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‘Oil price hard to predict’

Business Desk |
Update: 2015-09-17 05:36:00
‘Oil price hard to predict’ Photo Courtesy: nytimes.com

DHAKA: Royal Dutch Shell chief executive Ben van Beurden has told the BBC a recovery in the price of oil is hard to foresee.

‘It is a very, very volatile business in terms of supply and demand. The oil price responds to very small mismatches between supply and demand,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today program.

The price of oil has roughly halved in the past year, to around $50 per barrel.

Goldman Sachs predicted earlier this month it could fall as low as $20.

When asked where oil prices may go next, he told the media, ‘The honest answer to that is I don’t know’.

The halving of the oil price is ‘on the back of just a few percent of oversupply, and it shows how inelastic the whole system is, and simply because oil is so cheap - its not as if demand is going to respond’, he said.

He added that oil becoming cheaper would not tempt consumers to use more of it, as can happen with other products.

‘People don’t drive to work twice because it’s more economical to do so’ than it was before, he explained.

Demand for energy, North American shale oil production, Opec policy and industry costs would help inform where oil will go in the future, he said.

Opec producers, particularly Saudi Arabia, have maintained high levels of production in an attempt to curb US shale output, which is uneconomical at lower prices.

The organization is managing through low oil prices by keeping its debts low. The organization’s debts are about 12% of total capital, he added.

BDST: 1533 HRS, SEPT 17, 2015
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