Severe hurricane season means gas prices could hit US$3.50 per gallon in the U.S. or C$1.30 per litre in Canada this summer, ac
24 Mayo 2006 - 6:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
- Oil prices expected to hit new record highs later this year -
TORONTO, May 24 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Gas prices could hit
US$3.50 per gallon or C$1.30 per litre this summer, according to a
CIBC World Markets report issued today, entitled Drilling in
Troubled Waters. Another severe hurricane season in the Gulf of
Mexico this year, as forecast by the U.S. Weather Service, will
likely severely hamper oil production in the Gulf and drive crude
prices to record highs. "Echoing 2005, stormy weather is likely to
mean further pain for motorists at the gas pumps during the coming
driving season," notes Jeff Rubin, Chief Economist and Chief
Strategist, CIBC World Markets. "The resulting drag on disposable
income is expected to contribute to slower performance from the
economy in the second half of the year." At today's retail prices,
crude oil costs account for about 60 per cent of the retail price
of a gallon of gasoline, up from just 47 per cent two years ago.
With crude oil prices forecasted to increase by 10 per cent through
the fall, combined with decreased production capacity and already
lower than average inventories, the average nationwide retail price
of gasoline is expected to increase to US$3.50 a gallon in the U.S.
and C$1.30 per litre in Canada. "With the potential loss of as much
as 750,000 barrels per day of production from storms this season,
we will see West Texas Intermediate (WTI) easily top its recent
peak," adds Mr. Rubin. "We expect WTI to average US$78 per barrel
by the fourth quarter of 2006." Last year, hurricanes adversely
hampered oil production in two ways. First, they led to huge
production setbacks for new fields and construction delays for
newly planned projects. Second, existing production was shut down,
as was much of the industry's service infrastructure along the Gulf
coast. Domestic oil production in the U.S. will likely continue to
struggle, as sea temperature anomalies are expected to lead to a
severe 2006 hurricane season. The steady warming of sea surface
temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico since the 1970s is highly
correlated with an over-doubling in the storm intensity of
hurricanes over that period. Ahead of the June 1 start of hurricane
season, temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico and tropical Atlantic
are again well above normal, heightening the risk of production
outages. The report predicts that U.S. production will decline from
about the current level of 7.3 million barrels per day to about 6.0
million barrels per day by 2010. While U.S. dependency on foreign
oil is expected to grow, Canada is alone among its current
suppliers as a country in a position to significantly increase oil
exports to the U.S. marketplace, largely as a result of Canadian
oil sands production. The complete CIBC World Markets report,
Drilling in Troubled Waters, is available at
http://research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/download/occ_rep_58.pdf.
CIBC World Markets is the wholesale banking arm of CIBC, providing
a range of integrated credit and capital markets products,
investment banking, and merchant banking to clients in key
financial markets in North America and around the world. We deliver
innovative full capital solutions to growth-oriented companies and
are active in all capital markets. We offer advisory expertise
across a wide range of industries and provide top-ranked research
for our corporate, government and institutional investor clients.
DATASOURCE: CIBC World Markets CONTACT: Jeff Rubin, Chief Economist
and Chief Strategist, Managing Director, CIBC World Markets, (416)
594-7357, or Susan McDougall, CIBC Communications and Public
Affairs, (416) 980-4047,
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