran have had a political rapprochement since 2019, which helped ease
regional tensions, but relations remain difficult.
Oil prices have traded in a
narrow range of $70-90 per barrel over the past years despite the war between
Russia and Ukraine and conflict in the Middle East.
A
rise in U.S. production has helped ease the fear premium in oil markets, said
Rhett Bennett, chief executive at Black Mountain, which has operations in the
U.S. Permian basin.
The
U.S. produces 13% of global crude and almost 20% of global oil liquid
production compared to OPEC’s 25% global crude production share and some 40% by
OPEC+.
A
broad conflict in the Middle East, however, with a major impact on production
would inevitably push oil prices up.