•預測油價一直很困難,但歐洲的能源危機、歐佩克+控制產量、正在進行的能源轉型、疫情明年還在繼續,這些都讓人很難預測油價
•全球能源轉型面臨很多問題,尤其是成本上升,這將是2022年關注的一個關鍵因素
•繼2021年石油和天然氣需求的反彈之後,隨著奧密克戎病例的激增和投資者繼續敦促企業進行脫碳,市場將在 2022年面臨價格、需求和行業長期前景的新不確定性
中國石化新聞網訊 據油價網12月21日訊息,隨著新冠疫情和通脹擔憂威脅需求,不確定性在年底重新回到石油市場。
石油和天然氣需求明年是否會繼續復甦,清潔能源裝置是否會繼續激增?或者,潛伏一段時間的風險會阻礙綠色能源的推出,並顛覆全球石油和天然氣需求的反彈?
離2021年底越近,2022年的前景就越不確定,奧密克戎讓已經開始收緊限制或像荷蘭那樣重新實施嚴格封鎖的歐洲各國政府感到不安。英國不排除採取更嚴格的措施,許多其他歐洲國家也在收緊旅行限制。
100美元的油價?
奧密克戎對經濟和燃料需求的影響,以及對石油需求復甦和價格的影響將是2022年全年的一個主要主題,特別是在前幾個月。
儘管在“正常”情況下預測油價很困難,但疫情帶來的不確定性使預測任務更加困難。目前,市場對油價的預期從明年平均每桶70美元左右,到2022年或2023年某個時候達到每桶100美元以上的高點不等。
歐佩克認為奧密克戎對石油需求的影響是“溫和而短暫的”,而國際能源署(IEA)則預計,由於該新變異毒株的出現,需求復甦將暫時放緩,但不會完全顛覆需求趨勢。
在奧密克戎變異毒株擴散初期,摩根大通曾表示,由於歐佩克增產能力有限,明年油價可能飆升至每桶125美元,2023年達到每桶150美元。
由於奧密克戎的不確定性,歐佩克可能會立即調整其石油生產政策,因此,歐佩克的行動將與疫情的發展一起,成為明年油價的重要驅動因素。
伍德麥肯茲公司(Wood Mackenzie)董事長兼首席分析師西蒙•弗勞爾斯(Simon Flowers)最近在一篇文章中討論了2022年油氣行業的主要主題,他在文章中寫道,油價不太可能升至每桶100美元,至少在明年的任何一段持續時間內都不太可能。
一些分析人士預計,北半球將迎來比往年更冷的嚴冬,這將加劇歐洲的能源危機,並耗盡該國的天然氣儲備。就今年這個時候而言,這些的天然氣儲備已經處於10年來的最低水平。這可能會推動使用天然氣以外的燃料(包括石油產品)供暖的需求,即使封鎖限制了汽油消費,也可能會推高石油需求。
能源危機何時結束?
“一個糟糕的冬天會把已經接近歷史最高水平的天然氣和電力價格推得更高,”弗勞爾斯說。
本週末的一股寒流已經將歐洲的電價推至新高,原因是法國關閉四座核反應堆後,天然氣儲存量和電力供應都很低。
天然氣價格非常不穩定,對俄羅斯額外供應的缺乏非常敏感,但隨著春天天氣變暖,天然氣價格勢必會下降。
然而,伍德麥肯茲的分析師表示,即使在2022年春季冬季結束時,亞洲和歐洲的天然氣價格仍將高於危機前的水平,天然氣市場的結構性比疫情之前更為緊張。
他們指出:“我們預計,在2021年至2025年期間,歐洲和亞洲的液化天然氣價格將穩定在當前平均價格的兩倍以上,直到2026年新的供應開始供應。”
明年及以後的天然氣市場前景面臨的一個主要風險是,天然氣是否仍會被視為一種可靠的、比煤炭更清潔的燃料,以幫助煤轉氣轉換和支援可再生能源,或者只是作為另一種化石燃料, 不應再被視為清潔能源的“橋樑燃料”。
成本上升會阻礙能源轉型嗎?
伍德麥肯茲認為,雖然大型石油公司將更多投資轉向低碳能源,但由於成本較高,已經成熟的太陽能和風能技術的產能增加速度可能會放緩,伍德麥肯茲認為清潔能源裝置中存在金屬潛在超級週期和持續激增的風險。
IEA 執行董事法提赫比羅爾本月早些時候表示,儘管大宗商品和運輸價格居高不下,但可再生能源有望在 2021 年實現創紀錄的增長。
國際能源署在其《2021年可再生能源市場報告》中預測,到2026年,全球仍需要在未來五年內增加兩倍的年生產能力,才能在2050年實現淨零排放。
伍德麥肯茲認為,不斷上升的投入成本和工資、供應鏈挑戰和物流可能“阻礙大量低碳技術的推出和發展”。
伍德麥肯茲本月早些時候表示,在未來的幾個月和幾年裡,蓬勃發展的美國太陽能產業將在巨大的機遇和重大的絆腳石之間搖擺不定,未來幾年很可能會經歷一次瘋狂的“太陽能過山車”。
美國太陽能市場第三季度安裝了5.4吉瓦的太陽能裝機容量,比2020年同期增長33%,是有記錄以來最大的第三季度。然而,成本繼續上升。
所有細分市場的安裝成本連續第二個季度上升,反映了供應鏈的挑戰。除住宅外,所有細分市場的同比價格漲幅都達到了2014年以來的最高水平,當時伍德麥肯茲開始追蹤價格資料。
不確定性似乎將成為2022年油氣市場的最大主題。
原文如下:
Uncertainty To Dominate Oil Markets In 2022
•Uncertainty has returned to oil markets at the end of the year as a new variant of Covid combines with inflation fears to threaten demand
•Predicting the price of oil is always difficult, but with an energy crisis in Europe, OPEC+ controlling production, the energy transition underway, and Covid continuing next year is particularly difficult to read
•The global energy transition is facing plenty of problems, not least of which is rising costs, and will be a key factor to watch in 2022
Following the rebound in oil and gas demand in 2021, the market is headed to 2022 with renewed uncertainties about prices, demand, and the industry’s longer-term prospects as Omicron COVID cases spike and investors continue to press companies toward decarbonization. Will oil and gas demand continue to recover and clean energy installations continue to surge next year? Or will risks lurking for some time materialize to hamper green energy rollouts and upend the rebound in global oil and gas demand?
The closer we get to the end of 2021, the more uncertain the 2022 outlook becomes, with Omicron spooking governments in Europe that have already started to tighten restrictions or re-impose strict lockdowns in the case of the Netherlands. The UK is not ruling out stricter measures, and many other European countries are tightening travel restrictions.
$100 Oil?
The Omicron impact on economies and fuel demand and the effect on oil demand recovery and prices will be a major theme throughout 2022, especially during the first few months of the year.
As difficult as it is to predict oil prices in “normal” circumstances, the uncertainties with the pandemic have made the task of forecasting even more difficult. Currently, outlooks range from oil averaging around $70 next year to hitting as high as above $100 per barrel at some point in 2022 or 2023.
OPEC sees a “mild and short-lived” Omicron impact on oil demand, while the International Energy Agency (IEA) expects a temporary slowdown in demand recovery due to the new variant, but not an entirely upended demand trend.
In the early days of the Omicron variant spreading, JP Morgan said that oil could soar to $125 per barrel next year and $150 in 2023 due to OPEC’s limited capacity to boost production.
OPEC left the door open to potential immediate adjustments in its oil production policy with the Omicron uncertainty, so the cartel’s actions would be an important driver of oil prices next year, along with the COVID developments.
Oil prices rising to $100 a barrel is unlikely, at least for any sustained period next year, Simon Flowers, Chairman, and Chief Analyst at Wood Mackenzie, wrote in a recent post discussing the key themes in oil and gas in 2022.
Some analysts expect a harsh colder-than-usual winter in the northern hemisphere to exacerbate the energy crisis in Europe and deplete its stockpiles of natural gas in storage which are already at a decade low for this time of the year. This could prop up demand for heating with fuels other than natural gas, including oil products, potentially driving up oil demand even if lockdowns limit gasoline consumption.
When Will The Energy Crisis End?
“A bad winter will push gas and power prices—already near record levels—higher still,” says WoodMac’s Flowers.
A cold snap this weekend already sent Europe’s power prices surging to new records, as gas storage levels are low and electricity availability is low too after France shut down four nuclear reactors.
Natural gas prices are highly volatile and sensitive to (the lack of) extra supply from Russia, but they are set to fall in the spring with warmer weather.
However, even at the end of the winter season in the spring of 2022, gas prices in Asia and Europe will remain higher than pre-crisis levels, with a structurally tighter gas market than before COVID, WoodMac’s analysts say.
“We expect LNG prices in Europe and Asia to settle at more than double the average for prevailing prices between 2015 and 2020 until new supply comes onstream in 2026,” they noted.
A major risk to the gas market outlook next year and beyond would be whether gas will still be perceived as a reliable, cleaner-than-coal fuel to help a coal-to-gas switch and backup for renewables or as just another fossil fuel that shouldn’t be considered the “bridge fuel” to clean energy sources anymore.
Will Rising Costs Hold Back The Energy Transition?
While Big Oil directs more investments to low-carbon energy, the pace of the capacity additions of the already mature solar and wind technology could slow because of higher costs, according to one risk Wood Mackenzie sees for a potential supercycle in metals and a continued surge in clean energy installations.
Despite the high commodity and transport prices, renewables are on track for record growth in 2021, the IEA’s Executive Director Fatih Birol said earlier this month, noting however that “if commodity prices stay high until the end of 2022, it would wipe out 5 years of cost reductions for wind power – and 3 years of reductions for solar PV.”
The world will still need double new annual capacity over the next five years to achieve the net-zero by 2050 scenario, the IEA said in its annual Renewables 2021 Market Report with a forecast to 2026.
According to WoodMac, rising input costs and wages, supply chain challenges, and logistics could “hamper the roll-out and development of a raft of low-carbon technologies.”
The booming U.S. solar industry is set to be torn between huge opportunities and major stumbling blocks in the coming months and years, and it will likely see a wild “solar coaster” ride in the next few years, Wood Mackenzie earlier this month.
The U.S. solar market installed 5.4 GWdc of solar capacity in the third quarter, up by 33 percent from the same period of 2020 and the largest Q3 on record. However, costs continued to rise.
“Installed costs increased across all market segments for the second quarter in a row, reflecting supply chain challenges. In every segment besides residential, year-over-year price increases were the highest they’ve been since 2014 when Wood Mackenzie began tracking pricing data,” last week’s Solar Market Insight Report 2021 Q4 by the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) and Wood Mackenzie showed.
It looks like uncertainty will be the single biggest theme in oil and gas markets in 2022.
來源:中國石化新聞網
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