中东和北非地区的最新动态


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中东和北非——世界上最大的石油和天然气持有地区

能源被认为是任何经济发展最关键的因素。几十年来,中东和北非地区在全球能源生态系统中发挥着重要作用,支持了世界多个国家的工业化和经济增长。中东和北非(MENA)地区拥有世界已探明石油储量的约57%和天然气资源的约41%。该地区的地质格架有利于大量油气储量的产生和积累。

该地区拥有一些世界上最大的常规陆上和海上油气田。该地区最著名的油田包括沙特阿拉伯的加瓦尔油田和萨法尼亚油田、科威特的布尔干油田、伊拉克的鲁迈拉油田以及伊朗和卡塔尔共同拥有的南帕尔斯/北穹顶气田。北非石油和天然气格局主要围绕三个生产国:阿尔及利亚、利比亚和埃及。


图1:2020年全球探明油气储量分布。资料来源:BP世界能源统计年鉴,2021年。

世界上所有常规盆地都含有大量页岩。据估计,中东和北非地区页岩气储量为 2547英尺。沙特阿拉伯、阿联酋、巴林、阿曼等一些中东国家正在该地区开发页岩油气田,如卡赞、南加瓦尔、贾弗拉、鲁卜哈利等。

该地区的石油和天然气行业受到国家石油公司 (NOC) 的严格监管和控制

能源和资源部门是中东和北非国家经济增长和发展的基石。由于石油和天然气相关活动是政府的主要收入来源,因此它是一个受到严格监管的部门。国家石油公司(NOC)负责发展各自国家的石油和天然气行业。该地区一些著名的国家石油公司包括沙特阿美公司、伊朗国家石油公司、伊拉克国家石油公司、科威特石油公司、卡塔尔能源公司、阿尔及利亚国家石油公司、阿曼OQ、利比亚国家石油公司和阿布扎比国家石油公司。


图 2:该地区著名的国家石油公司。

国家石油公司与英国石油公司、雪佛龙公司、壳牌公司、埃克森美孚公司等国际石油公司建立战略合作伙伴关系,共同开发该地区的油气田。国际石油公司可以获得该国的石油和天然气储备,而国家石油公司则受益于国际石油公司的技术实力和财务能力。

价值链中的另一个重要利益相关者是油田服务(OFS)提供商。这些公司提供必要的产品和服务来勘探和开发油井以及从这些油井进一步生产石油和天然气。该地区著名的国际 OFS 公司有斯伦贝谢、贝克休斯、哈里伯顿、威德福等。在与中东国家石油公司开展业务时,供应商和服务提供商需要证明遵守阿美公司引入的国内增值要求(IKTVA)、ADNOC(ICV)和阿曼石油和天然气部(ICV),科威特和其他生产国可能会效仿。


图 3:中东和北非国家石油公司的收入(十亿美元)。资料来源:各公司的年报。

几十年来,中东和北非地区一直是世界能源生态系统的支柱

中东和北非的石油和天然气生产商一直是全球能源体系的支柱。从历史上看,该地区的石油供应量约占世界总供应量的37%,天然气供应量约占世界总供应量的35%。

目前中东和北非地区的原油产量约为每日 3040 万桶,约占全球石油总产量的 31%。天然气产量约9250亿立方米 <sup=""> 约占全球天然气生产总量的 23%。 <>

目前,该地区约占全球石油出口量的50%和天然气出口量的15%。该地区的主要石油生产国包括沙特阿拉伯、伊拉克、阿联酋、科威特和伊朗。中东和北非地区的天然气生产主要由伊朗、卡塔尔、沙特阿拉伯、阿尔及利亚、埃及和阿联酋主导。


图 4:2021 年中东和北非主要生产国的石油产量(百万桶/日)。资料来源:国际 - 美国能源信息署 (EIA)。



图 5:2021 年中东和北非主要生产国的天然气产量,十亿立方英尺3资料来源:环境影响评估。

中东和北非地区上游行业前景强劲——石油公司正在投资扩大产能

中东和北非五年(2022年至2026年)能源投资组合总投资额为8790亿美元,比2021年至2025年的投资预测增长9%。在所有正在实施的项目中,大约30%处于执行阶段,其余70%处于规划阶段。项目支出的增加由海湾合作委员会带头,已承诺的项目占海湾国家能源投资总额的45%以上。

该地区的国家石油公司已承诺对上游行业进行投资,以在未来几年增加该国的石油和天然气产量:

中东油气行业格局一直是全球能源动态的焦点。该行业最近经历了重大挑战和变化,因此,该地区未来的投资承诺变得更加多样化,重点是液化天然气、更复杂的海上项目、可再生能源和脱碳。这一趋势与大多数全球经济体的能源转型计划一致。

对能源安全和低碳投资的日益关注可能对该地区上游行业的增长构成威胁

持续的俄罗斯和乌克兰紧张局势深刻影响了欧洲能源供应市场。欧盟委员会宣布计划通过广泛采用可再生能源和天然气供应多元化,使非洲大陆摆脱俄罗斯化石燃料的依赖。Frost & Sullivan 确定了未来几年将塑造全球能源格局的五种趋势:

  1. 能源安全将是大多数国家的首要任务。
  2. 可再生能源的采用将不再是出于选择,而是出于必要。
  3. 化石燃料价格将成为能源供应国的一个关键地缘政治杠杆。
  4. 煤炭和石油将减少为区域燃料。
  5. 对天然气这种过渡燃料的需求将取决于其承受能力。

化石燃料进口国总是容易受到供应中断和价格波动的影响;因此,利用本国的本土资源来满足能源需求将成为未来几十年的优先事项。随着各国减少对能源进口的依赖,以中东和北非地区为主的上游行业可能会受到供应超过需求的影响。此外,需求减少将在石油市场造成停滞的低价环境,从而影响上游运营商和生产国。


图 6:2021 年至 2026 年平均年可再生能源新增容量 (GW)。资料来源:国际能源署 (IEA)。

全球能源行业正在经历巨大转型,中东和北非地区石油和天然气行业的未来值得关注。看看地区国家奥委会如何度过这些有趣且充满挑战的时代并开创低碳环境将会很有趣。

作者:Frost & Sullivan能源与环境业务总监 Rudranil Roy Sharma

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/Hydraulic-fracturing/21122022/the-latest-developments-in-the-mena-region/

原文链接/oilfieldtechnology

The latest developments in the MENA region

Published by , Editorial Assistant
Oilfield Technology,


MENA — The largest oil & gas holding region in the world

Energy is considered the most critical ingredient for the development of any economy. For decades, the MENA region has played a significant role in the global energy ecosystem and supported industrialisation and economic growth in several countries around the world. The Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) region holds about 57% of the world’s proven oil reserves and about 41% of the natural gas resources. The geological framework of the region favours the generation and accumulation of large oil and gas reserves.

The region is home to some of the world’s largest conventional onshore and offshore oil and gas fields. The most prominent fields in the region include Ghawar and the Safaniya oil fields in Saudi Arabia, the Burgan oil field in Kuwait, the Rumaila oil fields in Iraq, and the South Pars/North Dome gas field, co-owned by Iran and Qatar. The North African oil and gas landscape revolves primarily around three producer countries: Algeria, Libya, and Egypt.


Figure 1: Distribution of the world’s proven oil and gas reserves in 2020. Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2021.

All conventional basins across the world also contain large volumes of shale. It is estimated that the MENA region has 2547ft of shale gas reserves. Some Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, and Oman are developing shale oil and gas fields in the region, such as Khazzan, South Ghawar, Jafurah, and Rub’ Al Khali.

The Oil & Gas Sector in the region is highly regulated and controlled through the national oil companies (NOCs)

The energy and resources sector is the cornerstone of economic growth and development for Middle Eastern and North African countries. Since oil- and gas-related activities are the primary source of revenue for the government, it is a strictly regulated sector. National oil companies (NOCs) are responsible for developing the oil & gas sector in their respective countries. A few of the prominent NOCs within the region are Saudi Aramco, National Iranian Oil Company, Iraq National Oil Company, Kuwait Petroleum Corp., Qatar Energy, Sonatrach Algeria, OQ Oman, National Oil Company Libya, and ADNOC.


Figure 2: Prominent NOCs in the region.

NOCs enter strategic partnerships with international oil companies (IOCs) such as BP, Chevron, Shell, Exxon Mobil, etc., to develop oil and gas fields within the region. While IOCs get access to the country’s oil and gas reserves, NOCs benefit from IOC’s technological prowess and financial capabilities.

Another important stakeholder in the value chain is the oil field service (OFS) providers. These companies provide necessary products and services to explore and develop wells and further production of oil & gas from those wells. Notable international OFS companies in the region are Schlumberger, Baker Hughes, Halliburton, Weatherford, etc. When doing business with the Middle East NOCs, suppliers and service providers need to demonstrate compliance with the in-country value addition requirements that have been introduced by Aramco (IKTVA), ADNOC (ICV), and Oman’s Ministry of Oil and Gas (ICV), with Kuwait and other producer nations likely to follow suit.


Figure 3: Revenue (US$ billion) of the MENA NOCs. Source: Annual reports of the respective companies.

The MENA region has been the backbone of the world’s energy ecosystem for decades

Oil and gas producers in the Middle East and North Africa have been the backbone of the global energy system. Historically, the region has contributed to about 37% of the world’s total oil supply and approximately 35% of the world’s total gas supply.

Current crude oil production in the MENA region stands at approximately 30.4 million bpd, amounting to about 31% of the total oil produced in the world. Natural gas production is about 925 billion m3, roughly 23% of the total gas produced globally.

Currently, the region accounts for approximately 50% of oil exports and 15% of natural gas exports worldwide. Major oil producers within the region include Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, and Iran. The gas production in the MENA region is dominated by Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Egypt, and UAE.


Figure 4: Oil production of key producer countries in MENA, 2021, million bpd. Source: International - US Energy Information Administration (EIA).



Figure 5: Natural gas production of key producer countries in MENA, 2021, billion ft3. Source: EIA.

Strong outlook for the upstream sector in the MENA region—NOCs are investing in production capacity expansion

MENA’s five-year (2022 – 2026) energy investment portfolio comprises a total investment of US$879 billion, which is a 9% increase over the investment projection for 2021 – 2025. Of all the projects in the pipeline for implementation, about 30% are in the execution phase, while the remaining 70% are in the planning stage. The increase in project expenditure is spearheaded by the GCC, with committed projects making up more than 45% of the Gulf States’ total energy investments.

National oil companies in the region have committed investments in the upstream sector to increase the country’s oil and natural gas production in the coming years:

The Middle East oil & gas sector landscape has always been the focal point of global energy dynamics. The sector has recently gone through significant challenges and changes, and, as a result, future investment commitments in the region have become more diverse, with a focus on LNG, more complex offshore projects, renewables, and decarbonisation. The trend aligns with the energy transition plan for most global economies.

An increasing focus on energy security and low-carbon investment may pose a threat to the growth of the region’s upstream sector

The ongoing Russia-Ukraine tension has deeply impacted the European energy supply market. The European Commission announced plans to make the continent independent of Russian fossil fuels through the widespread adoption of renewable energy and diversification of natural gas supplies. Frost & Sullivan identified five trends that will shape the global energy landscape in the coming years:

  1. Energy security will be the foremost priority for most nations.
  2. Renewables adoption will no longer be by choice but out of necessity.
  3. Fossil fuel prices are to become a key geo-political lever for the energy-supplying nations.
  4. Coal and oil will be reduced to regional fuels.
  5. Demand for natural gas, a transitioning fuel, will depend on its affordability.

Fossil fuel importers are always vulnerable to supply disruption and price volatility; therefore, tapping into a country’s indigenous resources for energy needs will gain priority in the coming decades. As countries reduce dependence on energy imports, the upstream sector, which is dominated by the MENA region, may be affected as supply may outstrip demand. Further, a demand reduction would create a stagnant low-price environment in the oil market that will impact the upstream operator and the producing nations.


Figure 6: Average annual renewable capacity additions (GW), 2021 – 2026. Source: International Energy Agency (IEA).

The global energy industry is going through a huge transformation, and the future of the MENA oil & gas sector is one to watch. It will be interesting to see how the regional NOCs navigate these interesting and challenging times and usher in a low-carbon environment.

Written by Rudranil Roy Sharma, Director, Energy & Environment Practice, Frost & Sullivan

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/hydraulic-fracturing/21122022/the-latest-developments-in-the-mena-region/

 

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