IEA and OPEC jointly contemplate world energy investment outlook
The volume of world oil investment hinges upon uncertainties associated with future oil demand levels, policy
developments, and technological advances, agreed participants of a joint workshop organized by the International
Energy Agency and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Delegations representing the IEA and OPEC, oil companies, and the investment community attended that workshop late in
Paris. It was the second annual workshop examining IEA's World Energy Investment Outlook and OPEC's oil outlook.
IEA comments
"A pivotal area in shaping the flow of investment to oil development is the Middle East," said IEA Executive Director
Claude Mandil. "Although the costs of developing the region's vast resources are lower than anywhere else in the
world, financing this investment will be determined partially by perceptions of security risk, but even more so by
national decisions establishing the pace of resource exploitation."
The amount of net earnings that national oil companies can retain for investment depends upon broader national budget
needs, he said.
"Financing new projects could become a problem where the national debt is already high, and national considerations
discourage or preclude private or foreign investment," he said. "If the projected amount of investment in the Middle
East is not forthcoming and production does not, therefore, increase as rapidly as expected, more capital would need
to be spent in other more costly regions."
Regarding Russia, Mandil said "maintaining the momentum of the rebound in Russian production and exports will be
difficult." The momentum requires that new production be brought on stream, that oil export pipelines be expanded,
and that the government stabilizes legal and tax regimes for investors, he added.
OPEC comments
Adnan Shihab-Eldin, OPEC's director of research, noted that producers and consumers alike face challenges. He said he
welcomes a steadily growing sense of collective responsibility within the international oil community.
"The benefits of this can be felt throughout the industry, not only upstream, but also downstream-including
transportation and distribution. Indeed, it has become widely acknowledged that the downstream industry should
feature prominently in our assessments both now and in the future, so as to avoid it becoming a source of price
volatility," Shihab-Eldin said.
He emphasized that OPEC remains committed to its fundamental objective of seeking order and stability within the
international oil market through secure supply, reasonable prices, and fair returns for investors.
"OPEC's perspective is not just the immediate time horizon; it also extends well into the future. This is why we
attach so much importance to such workshops," as the joint IEA-OPEC workshop on world oil investment prospects, he
said.
