埃克森美孚将退出赤道几内亚,以应对更广泛的非洲原油淘汰

埃克森美孚在欧佩克成员国赤道几内亚的石油产量八年前达到超过30万桶/天的峰值,此后一直在下降。

萨布丽娜·瓦莱,路透社

两位知情人士告诉路透社,埃克森美孚公司将在 2026 年许可证到期后减少赤道几内亚的石油生产并离开这个西非国家。

此次退出反映出主要石油生产国采取更广泛的举措,减少西非的原油产量,并将投资转向非洲大陆的低碳天然气开发以及美洲更有利可图的项目。

“这是一个高成本地区,碳排放也是一个问题,”能源咨询公司伍德麦肯兹撒哈拉以南非洲地区研究总监盖尔·安德森说。

11 月 28 日,一位不愿透露姓名的消息人士表示,埃克森美孚已通过现有生产装置 Serpentina 将其在该国的石油产量削减至不足 15,000 桶/天。今年,由于老化的船舶进水,该公司从海上生产平台 Zafiro 疏散了工作人员。

今年对俄罗斯实施制裁后,欧洲一直在寻找替代石油供应商,是赤道几内亚石油出口的主要目的地。

老化油田

埃克森美孚在欧佩克成员国赤道几内亚的石油产量八年前达到超过30万桶/天的峰值,此后一直在下降。自 2020 年以来,埃克森美孚一直试图出售其 Zafiro 业务。该公司去年在赤道几内亚的日产量约为 45,000 桶,而该国的总产量为 93,000 桶/日。

由于缺乏对原油生产的投资,非洲正在努力满足欧佩克的配额。其两大生产国——PEC成员安哥拉和尼日利亚的产量从2019年的320万桶/日下降了三分之一,至10月份的210万桶/日。自2013年以来,产量已下降了41%。

德勤咨询公司的一项研究发现,该地区石油现金流的份额也在下降。对于中东和非洲石油生产商来说,过去两年现金占全球流量的比例已从 2010 年至 2020 年的 50% 减少至 30%。

由于石油盗窃现象猖獗,外国石油生产商雪佛龙公司、壳牌公司和埃克森美孚已从尼日利亚撤出,将其资产主要出售给当地公司。

尼日利亚的产量处于 32 年来的最低水平,今年该国的产量已落后于安哥拉,成为非洲最大的出口国。TotalEnergies SE 今年早些时候也退出了安哥拉。

转移到美洲

欧佩克估计,随着西非原油产量萎缩,明年美洲产量预计将增至 2800 万桶/日,比疫情前水平增加 230 万桶/日。其中大部分增长来自美国、加拿大、圭亚那和巴西,埃克森美孚在这些国家增加了石油产量支出。

一位知情人士表示,埃克森美孚已决定退役 Zafiro 并拖走该平台,可能是在下个月。该人士表示,Zafiro 未来的收入将无法支付维修费用。

其中一位知情人士表示,埃克森美孚可以通过增加名为 Jade 的第三个平台来恢复 Zafiro 的部分产量,产量达到约 25,000-30,000 桶/天,尚待政府和公司批准。

纳米比亚和天然气

虽然西非原油产量下降,但非洲大陆的液化天然气未来正在上升,非洲其他地方的化石燃料产量可能会增长。随着欧洲寻求取代受到制裁的俄罗斯的供应,主要生产商正在投资天然气和液化天然气。

德勤表示,到本十年末,全球需求的增长可能导致非洲天然气产量增加 30%。

莫桑比克本月早些时候出口了第一批液化天然气货物,该财团由意大利石油公司埃尼公司和埃克森美孚牵头,价值80亿美元的Coral South浮式液化天然气财团。雪佛龙去年从其在赤道几内亚运营的阿伦天然气项目出口了第一批液化天然气货物。

麦肯锡咨询公司的一项研究发现,利比亚和阿尔及利亚的石油生产成本较低,如果采取措施减少当前运营中的碳排放,它们可以继续吸引投资。

伍德麦肯兹的安德森表示,纳米比亚已发现有前景的石油和天然气储量,预计将于明年上半年钻探评估井。

她说:“这可能是下一个圭亚那。”她指的是这个南非国家,该国在过去十年中拥有世界上最大的石油发现。“这些信号非常积极。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Exxon Mobil to Exit Equatorial Guinea Amid Wider Africa Crude Phaseout

Exxon Mobil’s oil output in Equatorial Guinea, a member of OPEC, peaked at more than 300,000 bbl/d eight years ago and has been declining since.

Sabrina Valle, Reuters

Exxon Mobil Corp. will wind down oil production in Equatorial Guinea and leave the West African country after its license expires in 2026, two sources close to the matter told Reuters.

The departure reflects a wider move by major oil producers to reduce crude production in West Africa and shift investments to lower-carbon natural gas development on the continent, and to more lucrative projects in the Americas.

“It is a high-cost region where carbon emissions are a problem as well,” said Gail Anderson, research director for Sub-Saharan Africa at energy consultants Wood Mackenzie.

Exxon Mobil has cut its output in the country to less than 15,000 bbl/d of oil through existing production unit Serpentina, one of the sources said on Nov. 28 on condition of anonymity to discuss nonpublic information. It evacuated staff from the offshore production platform Zafiro this year due to water entering the aging vessel.

Europe, which has been looking for alternative oil suppliers after sanctions were imposed against Russia this year, is the main destination for Equatorial Guinea’s oil exports.

Aging Oil Fields

Exxon Mobil’s oil output in Equatorial Guinea, a member of OPEC, peaked at more than 300,000 bbl/d eight years ago and has been declining since. Exxon Mobil has been trying to sell its Zafiro operation since 2020. The company last year pumped about 45,000 bbl/d in Equatorial Guinea, out of the country’s total production of 93,000 bbl/d.

Africa is struggling to meet OPEC quotas due to the lack of investments in crude production. Output from its top two producers—OPEC-members Angola and Nigeria—sank by a third to 2.1 million bbl/d in October from 3.2 million bbl/d in 2019. Since 2013, it has declined 41%.

The region's share of oil cash flows also is falling, a study by consultancy Deloitte found. For Middle East and African oil producers, cash has dwindled to 30% of global flows in the last two years, from 50% between 2010 and 2020.

Foreign oil producers Chevron Corp., Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil have retreated from Nigeria due to rampant levels of oil theft, selling their assets mostly to local companies.

Nigeria’s output is at a 32-year low and the country this year slipped behind Angola as Africa’s largest exporter. TotalEnergies SE also exited Angola earlier this year.

Shift to Americas

As crude output in West Africa shrinks, production in the Americas is expected to grow to 28 million bbl/d next year, up 2.3 million bbl/d from pre-pandemic levels, OPEC estimates show. Much of the increase comes from the U.S., Canada, Guyana and Brazil, some of the places where Exxon Mobil has increased spending on oil output.

Exxon Mobil has decided to decommission Zafiro and tow the platform away, possibly next month, one of the people said. Future revenue from Zafiro would not have covered the cost of repairs, the person said.

Exxon Mobil could recover some of Zafiro's production and reach about 25,000-30,000 bbl/d by adding a third platform called Jade, pending government and company approvals, one of the people said.

Namibia and Natural Gas

While crude oil production wanes in West Africa, the continent’s LNG future is on the rise and fossil fuel output could grow elsewhere in Africa. Major producers are investing in gas and LNG as Europe looks to replace supply from sanction-blocked Russia.

Rising demand globally could result in a 30% rise in gas production in Africa by the end of the decade, Deloitte said.

Mozambique exported its first LNG cargo earlier this month from the $8 billion Coral South floating LNG consortium led by Italian oil firm Eni SpA and Exxon Mobil. Chevron last year exported the first LNG cargo from the Alen gas project it operates in Equatorial Guinea.

Libya and Algeria produce oil at lower cost levels and could keep attracting investments if they take measures to reduce carbon emissions from current operations, a study by McKinsey and Company consultancy found.

Promising reserves of oil and gas have been discovered in Namibia, with appraisal wells expected to be drilled in the first half of next year, Wood Mackenzie’s Anderson said.

“It could be the next Guyana,” she said, referring to the South African nation that is home to the world's largest oil discovery in the past decade. “The signals are very positive.”