Why now? Why would Russia and Saudi Arabia suddenly start an oil price war at the very moment that the coronavirus crisis goes fully global?
Why would these oil exporting economies let supply rip just as demand is cratering? It doesn’t make sense.
In Foreign Policy, Jason Bordoff explains it as a game of chicken gone wrong. Last week, realising the threat to demand, the Saudis called for big cuts in production — as you’d expect. But when the Russians refused to play ball, the Saudis decided to raise the stakes by increasing production.
According to Javier Blas, chief energy correspondent at Bloomberg, the Kingdom is now pushing up its production up to a self-harming 13 million barrels a day.
The Saudis have a choice of two strategies. The easy life option is to co-operate with other countries to maximise oil prices. But if the others won’t comply, there’s the high stakes option of a price war: which though painful, hurts rival producers more.
Saudi oil is relatively easy to extract — and there’s plenty of supporting infrastructure already in place. Things aren’t so straightforward elsewhere and thus the industries there are more capital intensive — and thus more sensitive to price swings.
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SubscribeYou’re focussing on the economics. Fine. But where’s the geo-political element to the piece?