Oil prices have moved around quite a bit of late, and the price of U.S. benchmark crude oil has even dipped below $90 a barrel. Lower oil prices are great for consumers, and they’re one reason we might actually be able to afford gas this summer. However, not everyone likes to see the price of oil move lower, and it’s pretty obvious that oil producers prefer higher prices. Next time oil prices spike higher, think about the following positive effects of higher oil prices.
1. New discoveries are possible because funding allows for increased exploration in previously uneconomic geographies.
If the price of oil had stayed really low, producers would have never been able to justify the investment required to tap our vast Bakken oil reserves. Further, places such as the oil sands of Canada or deepwater reserves in the Gulf of Mexico would never have been explored. One of the biggest benefits of high oil prices is that it becomes profitable to extract oil from more sources.
It costs upwards of $10 million for a small oil and gas producer to drill one Bakken well — something that Kodiak Oil & Gas Corp (USA) (NYSE:KOG) knows well. One of the major risks Kodiak faces is that oil prices slip below $70 a barrel, which is the an estimated level where wells become uneconomical. Meanwhile companies operating in the Canadian oil sands need oil prices to be in the $45-$70 range to break even. If oil had remained below those levels, Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) would never have sanctioned its Kearl oil sands project, which, after cost overuns, will end up costing the company $12.9 billion to complete.
Finally, last year was the best ever for deepwater discoveries, as producers smashed the previous record by 40%. However, those discoveries never would have happened if crude oil prices hadn’t been hovering around $100 a barrel the past three years. Higher oil prices are encouraging companies to invest in exploration of the deepwater in the Gulf of Mexico, a move that’s just starting to pay off. ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP), for one, has already announced two major discoveries in the Gulf this year, discoveries that might not have happened if the price of oil was lower.
2. Production from high-priced reservoirs becomes more viable; thus, production can be enhanced.
Not only do high oil prices affect producers’ decisions to pursue exploration projects, but they also encourage companies to squeeze more oil out of current resource basins. Denbury Resources Inc. (NYSE:DNR) is just one example of a company using “enhanced oil recovery” procedures to revive aging oil fields. Because of the initial capital investments required to source carbon dioxide and build pipelines, these projects wouldn’t be as economical and therefore unlikely to be a viable option if oil prices were lower.
3. Exporting nations have more money to invest into other businesses, while importing nations face the risk of higher debts, slowdowns, and recessions.
For years, higher oil prices were the bane of our economy. They meant that more of our money was going overseas while our economy remained at risk to price shocks. However, as we produce more oil, we can begin to turn that tide. The only problem is that oil prices need to remain sustainably high to justify the investments required to bring more production online.