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OIL
AND GAS INDUSTRY
Saudi
Arabia is the world's most important oil producer. Given
its relatively high production levels, accounting for
nearly 13 percent of world output and 35 percent of
total OPEC output in 1991, and, more significantly, its
small domestic needs, the kingdom's dominance of
international crude oil markets is unchallenged.
Although reluctant to play the role, Saudi Arabia has
become the "swing producer," balancing
international oil demand and supply. Therefore, within
limits, Saudi oil production policies can have a
profound impact on international prices. Since the early
1970s, the kingdom has occasionally used this dominance
to influence oil prices, usually to further its
objectives of sustaining long-term oil consumption and
ensuring economic stability in the industrialized world.
The
oil sector is the key domestic production sector; oil
revenues constituted 73 percent of total budgetary
revenues in 1991. Precise statistics for expenditures on
sector development were not available but some estimates
placed the annual figure at US$5 billion to US$7
billion, or less than 10 percent of total budgetary
expenditures. Export oil revenues accruing to Saudi
Aramco, a large portion of which is allocated to the
budget, accounted for 90 percent of total exports in
1991. Only in the number of jobs was the oil sector
relatively unimportant to the economy; the
capital-intensive nature of the oil industry required
few workers--less than 2 percent of the labor force in
the early 1990s.
During
the 1980s, crude oil production fell from a peak of 9.9
million bpd in 1980, as Saudi Arabia boosted output to
offset shortfalls in supply resulting from the beginning
of the IranIraq War, to 3.3 million bpd in 1985.
Thereafter, and until the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, a
combination of moves by the kingdom and developments in
international oil markets allowed for a steady increase
in supply. Production rose to 4.9 million bpd in 1986
and reached in excess of 5.8 million bpd on the eve of
the Iraqi invasion. To replace most of the 4.5 million
bpd of embargoed Kuwaiti and Iraqi oil, Saudi Arabia
raised output to 8.5 million bpd within three months.
After the Persian Gulf War, market conditions and
maintenance projects required modest declines in output
to below 8 million bpd, but the kingdom's output in 1991
and 1992 averaged 8.4 million bpd. Divided Zone output,
which was included in this figure, fell to zero
immediately after the Persian Gulf War as a result of
the war damage, but the Arabian Oil Company facilities
resumed pumping at levels close to 350,000 bpd within a
few months. Half of this output was attributed to Saudi
Arabia. Getty Oil facilities in the Divided Zone did not
resume pumping oil after the Persian Gulf War.
The
bulk of Saudi Arabia's crude oil production was exported. In 1980, for
example, crude oil exports totaled about 9.2 million bpd or 93 percent
of production. By 1985, with lower production, exports fell to below
2.2 million bpd . Over the latter half of the 1980s, exports have
risen steadily to average 3.3 million bpd in 1989, 4.8 million bpd in
1990, and 6.8 million bpd in 1991 and 1992. Direction of exports has
also varied during the 1980s. In the early 1980s, the United States
and, to a lesser extent, Canada accounted for 15 percent of Saudi
exports; by 1985 they accounted for only 6 percent. Lower oil prices
and more aggressive pricing structures enabled Saudi Arabia to place
greater quantities of oil in North America by the early 1990s when
this market constituted almost one-third of Saudi crude oil sales
overseas. By contrast, Western Europe's importance to Saudi Arabia as
an importer of crude fell during the 1980s from 41 percent in 1981 to
about 18 percent by 1990. Saudi Arabia has maintained its market
presence in Asia, although the high levels of dependence of the
mid-1980s have been reduced. Asia received 37 percent of Saudi crude
oil exports in 1981, expanded its share to 68 percent by mid-decade,
but with the kingdom's attempts to capture a greater share of the
United States market, Asia imported a somewhat reduced 47 percent of
Saudi crude oil exports by the early 1990s.
During the 1980s, the government established, virtually from scratch,
a modern industrial sector. The industrialization process had two
goals: first, the use of the kingdom's enormous gas production as
industrial inputs to produce chemicals and petrochemicals for export
and, second, the construction of energy-intensive industries, some for
import-substitution purposes and others to meet infrastructural needs.
The government also established state-of-the-art industrial cities and
facilities to support its industrial program, including those at Al
Jubayl and Yanbu.
By
the early 1990s, the vast majority of these plants had been completed,
and few major expansions were planned. Infrastructure requirements had
largely stabilized and were adequate to meet the needs of the
population and industry for much of the 1990s. Therefore, the
government concentrated on maintenance and on improving productivity
and efficiency. Moreover, with the onset of serious budgetary
constraints, the government's role in advancing the domestic
industrialization process grew more indirect. The government was
forcing a number of state-owned industrial institutions to seek
financing for their new capacity-expansion programs from
nontraditional sources such as domestic and foreign commercial banks,
stock markets, and private investors. In an ongoing attempt to
encourage more private sector investment in manufacturing,
particularly in light industries, local business received incentives
in the form of production and consumption subsidies.
In the early 1990s, Saudi Arabia was engaged in five major programs to
raise production capacity of crude oil to 10 million bpd by the
mid-1990s. The overall plan was originally scheduled for completion in
1998, but accelerated activity in the wake of the gulf crisis and the
allocation of additional funds has moved the projected completion date
to 1994. The cost of this program has jumped from US$13 billion to
between US$17 billion to US$20 billion. The needs associated with the
gulf crisis largely entailed activating existing capacity, which lay
unused after output fell in the mid-1980s. This requirement involved
recommissioning nearly 150 wells and 12 GOSPs. By the end of 1990,
that effort yielded total sustainable capacity of 8.8 million bpd. In
addition to the war effort, Saudi Aramco has been involved in bringing
on-line a number of GOSPs in existing and known areas such as As
Saffaniyah, Al Uthmaniyah, and Abqaiq, all in the Eastern Province.
Finally, Saudi Aramco began development of its new light crude oil
finds in the central region, with the expectation that it could
produce 150,000 bpd of Arab Super Light from Al Hawtah field, south of
Riyadh. Following Saudi Aramco's mandate to conduct such activities in
the entire country, it has begun exploration in nontraditional areas
such as the central region and along the Red Sea coast. Prior to the
gulf crisis, AOC and Getty Oil had plans to step up their exploration
and development activity. These have been revised in light of the
damage to existing facilities sustained during the war.
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