Showing posts with label OPEC members. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OPEC members. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 October 2025

Who Suffers More from Falling Oil Prices? OPEC Members or United States

The recent slide in global oil prices has once again stirred a debate, who suffers more — the oil-exporting giants of OPEC or the United States, now a major producer itself? The answer, as always, lies in the economics of dependence and the politics of energy.

OPEC countries, particularly in the Gulf, rely overwhelmingly on oil revenues to finance their national budgets, social programs, and development plans. For economies like Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Iraq, crude exports still account for more than two-thirds of total income.

When oil prices tumble below US$70 a barrel, their fiscal positions come under pressure. Budget deficits widen, subsidies become unsustainable, and ambitious diversification drives, like Saudi Vision 2030, face funding gaps.

For smaller OPEC producers such as Nigeria or Angola, the pain is even sharper — lower prices mean currency depreciation, inflation, and social unrest.

In contrast, the United States, despite being the world’s largest oil producer, experiences a more nuanced impact. Lower prices hurt shale producers in Texas and North Dakota, where high extraction costs make many wells unprofitable when crude dips below US$60.

Bankruptcies, layoffs, and reduced drilling activity follow swiftly. Yet the broader US economy benefits - cheaper gasoline boosts consumer spending, cuts transport costs, and eases inflationary pressure — all positives for growth and household budgets.

While US oil companies may bleed, the country’s economy as a whole absorbs the shock better than most OPEC states can.

The fiscal and social dependence of OPEC members on oil revenues magnifies their vulnerability. As against this, the United States — with its diversified economy, flexible markets, and domestic consumption — ultimately gains from lower energy costs.

In short, the current oil price decline hurts OPEC far more deeply. For Washington, it is a mixed blessing; for Riyadh and its peers, a financial headache.

Unless OPEC recalibrates its dependence on hydrocarbons, every fall in crude prices will continue to expose the fragility of their oil-driven prosperity.

 

Tuesday, 16 January 2024

Iran registers highest oil output rise among OPEC members

A latest report released by the US Department of Energy stated that Iran has been the top OPEC member in terms of production increase in 2023, with an increase of 330,000 barrels per day (bpd).

The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) affiliated with the Department of Energy mentioned in its latest report that the total oil production of Iran was estimated at 2.87 million bpd at the end of 2023. Iran’s oil production stood at 2.54 million bpd in 2022.

The figures show that total OPEC oil production was 26.89 million bpd in 2023 which shows 630,000 barrels fall year on year. OPEC produced 27.52 million bpd in 2022.

This report has put Iran's oil production in the last month of last year at 3.17 million bpd.

Iran was the third-largest OPEC producer after Saudi Arabia and Iraq in December 2023.

The 330,000-bpd increase in Iran’s 2023 oil production indicates that sanctions have been ineffective on Iran's oil industry.

Back in June 2023, Bloomberg reported that the production and export of Iranian oil in 2023 reached record highs since the country came under US sanctions more than five years ago.

The report published in late June 2023 stated that Iran was shipping the highest amount of crude in almost five years despite US sanctions.

Bloomberg cited energy analysts as saying that Iran’s oil exports have surged to the highest level since the US unilaterally re-imposed sanctions on the country in 2018.

A Reuters report, also said in June last year, that Iranian crude shipments continued to rise in 2023 with higher shipments to China, Syria, and Venezuela. The report quoted consultants, shipping data, and a source familiar with the matter.

A large chunk of Iran’s crude oil goes to China which is the world’s major importer of energy. Several European customers including Germany, Spain, and Bulgaria also imported oil from Iran.

Iran has not released official figures about its oil exports over the past years amid efforts to evade Washington’s illegal sanctions.