Reading too much into the Saudi capacity ceiling
MbS almost certainly did not mean what oil bulls have convinced themselves he did
A single comment by Saudi Arabia’s crown prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS) in an otherwise extensive speech at the US-Arab Summit in Jeddah was enough to electrify the oil market and its observers. After an increase to 13mn bl/d of oil capacity by 2027, “the Kingdom will not have any additional capacity to increase production”, bin Salman said. Bloomberg, The Washington Post and others jumped on this as proof that Opec’s largest producer will quite soon hit its absolute ceiling. Analysts suggested that this would spell trouble for the global economy. Or that, because capex for investment will clearly not be the constraint, the limit must be rooted in geology. This is a substantial over-extrap
Also in this section
23 January 2025
The end of transit, though widely anticipated, leaves Europe paying a third more for gas than a year ago and greatly exposed to supply shocks
23 January 2025
The country’s government and E&P companies are leaving no stone unturned in their quest to increase domestic crude output as BP–ONGC tie-up leads the way
22 January 2025
The return of Donald Trump gives further evidence of ‘big oil’ as an investable asset, with the only question being whether anyone is really surprised
21 January 2025
The new president must put his cards on the table and tell the American people, and the world, if the US is formally abandoning the energy transition