Mediterranean Economies 2023
DOI: 10.1401/9788815411167/c4
The fall in energy
consumption is shown in figure 3 which displays side by side the
reduction in GDP in the years hit by the pandemic, namely 2020
and 2022. The year 2020 is associated to the outbreak of the
pandemic, a shock whose magnitude has never been recorded
before. In this year, a fall of –2.6 per cent in global GDP
which corresponds to a sharp contraction in energy consumption,
about –2.7 per cent which is dictated by the reduction in the
demand side rather than supply. The year 2022 saw a recovery in
the total final consumption of energy
¶{p. 118}which recorded a growth of 0.5 per cent
despite the degrowth of global GDP (–1.6 per cent).
Whereas the
COVID-19 pandemic resulted in demand-side shocks for the energy
business, the Russian-Ukrainian conflict has hit the supply of
energy sources hard, leading to soaring inflation.
European countries
have started to reduce the procurement of fossil fuels from
Russia, making deals with non-EU countries to cover the
shortfall of primary energy resources. Figure 4 shows the trend
over time of the reliance of France, Italy and Spain on Russian
oil. The level of oil imports followed an oscillating path until
February 2022, when the Russian Federation invaded Ukraine.
Since this event,
the three European countries had to slow down the commercial
trade in energy sources with Russia, especially Spain whose oil
imports from Russia plummeted to zero by mid May 2022. Italian
import levels followed instead the opposite trend: in March 2022
oil imports started to increase until May 2022 when they
followed a slow degrowth, subsequently resuming growth in August
2022. ¶{p. 119}
3. The MENA region: fossil fuel production and reserves
The MENA region
includes countries with the highest concentration of oil and
natural gas resources worldwide. In 2020, it represented the
area with the highest percentage of oil reserves, namely 50 per
cent of the world reserve. Analysing the specific amount of
reserves held by the Middle East and North Africa, the former
possesses 46.3 per cent of total oil reserves, while the
remaining 3.4 per cent is held by North Africa, respectively
113.2 million tonnes and 8.3 million tonnes.
Expressed in a
thousand million barrels, the amount of oil reserves held by the
Middle East was 834.3 in 2017 while in 2020 it recorded an
increase of 0.19 per cent, reaching 835.9 thousand million
barrels.
Natural gas is the
second largest fossil fuel owned by MENA countries whose
reserves amount to 43.4 per cent. Splitting this percentage
respectively for the Middle East and North Africa, the Middle
East is the region which holds the highest share (40.3 per cent)
of the world’s reserves. The data show that in 2020
¶{p. 120}its natural gas reserves amounted to
75.8 trillion cubic metres, against 75.3 trillion cubic metres
in 2017. This means that the endowment of natural gas in the
Middle East has maintained its stability over time. A different
scenario applies to coal, most of whose reserves are held by the
rest of the world. The MENA region owns only 0.11 per cent, a
percentage that has decreased by 0.1 per cent since 2017.
From a production
perspective, 1,465.3 million tonnes of oil were produced in MENA
in 2021, corresponding to the 34.7 per cent of total world
production whose only the 31.2 per cent is produced in the
Middle East. The top two oil producers in the Middle East are
Saudi Arabia and Iraq, which account for 515 and 200.8 million
tonnes, respectively. In North Africa, the main producers are
Libya and Algeria, which account for 59.6 and 58.2 million
tonnes, respectively. With respect to 2017, in the MENA area,
there was a 13 per cent decline in oil production in 2020. This
signals not only the transition towards renewable energy but
also the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The economic
¶{p. 121}recovery in 2021 is signalled by the
higher production than that in 2020 (1,465.3 million tonnes vs
1,405.2 million tonnes), but which is still lower than that
recorded in 2017.
The MENA countries
are also producers of natural gas but to a lesser extent: in
2021, they accounted for only 22.2 per cent of world production.
Most of this production was from the Middle East countries (17.7
per cent of total production which corresponds to 714.9 billion
cubic metres). Unlike oil production, natural gas production has
increased over time. It increased by 12.7 per cent against 2017,
and by 6.6 per cent against 2020.
Fossil fuels
currently remain the energy source most widely used and traded,
also in a future scenario in which renewable energy is used. The
southern Mediterranean region and the Arabian peninsula to Iran
and Iraq constitute the greatest reserves of fossil fuels. They
represent the key countries in terms of trade towards European
countries also thanks to their strategic geographical position
and possession of natural deposits.¶{p. 122}
3.1. Analysis of MENA countries by oil and natural gas endowment
In this
section we will analyse the endowment of the two
fossil fuels, oil and natural gas, in MENA
countries. Inside the MENA region, six Middle
Eastern countries possess almost all the energy
resources: Iran, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iraq, UAE and
Kuwait. North African countries are those with the
lowest levels of reserves. As regards oil reserves,
Saudi Arabia has reserves that exceed those (33.66
per cent) of the other MENA countries. It is
followed by Iran and Iraq which possess 17.86 per
cent and 16.13 per cent, respectively, of MENA
reserves. Furthermore, the residual life of the
reserves in these three countries exceeds 50 years.
Reserves of countries like Iran and Kuwait can reach
peaks of 139 and 103 years of residual life.
Analysing the supply, Saudi Arabia comes first for
production and refinery capacity. Its production of
oil amounted to 519.6 million tonnes in 2020, with a
refinery capacity of 2,905 thousand barrels per day.
The second producer is Iraq which accounted for 202
million tonnes of oil. It is followed by the UAE and
Iran.
¶{p. 123}