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Saudis Keep Oil Flowing as They Patch Up Wounded Industry

The minister and CEO assured customers Aramco’s crude exports won’t be reduced this month because it will draw down reserves.

Saudis Keep Oil Flowing as They Patch Up Wounded Industry
A laborer watches boring machines in operation at the construction site of the King Salman International Maritime complex in Ras Al-Khair, Saudi Arabia. (Photographer: Mohammed Al-Nemer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabia reassured anxious customers that crude exports will keep flowing as normal and its industry can recover quickly from the worst attack in its history.

Crude prices fell after Tuesday’s long-awaited statement from the kingdom -- which pumped almost 10% of the world’s oil before the crucial Abqaiq facility was struck by missiles or drones over the weekend. Yet it also became clear that Saudi Arabia’s industry will remain weakened for months as it depletes oil reserves to meet supply commitments and operates without its usual buffer of spare production capacity.

“Considering limited spare capacity outside Saudi Arabia and risks of renewed attacks on Saudi energy infrastructure, a risk premium is likely to stay on oil prices in the foreseeable future,” UBS Group AG analyst Giovanni Staunovo said in a note on Wednesday.

Even as Aramco fixes the damage at Abqaiq, the possibility of further escalation of military conflict hangs over the oil market. Saudi Arabia’s Defense Ministry on Wednesday said the attacks were “unquestionably sponsored by Iran,” but stopped short of saying the strikes were launched directly from or by the Islamic Republic.

Recovering Production

Abqaiq is now processing about 2 million barrels a day of crude, Aramco Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser said at a briefing in Jeddah on Tuesday. The facility should return to pre-attack levels of about 4.9 million barrels by the end of September, he said.

Saudis Keep Oil Flowing as They Patch Up Wounded Industry

“During the two past days, we managed to contain the damage by recovering more than half of the production that we had lost during that terrorist attack,” Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said at a briefing in Jeddah. “The company will be able to meet all its commitments to customers this month by drawing on its crude oil reserves.”

That was relief for a market that has been wracked by uncertainty -- seeing a record price surge in Brent crude on Monday -- but progress has been slower than was initially expected. Soon after the weekend attack, officials indicated that the majority of output would be restored within days, with weeks required to get back to full capacity. The outlook became more pessimistic in subsequent days as photos were released showing the scale of the damage at the crucial facility.

The minister and CEO assured customers Aramco’s crude exports won’t be reduced this month because it will draw down strategic reserves. The kingdom also temporarily reduced the rate at which domestic refineries process oil by about 1 million barrels a day, making more crude available for shipment overseas.

Still, figures provided by the energy minister suggested the kingdom will take months to fully recover from the incident. Full output capacity of 12 million barrels a day will only be available at the end of November, with about 11 million restored by the end of this month, said Prince Abdulaziz. Saudi Arabia aims to pump 9.8 million barrels a day in October, he said, in line with recent months.

The Saudi comments were met with some skepticism. Full restoration of pre-attack capacity at Abqaiq processing facility will only be completed “as we approach the end of the year,” Bjornar Tonhaugen, an analyst at consultant Rystad Energy A/S analyst, said in a report on Wednesday. He expected almost 2 million barrels a day of Arab Light and Extra Light crude to be offline in September and October.

Saudis Keep Oil Flowing as They Patch Up Wounded Industry

Brent crude dropped 6.5% on Tuesday after the kingdom’s reassurances, but that only partially erased Monday’s 15% surge, which was the biggest since the contract started trading in 1988. Futures fell 1% to $63.89 a barrel as of 5:07 p.m. in London on Wednesday.

That historic price gain underscored the unprecedented nature of the disruption caused by the attack. For decades, Saudi Arabia has been the oil market’s great stabilizer, maintaining a large cushion of spare production capacity that can be tapped in emergencies, such as during the 2011 war in Libya.

The suspension of 5.7 million barrels day of Saudi production by the attack -- the worst sudden loss in the history of the global oil market -- exposed the inadequacy of the rest of the world’s supply buffer. Beyond the kingdom, other participants in the OPEC+ cuts, such as Russia, Kazakhstan and the United Arab Emirates, could restore a few hundred thousand barrels a day of idled production, but that’s not enough to offset Saudi losses.

Aramco ramped up offshore fields to maximum to replace some lost production, Nasser said. Customers were also being supplied using stockpiles, though some buyers are being asked to accept different grades of crude, a person familiar with the matter said earlier this week. The attacks had “zero” impact on the kingdom’s revenues, Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

For all the practical fixes to damaged infrastructure that are now underway, Saudi Arabia’s failure to prevent the attacks and the risk of further military escalation in the region will hang over the oil market for a long time to come.

Tehran and Riyadh are historic foes backing opposing sides in Yemen’s long-running civil war. The volatile situation in the region finally boiled over earlier this year as U.S. President Donald Trump used sanctions to attempt to choke off all of Iran’s oil exports -- the lifeblood of its economy -- after unilaterally withdrawing from an international nuclear deal.

Since then, the Persian Gulf, source of about a third of the world’s seaborne oil exports, has been under siege, targeted by air, sea and land. While Trump has shown some reluctance to go to war, choosing instead to further tighten economic sanctions on Iran, there are also few prospects for easing tensions.

Houthi rebels in Yemen, who are backed by Tehran, said Monday that oil installations in Saudi Arabia will remain among their targets and their weapons can reach anywhere in the country. Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Tuesday his country won’t negotiate with the U.S. on any level.

“We cannot rule out the possibility of similar attacks on key Saudi energy infrastructure in the future,” said UBS’s Staunovo. The bank raised its three-month trading range for Brent crude by $6 to $59 to $71 a barrel.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anthony DiPaola in Dubai at adipaola@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Herron at jherron9@bloomberg.net, Fred Pals

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