政府、石油和天然气参与者可以和平相处吗?

乌克兰战争开始时政府为稳定石油和天然气市场而采取的措施并没有缓解该行业的不信任。

乌克兰战争开始时政府为稳定石油和天然气市场而采取的措施并没有缓解该行业的不信任。(来源:Shutterstock) 

休斯顿政府采取积极干预措施控制石油和天然气价格——谁赞成?

考虑到有关监管的讨论的基调,参加标准普尔全球 CERAWeek 的大多数人可能会给出本能的负面反应。但如果问题更加微妙:多个政府联手限制俄罗斯石油和天然气销售收入,并在乌克兰战争后保持低价,市场是否会变得更好?

这是标准普尔全球商品洞察 (S&P Global Commodity Insights) 的卡洛斯·帕斯夸尔 (Carlos Pascual) 提出的问题,他是标准普尔全球在 CERAWeek 举办的关于政府作用日益增强的会议的主持人。观众席上很少有人举手。

小组成员没有表现出任何惊讶,但也没有退缩。

事实上,CERAWeek 政府会议上对政府政策的不信任是如此强烈,以至于石油和天然气行业代表不愿表示他们赞成为稳定全球市场而采取的行动,即使他们从这些行动中受益。今年 CERAWeek 期间,这种情绪在整个希尔顿美洲酒店中回响。

“它”总是很难与反事实进行比较。“如果没有这个,世界会发生什么?”未来资源公司总裁兼首席执行官、环境保护局前局长理查德·纽厄尔 (Richard G. Newell) 说。

古根海姆证券高级董事总经理迈克尔·拉莫特补充道,石油市场以准时方式运行。该系统没有太多灵活性,因此摩擦会导致价格大幅波动。 

“市场不能很好地处理外部因素,因此对乌克兰的入侵令人震惊,”拉莫特说。“但我认为政策反应有助于缓解欧洲的压力。”

政府干预有两个方面的帮助:尤其是减少石油市场的不确定性;并为市场和市场参与者提供有关如何继续交易和交易的指导,以便系统能够在特定情况下以尽可能少的摩擦运行。 

迈克尔·拉莫特
 迈克尔·拉莫特,古根海姆证券

拉莫特说:“入侵之后,随着原油价格的上涨,我认为市场的集体结论是,我们将采取禁令,很可能类似于伊朗原油的禁令。” “这种俄罗斯石油将退出市场。随着新冠疫情后经济复苏,人们对供需失衡的担忧加剧,引发了美国战略石油储备(SPR)的释放和其他建设性的政策反应,以降低价格。再次向那些负有责任的人致敬。”

“程序上不可能”

但拉莫特也指出,许多政府法规阻碍了能源行业。

“社会要求我们以更清洁、更可持续的方式完成这一转变,”康菲石油公司董事长兼首席执行官瑞安·兰斯在标准普尔全球会议 CERAWeek 的全体会议上表示。随着 IRA [通货膨胀减少法案] 的出现,现在在经济和技术上都变得更加可行。这在程序上仍然是不可能的。”

标准普尔全球副主席兼会议主持人丹尼尔·耶金冷冷地阻止了他,并要求他再说一遍。所以,兰斯做到了。

“我们国家在程序上仍然不可能这样做,因为我们的许可不允许我们建造这些东西,”他说。“这不仅仅是我们在阿拉斯加的 [Willow] 项目,它是全面的。”


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石油、天然气行业顶级首席执行官:规则不断变化时,要打持久战


杰克·福斯科
“美国没有建设的基础设施数量存在巨大空白。”——Cheniere Energy 的ack Fusco

并越过边境。在一次关于天然气未来的会议上,安桥公司董事长兼首席执行官格雷格·埃贝尔 (Greg Ebel) 对他所说的“最后的十年”期间加拿大西部的一系列项目失败表示遗憾。

在政府争吵中被废弃的包括:

“我们需要的不是失去一个十年,而是在能源政策、允许所有这些事情方面保持一致的十年,这是一个巨大的变化,对吧?”埃贝尔说。

缺乏一致性会导致投资下降,代价高昂。

Cheniere Energy 总裁兼首席执行官杰克·福斯科 (Jack Fusco) 在天然气会议上表示:“美国未兴建的基础设施数量存在巨大缺口。”他补充说,2022 年是美国基础设施建设的最低水平。自1993年以来对天然气管道的投资。

“你必须改变这一点。”

不信任比比皆是

尽管对拜登政府对石油和天然气的态度提出了种种抱怨,但参议员乔·曼钦(DW.Va.)提出的许可改革法案引起了两党的强烈反对,尽管它会带来好处提供给化石燃料和能源转型。“ 
  
开发商如何在墨西哥湾沿岸建造一座生产绿色氢的工厂?”兰斯问道。首先,获得许可证。 

“看看这个工业园区的规模、规模和范围,”兰斯说。“它”是巨大的。这是另一家炼油厂。这是另一个石化厂规模的设施。我们真的能在美国获得许可吗?”

在当前的政治环境下,可能不会。 

伊丽莎白·罗森伯格
“这永远不会只是一个禁止所有服务提供的事情。” 每个人都一起行动。”——伊丽莎白·罗森伯格,美国财政部

对于负责恐怖主义融资和金融犯罪的助理财政部长伊丽莎白·罗森伯格来说,问题在于人们不了解如果各国没有迅速而有力地针对俄罗斯采取行动,可能会发生什么,而且实际上很可能会发生什么。专家小组成员一致认为,战争释放的不确定性将导致全球股市和大宗商品市场发生巨大动荡。   

罗森伯格说,人们也没有意识到所需合作的广度。没有一个国家单独行动。

“欧盟、英国、美国、新加坡、韩国、澳大利亚、瑞士、挪威等之间进行了巨大的协调,”她说。“这永远不会只是一个禁止所有服务提供的事情。” 大家一起搬家。”

但在全球联盟中建立的信任并不意味着对国内政策的信任,特别是当人们感觉政府正在为行业的成功设置障碍时。

“我们有大量的[天然气]产品,特别是在北美,”埃贝尔说。“我们知道全世界都渴望它,而这里可能是实际生产这些产品的最环保、最自由的地方。但如果你无法真正将其出口到潮水,或者你无法将其推向北美市场,那么它似乎对我们的能源转型之旅没有多大影响。” � 

原文链接/hartenergy

Can Governments, Oil and Gas Players, Be Permitted to Get Along?

Governmental measures at the start of the Ukraine war to stabilize oil and gas markets did not ease distrust from the industry.

Governmental measures at the start of the Ukraine war to stabilize oil and gas markets did not ease distrust from the industry. (Source: Shutterstock) 

HOUSTON—Massive government intervention to control the price of oil and gas … who’s in favor?

A majority of the crowd gathered for CERAWeek by S&P Global would likely give a visceral negative response, given the tenor of discussions concerning regulations. But what if the question was more nuanced: Are markets better off as a result of multiple governments joining to limit Russian revenues from oil and gas sales, as well as keeping prices low in the wake of the Ukraine war?

That was asked by Carlos Pascual of S&P Global Commodity Insights, moderator of a session on the growing role of government at CERAWeek by S&P Global. Few hands went up in the audience.

Panelists showed little surprise, but neither did they back down.

Indeed, the distrust of government policies was so intense at the CERAWeek government session that oil and gas industry representatives were loath to say they approved of actions taken to stabilize global markets, even if they benefited from those actions. It was a sentiment that echoed throughout the Hilton-Americas during CERAWeek this year.

“It’s always hard to compare to the counterfactual. What would have happened in the world if not for this?” said Richard G. Newell, president and CEO of Resources for the Future and a past administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.

The oil market operates in a just-in-time manner, added Michael LaMotte, senior managing director of Guggenheim Securities. There’s not a lot of flexibility in the system, so friction causes significant price volatility. 

“Markets don’t deal with externalities particularly well, so the invasion of Ukraine was a shock,” LaMotte said. “But I think the policy response helped relieve Europe.”

Two aspects of government intervention helped: reduction of uncertainty in the oil markets, in particular; and giving the market and market participants guidance on how to continue to trade and transact so the system can work with as little friction as possible, given the circumstances. 

Michael LaMotte
 Michael LaMotte, Guggenheim Securities

“Immediately after the invasion, with the runup in crude prices, I think the markets’ certain collective conclusion was, we’re headed towards a ban, most likely similar to that with Iranian crude,” LaMotte said. “This Russian oil would just be off the market. And with economies recovering post-COVID, there was a lot of concern about the supply-and-demand imbalance, which triggered the release of the SPR (U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve) and other constructive policy responses in terms of bringing the price down. Again, my hat’s off to those responsible.”

‘Procedurally impossible’

But LaMotte also noted that many government regulations hinder the energy industry.

“Society’s demanding us to go through this transition and do it in a cleaner and more sustainable way,” ConocoPhillips Chairman and CEO Ryan Lance said during a plenary session at the CERAWeek by S&P Global conference. “It’s now become economically and technically a little bit more feasible with the advent of the IRA [Inflation Reduction Act]. It is still procedurally impossible.”

Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of S&P Global and moderator of the session, stopped him cold and asked him to repeat. So, Lance did.

“It is still procedurally impossible for our country to go do this because our permitting doesn’t allow us to build these things,” he said. “It is not just our [Willow] project in Alaska, it is across the board.”


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Jack Fusco
“There is a big void in the amount of infrastructure that’s not being built here in America.” —Jack Fusco, Cheniere Energy

And across the border. During a session on the future of natural gas, Greg Ebel, chairman and CEO of Enbridge, lamented the slew of failed western Canadian projects during what he has termed the “lost decade.”

Among those scrapped in governmental squabbles:

“Instead of a lost decade … we need a decade of consistency with respect to energy policy, permitting, all those things, and that’s a huge change, right?” Ebel said.

The lack of consistency is costly in terms of a drop-off in investment.

“There is a big void in the amount of infrastructure that’s not being built here in America,” said Jack Fusco, president and CEO of Cheniere Energy, during the natural gas session, who added that 2022 represented the lowest level of investment in natural gas pipelines since 1993.

“We’ve got to change that.”

Distrust abounds

For all of the complaints about the Biden administration’s approach to oil and gas, the permitting reform bill proposed by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) generated considerable opposition from both sides of the aisle—despite the benefits it would have provided to fossil fuels and the energy transition. 
  
“How would a developer build a plant to produce green hydrogen on the Gulf Coast?” Lance asked. First, secure the permits. 

“Look at the size, scale, scope of that industrial complex,” Lance said. “It’s huge. It’s another refinery. It’s another petrochemical plant-sized facility. Can we actually get that permitting in the United States?”

In the current political environment, probably not. 

Elizabeth Rosenberg
“It was never going to be just one—EU—that was banning all service provisions. Everyone moved together.” — Elizabeth Rosenberg, U.S. Treasury Department

To Elizabeth Rosenberg, assistant treasury secretary for terrorist financing and financial crimes, it’s a matter of people not understanding what could have, and indeed was likely to have happened if nations had not acted swiftly and forcefully against Russia. The uncertainty unleashed by the war would have resulted in enormous upheaval for global equity markets as well as commodity markets, the expert panelists agreed.   

People also don’t realize the breadth of cooperation required, Rosenberg said. No single country acted on its own.

“There’s been tremendous coordination between the EU, the U.K., the United States, Singapore, South Korea, Australia, Switzerland, Norway, etc., etc.,” she said. “It was never going to be just one—EU—that was banning all service provisions. Everyone moved together.”

But trust built in a global alliance does not translate to trust in domestic policies, particularly when there is a feeling that government is erecting hurdles to an industry’s success.

“We’ve got plenty of [natural gas] product, particularly here in North America,” Ebel said. “We know the world is hungry for it, and this is probably the greenest and freest place to actually produce those products. But if you can’t actually get it to tidewater in the case of exports, or you can’t get it to the market here in North America, it doesn’t seem to make a lot of difference on our energy transition journey.”