商业/经济学

一个盆地,两种结果:英国和挪威在北海的不同结果

韦斯特伍德将 2026 年的勘探成果与政策联系起来,挪威近海的运营商发现的资源量是英国近海运营商的七倍。

Westwood Global Energy Group 的分析师在最近的一次网络研讨会上表示,英国和挪威在北海油气勘探方面采取的不同路径正在产生截然不同的结果。
Westwood Global Energy Group 的分析师在最近的一次网络研讨会上表示,英国和挪威在北海油气勘探方面采取的不同路径正在产生截然不同的结果。
图片来源:Themotioncloud/Getty Images。

英国和挪威在北海油气勘探方面采取了截然不同的路径,导致结果大相径庭。

韦斯特伍德全球能源集团的分析师在最近一次题为“堪萨斯-西海岸盆地和北海岸盆地2025年及以后:结果分歧”的网络研讨会上表示,从整体财政环境到许可证发放,两国不同的做法导致了勘探井钻探数量和已发现资源量的巨大差异。

Westwood的技术经理艾莉·哈丁表示,挪威政府支持挪威大陆架(NCS)的勘探活动,并正在努力应对该国日益严峻的石油产量下滑问题。她指出,这与成熟的英国大陆架(UKCS)形成鲜明对比,英国政府对该行业的扶持力度不足。

“尽管英国大陆架油气资源已非常成熟,但仍有新的发现,潜力巨大,但由于非地质因素的影响,这些潜力被忽视了,”她说道。“从勘探到生产的整个生命周期都缺乏投资。产量正进入一个无序下降期,而不是一个能够创造价值的有序下降期。”

她表示,如果没有投资,英国大陆架油田、枢纽和基础设施可能会提前停止运营。

“另一方面,挪威石油公司得到了政府的勘探支持,”她说道。“尽管挪威石油行业发展尚不成熟,但其产量也正面临下降趋势,政府希望各公司能够解决这个问题,并努力将产量停滞期延长至2030年以后。”

Westwood高级分析师Stephen Coomber表示,虽然英国大陆架(UKCS)在2025年完成了三口勘探井,但这些井是在2024年开钻的。他指出,2025年英国大陆架没有开钻任何勘探井,而且今年也只计划钻探三口,这与挪威大陆架(NCS)的情况形成鲜明对比,挪威大陆架当年完成了33口勘探井。他还补充说,2025年是挪威自2013年以来发现资源量第二高的一年。他表示,2026年挪威近海计划钻探41口勘探井和4口评价井。

“英国在油气勘探开发的各个方面都缺乏投资者信心,不仅仅是勘探。如果无法开发发现的油气资源,为什么要钻探勘探井呢?连接发现油气资源的配套基础设施是否到位?”他说道。

多年来,英国的财政体系几经变迁,往往受短期政策驱动,而挪威的财政体系则更为稳定。他表示,鉴于挪威的石油产量“濒临下降”,挪威政府正鼓励企业维持勘探活动并推进开发项目。

2016 年至 2025 年勘探成果
:英国共钻探 79 口勘探井,发现 24 个商业油气藏,资源量达 3.7 亿桶油当量;相比之下,挪威共钻探 279 口勘探井,发现 93 个商业油气藏,资源量达 26.2 亿桶油当量。

库姆伯表示,许多成功案例都与基础设施主导的勘探(ILX)有关,而不是与那些被归类为高影响力的勘探有关。韦斯特伍德将高影响力勘探定义为目标资源量超过 1 亿桶油当量(BOE)的勘探项目,或者位于前沿地区的勘探项目。

简而言之,他说,“英国未能取得重大发现”,而挪威发现的资源量是英国的七倍。

“在英国,如果政策改变,钻探更多油井,可能会发现什么呢?”他问道。

哈丁表示,挪威的“2025 年预定义领域 (APA)授予 
”与英国的第 33 轮授予形成了鲜明对比,后者从启动到授予历时 22 个月。

“第33轮招标是一个漫长而繁琐的过程,”她说道。“等到所有奖项最终颁发完毕时,一些公司已经对英国大陆架失去了兴趣,因为他们看不到未来。88份招标书中有12份没有被接受。”

她表示,挪威的APA计划旨在提供稳定的许可机会,2025年的APA计划向19家公司授予了57项许可

她表示,英国提议从许可证发放轮次转向过渡能源证书(TEC),这进一步加剧了英国近海勘探的复杂性。 

哈丁表示,TEC 的当前定义尚不明确,且容易产生歧义,但通常认为,只有未获得许可、包含油气发现且与已获得许可并拥有油田的区块直接相邻的区块才有资格获得 TEC,这可能会使未获得许可的区块的勘探前景被搁置。

她预计勘探许可证(TEC)会限制勘探机会。“大多数已经获得许可证的人应该已经考察过近场勘探机会了。我的意思是,20年前他们就已经这么做了。所以,如果你想找到更多资源,就必须把目光投向许可证范围之外。因此,这肯定会限制勘探机会。”她说道。

她表示,改用TEC可能导致134亿桶油当量的潜在资源和13亿桶油当量的或有资源无法开采。据估计,约有18亿桶油当量的资源位于未获许可的油田上,这些油田可能符合TEC的条件。

她补充说,这种情况的另一个复杂之处在于,那些未经许可的英国油田(可能是挪威油田的潜在延伸部分)将会发生什么。 

哈丁表示, 2026 年及以后的勘探
预计只会在英国近海开钻三口勘探井,不会开钻任何评价井。

她表示,挪威预计将在2026年开钻41口勘探井和4口评价井,并补充说,“挪威需要从英国的经验中吸取教训。”

原文链接/JPT
Business/economics

One Basin, Two Tales: UK, Norway’s Different North Sea Results

Westwood links 2026 exploration outcomes to policies, with operators offshore Norway finding seven times more resources than those offshore the UK.

UK and Norway’s diverging paths related to North Sea oil and gas exploration are generating very different outcomes, analysts from Westwood Global Energy Group said during a recent webinar.
UK and Norway’s diverging paths related to North Sea oil and gas exploration are generating very different outcomes, analysts from Westwood Global Energy Group said during a recent webinar.
Source: Themotioncloud/Getty Images.

UK and Norway’s diverging paths related to North Sea oil and gas exploration are generating very different outcomes.

From the overall fiscal environment to the offering of licenses, the two countries’ different approaches have resulted in a sharp contrast in the number of exploration wells drilled and the amount of resources discovered, analysts from Westwood Global Energy Group said during a recent webinar, “UKCS and NCS 2025 and Beyond—Same Basin, Diverging Outcomes.”

Aly Harding, technical manager at Westwood, said Norway’s government supports exploration on the Norwegian Continental Shelf (NCS), and the government is working to address the country’s approaching production decline. It contrasts, she said, with a mature UK Continental Shelf (UKCS), where there’s a lack of government support for the industry.

“Although the UKCS is very mature, there's still potential with discoveries being made, but this is being overlooked due to nongeological influences,” she said. “The investment is lacking in the entire life cycle from exploration through to production. Production rates are entering a period of unmanaged decline rather than a managed decline that would create value.”

And without investment, she said, there is a risk that UKCS fields, hubs, and infrastructure will cease early.

“Norway, on the other hand, has government support for exploration,” she said. “Although less mature, Norway is approaching production decline, and the government is looking to companies to address this and keep the production plateau out beyond 2030.”

Stephen Coomber, senior analyst at Westwood, said that while three exploration wells were completed on the UKCS in 2025, they were spudded in 2024. No exploration wells were spudded in 2025 on the UKCS, and only three are planned for this year, he said, in contrast with the NCS, where 33 exploration wells were completed. He added that 2025 marked Norway’s second-highest volume of discovered resources since 2013. In 2026, he said, 41 exploration wells and four appraisal wells are planned offshore Norway.

“The UK has been hit with a lack of investor confidence in all aspects of E&P, not just exploration. Why drill an exploration well if you'll not be able to develop a discovery? Will the infrastructure still be in place to tie back a discovery?” he said.

Over the years, the UK fiscal system has changed many times, often led by short-term policies, while Norway’s fiscal system has been more stable. With Norway’s production level “on the brink of decline,” he said, the Norwegian government is encouraging companies to sustain exploration activities and move forward with development projects.

Exploration Outcomes
From 2016 to 2025, there were 79 exploration wells drilled with 24 commercial discoveries finding 370 million BOE of resources in the UK, compared to 279 exploration wells drilled with 93 commercial discoveries finding 2.62 billion BOE of resources in Norway.

Many of the successes were related to infrastructure-led exploration (ILX) rather than those classified as high-impact, which Westwood classified as prospects targeting more than 100 million BOE of resources, or those in frontier areas, Coomber said.

In short, he said, “the UK failed to have big discoveries,” and Norway discovered seven times more resources than the UK.

“In the UK, what might be discovered if policy changed and more wells were drilled?” he asked.

Licensing Rounds 
Harding said Norway’s Awards in Predefined Areas (APA) 2025 contrast significantly with the UK’s 33rd Round, which spanned 22 months from launch to award.

“The 33rd Round was a long, drawn-out process,” she said. “By the time all awards were finally made, some companies had lost interest in the UKCS, as they no longer saw a future. Twelve of the 88 offers were not accepted.”

Norway’s APA program is intended to provide a steady cadence of licensing opportunities, and the 2025 round saw 57 licenses awarded to 19 companies, she said.

The future of exploration offshore the UK is further complicated by the country’s proposed switch from licensing rounds to Transitional Energy Certificates (TECs), she said. 

Harding said the current definition of TEC is unclear and subject to interpretation, but the assumption is that blocks are only eligible for a TEC if they are unlicensed, contain a discovery, and are directly adjacent to licensed acreage with an existing field—potentially leaving prospectivity on unlicensed acreage stranded.

She expects TECs will limit opportunity. “Most of the people who have got licenses already would've already looked at nearfield exploration opportunities. I mean, that was being done 20 years ago. So, really, you need to look further beyond the license outlines if you want to find additional resources. So, it is going to absolutely limit opportunity,” she said.

Switching to TECs could result in 13.4 billion BOE of risked prospective resources and 1.3 billion BOE of contingent resources becoming inaccessible, she said. An estimated 1.8 billion BOE exists on unlicensed acreage that could be eligible for TEC.

A further wrinkle in that scenario is what happens with unlicensed UK acreage that could be potential extensions from Norway discoveries, she added. 

Exploration 2026 and Beyond
Harding said only three exploration wells and no appraisal wells are expected to be spud offshore UK in 2026.

Norway should see 41 exploration wells and four appraisal wells spudded in 2026, she said, adding, “Norway needs to learn from what has happened in the UK.”