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Can Saudi Aramco Meet Its Oil Production Promises?

The days when Saudi Aramco could easily pump more and more barrels are over. From now on, each incremental barrel is a struggle.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>Aramco told investors earlier this year that boosting its production capacity to 13 million barrels a day from 12 million barrels a day will take from 2024 to 2027. Bloomberg</p></div>
Aramco told investors earlier this year that boosting its production capacity to 13 million barrels a day from 12 million barrels a day will take from 2024 to 2027. Bloomberg

(Bloomberg Opinion) -- If the oil market was a religion, its central article of faith would be the maximum production capacity of Saudi Aramco.

Aramco, the state-owned Saudi Arabian oil giant, claims it can sustainably pump 12 million barrels a day, well above the kingdom’s OPEC+ August target of 11 million barrels. For the global economy, Saudi spare capacity is the last line of defense against more energy inflation. But apart from a few top company executives and a handful of Saudi royals, no one knows for sure whether Aramco can deliver. The rest either have blind faith in Aramco — or simply don’t believe.

On Tuesday, French President Emmanuel Macron was caught at the Group of Seven summit relaying

Can Saudi Aramco Meet Its Oil Production Promises?

Over the last eight weeks or so, there has been frenetic activity inside Aramco to prepare for an output surge. “MSC,” as maximum sustainable capacity is known at the company’s headquarters in Dhahran, has been the key topic of discussion. Company insiders, speaking in private, say it can reach 12 million barrels a day within 30 days and sustain that level for at least 90 days. What about longer? Aramco is simply confident it will prove skeptics like Macron wrong. Have faith, is the message.

Aramco told investors earlier this year that boosting its production capacity to 13 million barrels a day from 12 million barrels a day will take from 2024 to 2027Bloomberg
Aramco told investors earlier this year that boosting its production capacity to 13 million barrels a day from 12 million barrels a day will take from 2024 to 2027Bloomberg

The company is taking steps to boost its MSC to 13 million barrels from 12 million. But the first increase, a tiny extra 25,000 barrels a day, won’t arrive until 2024. The bulk of the expansion, including boosting production at three key oilfields known as Zuluf, Marjan and Berri, is slated for 2025 and 2026.

Oil executives and energy officials who’ve spoken to the Saudis in recent months have received conflicting signals about Aramco’s capabilities. Many have been told, in no uncertain terms, that the company will do as promised: the 12-million level is guaranteed. But I’ve heard a different version from a few others who have intimate connections with the kingdom and say anything above 11.2 to 11.3 million barrels for more than a few months would prove difficult.

That more skeptical version echoes what Macron was overheard telling Biden at the G7. According to Macron, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, ruler of the United Arab Emirates, told him the Saudis couldn’t currently boost production by much, perhaps another 150,000 barrels per day and, if more was needed, Riyadh would need another six months. “They don’t have huge capacities,” the French leader was caught saying. 

Both the optimistic and pessimistic scenarios can be simultaneously true. Pumping 12 million barrels a day can be possible and also very challenging; difficult needn’t equal impossible. Experience says that Riyadh will do whatever it takes to maintain its reputation as the world’s most reliable oil supplier. Money won’t be an issue; extra drilling would be approved, maintenance delayed, and oil reservoirs will be run hard if needed.  

Aramco can pull a few extra levers to, rather than produce, extra crude, maintaining the illusion of higher capacity. The company maintains vast crude storage in Egypt, the Netherlands and Japan, from where it can ship more barrels. In addition, it keeps a strategic reserve of refined products in underground caverns at five locations in the kingdom. It can tap that little-known reserve, which took two decades to build, to supply its domestic market with gasoline, diesel and jet fuel for a while, reducing crude intake at its local refiners and thus freeing more for export. Secretly, that’s precisely what Riyadh did after the attack in 2019 on its large Abqaiq oil-processing center.

Experience also says that every time the market has doubted the Saudi ability to boost production, the kingdom has proven the naysayers wrong. Perhaps the most notable example is how the late Matt Simmons, author of the much-discussed book “

And yet, there are reasons to worry.

Aramco doesn’t just use its spare capacity to meet surges in global oil demand but also, according to the IPO prospectus, to “maintain its production levels during routine field maintenance.” As Riyadh ramps up to maximum sustainable production, Aramco would be forced to run its oil fields at full throttle with little maintenance possible — a recipe for trouble. Any unplanned outages, which in normal times Saudi Arabia can conceal thanks to its spare capacity, would be catastrophic There would be no cushion.

Regardless of the true potential production number, one thing is clear: the days when Aramco could easily pump more and more barrels are over. From now on, each incremental barrel is a struggle. Whether or not you have faith in in the Saudis, the world faces a reckoning.  

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commodities. A former reporter for Bloomberg News and commodities editor at the Financial Times, he is coauthor of “The World for Sale: Money, Power and the Traders Who Barter the Earth’s Resources.”

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