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IEA: Oil price to rise without Mideast investment Fears over unrest may stall the $1.5 trillion annual foreign investment the sector needs to keep up with energy demands
A reluctance to invest in energy infrastructure in Middle Eastern and North African countries, partially because of unrest in the region, could drive up oil prices, an economist warned Tuesday. Fatih Birol, the chief economist for the International Energy Agency, said that US$1.5 trillion needs to be invested each year if the world is going to meet the energy demands from now until 2035. Much of that money has been forthcoming, he told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting of energy ministers and industry leaders in Paris. But there is a particular shortfall in the Middle East and North Africa, from which 90 per cent of the growth in oil production will come over the next 10 years. "If we don't find that money, then the production won't grow as much as it needs to grow, and as a result of that, one can see much higher prices than we have now today," he said. An upcoming report by the agency will look more closely at the precise impact on oil prices a shortfall investment will have. Birol said some countries were choosing not to produce as much as the market wanted, while others were unable to because of unrest. He would not name any specific countries, but protests that swept the region this year have raised concerns that oil production could be affected. There is particular interest in when Libya will return to producing the 1.6 million barrels it used to pump each day before it descended into civil war. Libyan crude is of exceptionally high quality and therefore particularly valuable. International oil companies have started to return to the country, but the situation there remains far from stable. Birol said many fields in the country haven't even been assessed yet, so it was difficult to tell when it would ramp up to prewar levels. "I would be positively surprised if we see the prewar levels reached before 2013," he said. That is roughly in line with the predictions of the country's oil chief, who recently said he thought full output would return in 14 to 15 months. The IEA, created in the wake of the 1970s oil crisis, is made up of more than two dozen mainly European, oil-importing countries. It works to coordinate responses to supply disruptions and gather research and data on the energy sector.