IHS Markit 表示,常规发现量降至 70 年来的最低水平,而且不太可能出现大幅反弹

2019 年 10 月 1 日

休斯顿 - 全球商业信息提供商 IHS Markit 的最新报告显示,过去三年常规石油和天然气发现量处于七十年来的最低水平,预计不会出现大幅反弹。

发现量较低的原因是过去 10 年针对常规石油和天然气开采的野猫钻探活动大幅减少,尤其是在 2014 年油价暴跌后。该报告题为 IHS Markit 早期常规勘探结果2018 年至 2019 年:活动或结果没有反弹表明这些趋势具有深远的影响,可能会限制未来常规储备的增加。

报告称,常规油气发现量的下降不仅是由于低油价造成的,也是由于周期短的非常规项目的竞争以及对长期、高成本、前沿项目提出质疑的金融投资者造成的。这些因素反过来又使钻探远离潜在发现量可能更大的地区,并由于对长期石油需求的担忧而减少了上游勘探投资。  

“这里的主要驱动力之一是美国独立企业的投资从国际勘探转向美国的页岩机会,周期较短的项目可以更灵活地应对不断变化的市场条件,”基思·金说是 IHS Markit 的高级顾问,也是 IHS Markit E&P 趋势分析的主要作者。“如果油价下跌,这些运营商可以迅速关闭非常规项目,并停止或推迟下个月的钻探。”

除了常规钻探总体减少之外,IHS Markit 报告还指出了近年来勘探成果有限的其他原因。最能说明问题的一点是,常规油田的平均发现规模随所勘探盆地的成熟度变化很大。

处于生命周期早期(前沿阶段和新兴阶段)的盆地的平均发现规模是后期、更成熟盆地的平均发现规模的 10 倍。这些早期生命周期盆地的平均发现规模约为 2.1 亿桶,而过去 10 年发现的成熟盆地的平均规模为 2500 万桶。

IHS Markit 分析还显示,与浅水和陆上发现相比,深水和超深水区域的平均发现规模存在差异,前者平均大五倍或更多。 

尽管与这些更深的水域和前沿/新兴盆地相关的发现规模更大,但运营商在这些地区钻探的井较少。2014年,在深水和超深水中钻探了161口新油田预探井(NFW,在未经证实的油田钻探的油井);IHS Markit 表示,到 2018 年,这一数字降至 68 口井。前沿/新兴盆地的钻探也出现了类似的下降。

IHS Markit 表示,在当前规避风险的环境下,该行业更喜欢在现有基础设施附近的成熟盆地进行钻探,运营商可以在 2 至 3 年内将项目上线。

金表示,“该行业可能会继续加大对陆上和大陆架成本更低、风险更小、周期更快的项目的投资,而深水投资仍然受到限制。” “在更深的水深以及前沿和新兴盆地中,将会有一些活动频繁的区域,但总体而言,这些区域只会看到增量收益。” 

IHS Markit表示,一些较大的勘探与生产公司和一些拥有更好业绩记录的勘探与生产独立公司继续进行选择性深水勘探,但这并不能抵消行业的总体趋势。

IHS Markit 认为其他令人困惑的问题可能会继续抑制常规资源的发现。首先,全球范围内钻探的常规新油田预探井数量减少——仅在美国,自 2009 年以来就减少了 60%。其次,在发现量最大的地区钻探的井的百分比和绝对数量相对于其他地区有所下降。发现规模较小的地区。

然而,尽管传统活动面临这些重大挑战,但这些趋势总有可能逆转。

金表示,从长远来看,北美陆上非常规生产的财务回报不佳可能会促使更多运营商回归传统勘探。“离岸公司已经能够大幅降低开发更深水域资源所需的离岸设施的建设和运营成本。这种新的竞争力可能会重新点燃人们对传统勘探的兴趣,从而获得更大的发现。”

原文链接/worldoil

Conventional discoveries fall to lowest levels in 70 years, and a major rebound isn’t likely, says IHS Markit

October 01, 2019

HOUSTON - Conventional oil and gas discoveries during the past three years are at the lowest levels in seven decades and a significant rebound is not expected, according to a new report by global business information provider IHS Markit.

The low levels in discoveries come as a result of a pullback during the past 10 years in the wildcat drilling that targets conventional oil and gas plays—most drastically after oil prices collapsed in 2014. The report, entitled IHS Markit Conventional Exploration Results in Early 2018 Through 2019: No Rebound in Activity or Results says that these trends have far-reaching implications that could limit future conventional reserves additions.

The decline in conventional discoveries was not only driven by low oil prices, but by competition from short cycle-time unconventional projects, and by financial investors who question long-term, high-cost, frontier projects, the report said. These factors, in turn, shifted drilling away from areas where potential discoveries could be larger, and reduced upstream exploration investment due to concerns about long-term oil demand.  

“One of the main drivers here is the shift of investment by U.S. independents from international exploration to shale opportunities in the United States—shorter cycle-time projects—with greater flexibility to respond to changing market conditions,” said Keith King, senior advisor at IHS Markit and a lead author of the IHS Markit E&P trends analysis. “These operators can quickly turn an unconventional project off and stop or postpone drilling next month if oil prices fall.”

In addition to the overall reduction in conventional drilling, the IHS Markit report identified additional reasons for the modest exploration results in recent years. One of the most telling is that the average discovery size of conventional fields varies greatly with the maturity of the basins being explored.

Basins that are early in their life cycle—the frontier and emerging phases—have average discovery sizes 10 times greater than average discovery sizes made in the later, more mature basins. The average discovery size of these early life-cycle basins is approximately 210 million barrels versus 25 million barrels from mature basins discovered during the last 10 years.

The IHS Markit analysis also showed differences between average discovery sizes in deep- and ultra-deep-water areas compared to shallow water and onshore discoveries—the former being five or more times greater on average. 

Despite the larger discovery size associated with these deeper water and frontier/emerging basins, operators are drilling fewer wells in these areas. In 2014, 161 new field wildcats (NFW, exploratory oil wells drilled in unproven fields) were drilled in deep and ultra-deep water; by 2018 that number dropped to 68 wells, IHS Markit said. Drilling in frontier/emerging-phase basins declined by a similar amount.

In the current risk-averse environment, the industry prefers drilling in mature basins, near existing infrastructure, where operators can bring a project online in 2 to 3 years, IHS Markit said.

“The industry will likely continue to invest more in less costly, less risky, quicker cycle time projects in the onshore and shelf, with deep-water investment remaining constrained,” King said. “There will be areas of intense activity in the deeper water depths and in frontier and emerging-phase basins as well, but overall, these areas will only see incremental gains.” 

IHS Markit said some of the larger E&P companies and a few E&P independents with better track records continue to pursue selective deep-water exploration, but this does not offset the industry trend in the aggregate.

IHS Markit sees other confounding issues that could continue to suppress the discovery of conventional resources. First, there are fewer conventional new field wildcat wells being drilled globally—in the U.S. alone, they have declined by 60% since 2009. Second, the percentage and absolute number of these wells drilled in areas with the largest discoveries has declined relative to areas with smaller discovery sizes.

However, despite these significant challenges for conventional activity, there is always some chance that these trends could be reversed.

Lackluster financial returns from unconventional production onshore in North America may drive more operators back to conventional exploration in the longer-term,” King said. “Offshore companies have been able to substantially reduce the costs of building and operating offshore facilities necessary to develop resources in deeper waters. This renewed competitiveness could rekindle interest in conventional exploration where larger discoveries are made.”