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An attack on Saudi Arabia's largest oil processing plant pushed crude prices sharply higher on Monday, 16 September, though its longer-term impact depends on how long production is disrupted and the attack's future implications.
Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi rebels claimed responsibility for the attack on the Saudi Aramco facility. It halted production of 5.7 million barrels of crude a day, more than half of Saudi Arabia's global daily exports and more than 5 percent of the world's daily crude oil production. Most output goes to Asia.
"To take Saudi oil production down 50 percent, that's shocking," said Jonathan Aronson, a research analyst at Cornerstone Macro.
The attack may add to anxiety about the stability of the world's oil reserves. "Saudi Arabia has been a very reliable supplier of oil in the world," said Jim Burkhard, who heads crude oil research for IHS Markit. This attack is "adding a geopolitical premium back into the price of oil."
Work is underway to restore production at the Abquaiq plant. The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that Saudi officials said a third of crude output will be restored Monday, but bringing the entire plant back online may take weeks. Officials said they would use other facilities and existing stocks to supplant the plant's production.
The world's richest countries have oil reserves of more than 2 billion barrels, but releasing those to alleviate supply concerns could potentially backfire and result in higher prices on the market as traders worry that there is a problem with tight supply, he said.
While the US has a cushion because it and Canada both produce plenty, leaving the US less reliant on oil from West Asia, it's still a global market. "If you take oil anywhere out of system it affects everybody," said Burkhard.
Still, the situation is better today than it would have been a decade ago, prior to the US energy boom.
If the plant goes back online and there is no fundamental change to the world's supply of oil, prices may move higher and stay higher because traders would build in a "security premium," said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research.
There would be worries that the global oil supply is more insecure and that more attacks may be coming.
The attack on its oil infrastructure could lead Saudi Arabia to launch a military strike on Iran in retaliation, Book said. Countries attacking each other's oil facilities and fields is a "prescription for a high oil price." He argues that the attack on Saudi Arabia will help world markets finally recognise the repercussions of the unraveling of the Iran nuclear deal, from which President Donald Trump withdrew the US in 2018, imposing harsh sanctions on Iran, including its oil industry.
(Published in an arrangement with the Associated Press)
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