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  • The pandemic has disrupted economies worldwide, and oil is not escaping unscathed.

  • While fluctuations in oil prices are not new,

  • the latest tailspin sent oil companies and investors in a state of alarm.

  • But what does this mean for what is arguably the most important commodity in the world?

  • Market forces such as demand and supply usually determine the prices of commodities

  • but the same cannot be said for oil.

  • The dynamics behind oil prices are often complex,

  • with environmental and geopolitical factors at play.

  • At the start of 2020, demand for oil around the world plunged

  • but oil-producing countries continued to generate the commodity at a surplus.

  • At one point, the price for a barrel of West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark for US oil,

  • fell to negative $37.63 a barrel

  • which meant that oil producers were paying buyers to offload the commodity.

  • For years, global oil production has been increasing steadily

  • fuelled by demand from a growing global economy.

  • That was before the oil industry was hit by a double whammy:

  • The coronavirus pandemic and a spat between two major oil producers,

  • Saudi Arabia and Russia.

  • Saudi Arabia is part of OPEC, or the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries

  • which is currently made up of 13 members from the Middle East, Africa and South America.

  • While the oil cartel controls around 80% of total oil reserves,

  • it only contributed around 30% of global oil production.

  • With demand for oil falling to unprecedented levels in March 2020,

  • Saudi Arabia proposed a downward adjustment in oil production

  • to a wider group called OPEC+, which includes Russia.

  • The wider alliance of OPEC+ has been regulating production

  • in order to balance the oil market since 2017.

  • However, Saudi Arabia's proposal to cut production levels was opposed by Russia

  • which analysts described as a geopolitical move against the United States.

  • In 2018, U.S. eclipsed Saudi Arabia and Russia as the number 1 oil producer in the world.

  • With oil prices in freefall, it would be hard for American producers to break even

  • which would threaten its market dominance.

  • With Russia unwilling to budge,

  • Saudi Arabia retaliated by slashing prices and increasing production

  • causing a wave of repercussions to reverberate through the whole larger economy.

  • Russia followed suit by lowering prices.

  • Crude oil prices have been see-sawing since then

  • falling more than 60% since the beginning of 2020.

  • A few weeks after the spat between Russia and Saudi Arabia,

  • OPEC and its allies eventually agreed to a historic cut

  • in oil production levels to shore up prices.

  • However, the world was already knee-deep in the pandemic by the time the deal was reached

  • in April of 2020, dampening the effects of the production cuts.

  • With international travel and trade ravaged by the pandemic, airplanes were grounded and

  • lockdowns enforced, constraining the demand for fuel.

  • For the first time in over a decade, global oil demand is expected to fall in 2020.

  • The initial contraction in China's economy was also a major trigger

  • for the volatile oil prices.

  • China, which made up 24% of energy demand in 2019,

  • was one of the earliest countries to impose a nationwide lockdown in January 2020.

  • The shuttering of businesses and factories had a lasting impact on the local and global

  • economy for the first quarter of the year.

  • The subsequent lockdowns around the world, including in Europe and the United States,

  • further depressed energy demand.

  • With an oil glut and demand collapsing,

  • storage space for all the excess crude was quickly filling up.

  • In April, the unimaginable happened

  • when U.S. oil prices went into negative territory for the first time

  • which meant sellers were paying buyers to offload oil.

  • The projected revenues for oil and gas companies involved in exploration and production is

  • expected to decline 40% year-on-year, from $2.47 trillion in revenues in 2019

  • to $1.47 trillion this year.

  • The rise of renewable energy in recent years

  • is also threatening the pole position of fossil fuels.

  • In 2018, the share of renewables in electricity production increased to nearly 26%.

  • In the first quarter of 2020, the usage of renewables globally increased by 1.5%

  • compared to the same period in 2019.

  • According to the International Energy Agency,

  • renewables are the most resilient energy source during the coronavirus pandemic

  • with renewable electricity generation projected to rise by almost 5% in 2020.

  • As governments worldwide ease social restrictions, the way people travel has changed.

  • Even before the pandemic, global oil demand was expected to slow down after 2025

  • and flatten out in the 2030s.

  • While oil prices have rebounded slightly, it is likely that the oil industry will have

  • to adjust to a new normal in the years ahead.

  • Hey guys, thanks for watching.

  • We'd love to hear your oil industry predictions

  • so drop your comments and don't forget to subscribe.

  • And in the meantime, stay safe.

The pandemic has disrupted economies worldwide, and oil is not escaping unscathed.

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當一桶油比你的咖啡還便宜的時候 - CNBC解釋 (When a barrel of oil was cheaper than your coffee | CNBC Explains)

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    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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