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Oil prices: Expect a 'few years of pain' after 2022, analyst says

Although crude oil prices plunged on Friday, energy costs in the coming years could be a different story, an oil analyst says.

“I think the energy transition is going to be moving into another quarter,” Tom Kloza, Global Head of Energy Analysis told Yahoo Finance Live (video above). “That is going to herald really the next few years of pain.”

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has kept oil and other energy costs at historically elevated levels as Europe is forced to dislodge its dependency on Russian natural gas.

After Russian President Vladimir Putin called for a partial military mobilization earlier this week, Kloza noted that Russia cutting off the flow of crude oil and refined products is "still very, very much a threat."

Oil prices hit an eight-month low on Friday as West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) crude futures fell 6% to $78/barrel while Brent (BZ=F) futures dropped 5% to hover just above $85/barrel.

U.S gasoline prices, meanwhile, have been mostly on a steady downward trend since reaching a record in mid-June.

“We’ve survived a gasoline scare when we were at $5.0165 on June 14th,” Kloza said, adding that he doesn't see a big move higher for the rest of 2022.

In 2023, however, “we will see what I call ‘petronoia’ — the fear that there will not be enough petroleum molecules to go around, particularly in the gasoline season,” the analyst explained. “It will manifest itself, and then maybe we'll have another move.”

He added that he doesn't think that gasoline prices in 2023 are "going to be much more expensive than what we saw in the summer of 2022. But I do believe that the bias is toward higher prices for energy as opposed to lower.”

Furthermore, the current demand for certain U.S refined products has been high and a harsh winter could impact supplies.

“Diesel and heating oil and jet fuel — those are the products to watch,” Kloza said.

FILE - The sun sets behind an idle pump jack near Karnes City, USA, April 8, 2020. Oil prices are sagging amid fears of recessions across the globe. OPEC and allied countries are weighing what to do about that when they meet online Thursday, Sept. 8, 2022. High oil prices were a bonanza for countries like Saudi Arabia over the summer, but now they're well off those highs. Saudi Arabia's oil minister has even said the group known as OPEC+ could cut production at any time. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
The sun sets behind an idle pump jack near Karnes City, USA, April 8, 2020. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

Ines Ferre is a markets reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter at @ines_ferre.

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