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The U.S. will not drown the world in oil, forecaster says

After a bump in the fall, oil prices have been stuck around the $50 US mark for months. When will that change?

Expected OPEC cuts 'should create enough momentum to get inventories drawn down,' Martin King tells oil execs

Oil prices will rise in the second half of 2018, according to energy forecaster Martin King, of GMP FirstEnergy (Kyle Bakx/CBC)

The price of oil has been in the doldrums for months now, as OPEC cartel members cut supply and U.S. producers increase it.

But a Calgary energy forecaster told an audience of oil executives Tuesday to keep the faith, that the United States will not drown the world in oil and prices will eventually respond to the cuts in production and increases in demand.

"It is fundamentally impossible for the U.S. to offset all the supply cuts from OPEC, the supply cuts from participating non-OPECcountriesand deal with demand growth," Martin King, director ofinstitutional research at GMP FirstEnergy, saidat the Petroleum Club in Calgary.

As a result, King expects the price of oil will rise in the second half of 2017, to $60 US, and average $65in 2018.

That would not be enough to spark much oilsands growth, but sufficient to keep most surviving producers in the black.

How much can the U.S. produce?

Energy traders have beenfocused on the U.S. inventory numbers released every Wednesday. Inventory levels are still high in the United States, although King pointed out that they are starting to drop in other parts of the world, such as in China and Saudi Arabia.As well, floating storage held in tankers on the seas is in retreat.

The question is how far the U.S. will increase its production.

King expects U.S. shale producers to increase their production by twomillion barrels perdaybythe end of 2019. That wouldsmash the country's previous production record, set in 1970, of 9.6 million barrels per day.

But even that, he said,is not quite enough, so long as production cuts remain in place from OPEC and non-OPEC members like Russia.

"We do expect OPEC cuts to be extended in the second half of this year," said King. "Andthat should create enough momentumto get inventories drawn down. That's the math people go through the U.S. supplies cannot offset that."

Canada'splace

As always, Canada is not a player in the oil price market, as it simply doesn't produceenough to have an impact.

Canada's suppliesare still rising modestly, tied to oilsands projects approved before the price crash of 2014. A bigger boost in prices wouldbe needed for Canadian production to pick up steam.

"To get more investment, you need to see higher prices, something more sustainableinto the upper 60s and 70s," said King.