OEUK:供应链公司需要支持来维持石油和天然气活动

作者:
, 《油田技术》副主编


英国离岸能源公司(OEUK)警告说,政府和行业需要采取更多行动,支持供应链公司在维持石油和天然气活动方面发挥关键作用,同时帮助建设英国的低碳未来能源系统。

OEUK新的供应链报告呼吁政府提供稳定的监管和财政框架,为供应链提供可预测且有吸引力的商业环境,以继续投资于英国的能源安全。它还要求政府与行业密切合作,为决策和政策提供信息,确保供应商拥有更好的可见性和机会确定性,并提高其投资技术开发、技能和创新方式的能力,以实现净零未来。

该报告涵盖了数百家各种规模的公司,它们为运营商提供运营北海石油和天然气设施所需的一系列产品和服务,其技能有助于确保英国的能源安全。该报告发布之际,OEUK 敦促该行业与供应链发展并保持牢固的业务关系,优先领域包括公平分配合同风险和回报以及鼓励创新工作方式。

OEUK 供应链和人力总监 Katy Heidenreich 表示:

“我们的海上能源供应链是一项令人惊叹的战略性国家资产。2022 年,这些公司帮助英国石油和天然气行业为经济贡献了 280 亿英镑的总增加值 (GVA)。未来十年,该行业计划斥资超过 2000 亿英镑,为超过 20 万人提供就业机会,扩大低碳能源生产。”

世界领先的多元化能源供应链正在发展,但通过与我们的成员互动以及两项调查的反馈,我们知道他们在许多方面面临着重大阻力。我们的情绪调查显示,整个行业缺乏信心。大约五分之一的受访供应链公司表示,英国未来项目的可见性不佳正在影响他们近期和长期规划和服务活动的能力,OEUK 正在与业界合作解决这个问题。

该报告概述了英国的能源供应链如何涵盖从提供综合油田服务的全球业务主要承包商到具有专业能力的小型本地公司。许多公司正在不断发展以支持新兴能源,包括海上风电、碳捕获和储存以及氢气生产。2021年,政府认识到供应链在北海过渡协议中的关键作用,该协议旨在加速向低碳能源结构的转变,减少温室气体排放,并建立一个以英国为基础的低碳供应链全球可输出的专业知识。

新报告调查的企业支撑着离岸行业 20 万名就业人员中约 80% 的就业岗位。该供应链遍布英国各地,从设得兰群岛到南安普敦,从大雅茅斯到莫克姆湾,蒂赛德和亨伯赛德等地区正在兴起低碳能源中心。

凯蒂·海登赖希评论道:

“我们看到企业正在努力控制通货膨胀,在国家层面上,我们知道英国脱欧已经产生了影响,使得进出口货物和利用欧盟国家内的商业机会变得更加困难。最近,我们行业中的公司或各种规模的公司都受到能源利润税(EPL)增加所带来的不确定性的打击,而我们已经是英国税收最高的行业。”

OEUK 的报告包括“团结一致”调查的反馈,该调查评估了该行业如何对待其供应链。该调查根据行业供应链原则(规定了良好的采购行为)确定了该行业可以改进的领域,包括及时支付发票、买家和供应商之间公平分配风险和回报,以及对供应链主导的创新持开放态度。所有这三个问题都是 OEUK 为确保行业解决这些问题而建立的工作组的重点。

Heidenreich 女士表示:“英国供应链对于我们到 2050 年实现碳中和盆地的努力至关重要,我们的新报告强调了未来挑战的规模。行业和政府在确保这一战略性国家资产能够继续维持当前对石油和天然气能源的需求,同时建立实现本土低碳能源经济的能力方面发挥着至关重要的作用。”

“如果现在不采取行动,就意味着我们将看到投资、设备和资源被转移到海外,所以这场竞赛已经开始。” 我们必须确保共同努力,为这一挑战创建一个全行业的解决方案。我们正在加强与政府的合作,以确保英国作为制造和投资目的地具有竞争力,并加大力度帮助确保我们的供应链占据未来项目活动的至少一半。”

“增强我们的供应链将使我们能够开发工程、制造、服务和技术专业知识,以支持不断发展的低碳能源结构,并创建一个具有全球竞争力、享有国际声誉的能源供应链。现在是采取行动的时候了。”

该报告可在https://oeuk.org.uk/product/supply-chain-report-2023/获取

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-product/01022023/oeuk-supply-chain-companies-need-support-to-sustain-oil-and-gas-activity/

 

本文已被标记为以下内容:

上游新闻 石油天然气新闻


原文链接/oilfieldtechnology

OEUK: Supply chain companies need support to sustain oil and gas activity

Published by , Deputy Editor
Oilfield Technology,


Offshore Energies UK (OEUK) has warned that more action is needed from both government and industry to support supply chain companies in playing a critical role in sustaining oil and gas activity while helping to build the UK’s low-carbon future energy systems.

OEUK’s new Supply Chain report calls on government to provide a stable regulatory and fiscal framework which gives the supply chain a predictable and attractive business environment to continue investing in the UK’s energy security. It also asks government to work closely with industry to inform decision-making and policies which ensure suppliers have better visibility and certainty of opportunity and improve their ability to invest in technology development, skills and innovative ways to deliver a net zero future.

The report encompasses the hundreds of firms of all sizes providing the array of products and services operators require to run North Sea oil and gas installations and whose skills help ensure UK energy security. The report comes at a time when OEUK is urging the sector to develop and maintain strong business relationships with the supply chain with priority areas including fair allocation of contractual risk and reward and encouraging innovative ways of working.

Katy Heidenreich, OEUK’s Supply Chain and People Director said:

“Our offshore energy supply chain is an amazing and strategic national asset. In 2022, these companies helped the UK oil and gas industry contribute £28 billion gross value added (GVA) to the economy. Over the next decade, this sector plans to spend over £200 billion, providing jobs for over 200 000 people, as it expands low-carbon energy production.”

“A world-leading, diversifying energy supply chain is developing, but through engaging with our members and feedback from two surveys, we know they face major headwinds on a number of fronts. Our sentiment survey revealed there’s a lack of confidence across the sector. Around a fifth of supply chain companies surveyed said poor visibility of the future UK projects is affecting their ability to plan and service activity both in the near and longer term, a problem that OEUK is working with industry to address.”

The report outlines how the UK’s energy supply chain ranges from major contractors with a global presence delivering integrated oilfield services to small-scale local firms with specialist capabilities. Many firms are evolving to support emerging energies including offshore wind, carbon capture & storage and hydrogen production. In 2021, the government recognised the supply chain’s critical role in the North Sea Transition Deal, which aims to accelerate the shift to a low-carbon energy mix, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and build a UK-based low-carbon supply chain with globally exportable expertise.

The businesses surveyed by the new report support the jobs of around 80% of the 200 000 people employed by the offshore sector. This supply chain is spread across the UK from Shetland to Southampton and Great Yarmouth to Morecambe Bay, with low-carbon energy hubs emerging in areas including Teesside and Humberside.

Katy Heidenreich commented:

“We are seeing businesses battling to control inflation and at a national level, we know Brexit has had an impact, making it harder to import and export goods and take advantage of business opportunities within EU countries. Most recently companies or all sizes in our sector have been hit by the uncertainty created by the increase of the energy profits levy (EPL)when we were already the most highly taxed industry in the UK.”

OEUK’s report includes feedback from its Working as One survey, which assesses how the sector is treating its supply chain. Based on the industry’s Supply Chain Principles, which set out what good procurement behaviours look like, the survey pinpoints areas where the sector can improve in areas including the prompt payment of invoices, fair allocation of risk and reward between buyer and supplier, plus openness to supply-chain-led innovation. All three of these comprise the focus of work groups OEUK has established to ensure industry addresses these issues.

Ms Heidenreich said: “Our UK supply chain is critical to our efforts to deliver a carbon neutral basin by 2050 and our new report highlights the scale of the challenge ahead. Both industry and government have a vital role in ensuring this strategic national asset can continue to sustain current demand for oil and gas energy, while building the capability to deliver a home-grown low carbon energy economy.”

“Failing to act now means we will see investment, equipment and resources being diverted overseas, so the race is on. We must ensure we work together to create an industry-wide solution to this challenge. We are stepping up our work with government to make sure the UK is competitive as a destination for manufacturing and investment and sharpening efforts to help ensure our supply chain captures at least half of the project activity ahead.”

“Boosting our supply chain will enable us to develop engineering, manufacturing, services and technology expertise to support the evolving low carbon energy mix and create a globally competitive energy supply chain of international repute. The time to act is now.”

The report is available at https://oeuk.org.uk/product/supply-chain-report-2023/

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/01022023/oeuk-supply-chain-companies-need-support-to-sustain-oil-and-gas-activity/

 

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