Saudi Oil Site Attacks Exacerbate Tightening Supply, Add to Price Risk Premium

Oil prices surged Monday after attacks on Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq processing plant and Khurais oil field Saturday suspended more than half the country’s oil production. While the ultimate impact will depend on a combination of the extent of damage, the U.S. and Saudi response, and whether further attacks occur, the current production decline will exacerbate the tightening in the oil market that was already underway and could add a more lasting geopolitical risk premium to prices.

What happened

The attacks halted production of 5.7 million barrels per day (b/d) of crude oil, 2 billion cubic feet per day of natural gas, and more than 500,000 b/d of natural gas liquids, amounting to more than 5% of global oil supplies (according to Saudi government reports and the International Energy Agency). While media reports suggest one-third of this production could be restarted as early as Monday, the outage has the potential to be one of the largest in history if the damage is significant and recovery slow.

Abqaiq plant: the heart of Saudi oil

While the focus has been on risks in the Strait of Hormuz, we believe the Abqaiq processing plant presents a bigger vulnerability. Simply put, this plant is the heart of the Saudi oil industry, removing hydrogen sulfide and dissolved natural gas and stabilizing the oil for export and refining – and therefore critical to transport and sale. The plant sits at the cross-section of the country’s oil and gas infrastructure, and the output loss will limit supplies not only to export terminals, but also to domestic refiners and power plants, which could affect desalination operations. We’ve already heard reports of reduced operations at domestic petrochemical plants and refiners due to lack of feedstocks. The body doesn’t work without the heart. In addition, while pipelines may be relatively simple to repair, processing units of this complexity are a different story.