不管你喜欢与否,深水石油和天然气是能源转型的关键

深水石油和天然气的发展在向清洁能源转型的过程中发挥着关键作用。

Petrobras 的 Maiza Goulart、TechnipFMC 的 Brandon Finley、BP 的 Sarah Hill、Baker Hughes 的 Romain Chambault、Hess 的 Clare Gardner 和 Wood Mackenzie 的 Julie Wilson 在 2023 年 OTC 会议上探讨深水在能源转型之旅中的角色。(来源 :哈特能源)

石油和天然气长期以来一直是能源工业的命脉。尽管它为世界带来了巨大的利益,但社会的很大一部分人希望从碳氢化合物转向更可持续的替代能源。

即使面临这样的反对,行业专家在 2023 年海上技术大会上的深水在能源转型中的作用小组会议上表示,碳氢化合物仍然在寻找更可持续的能源方面发挥着重要作用。

“深水生产的增长速度将超过任何其他资源。到 2030 年,我们将看到大部分产量增长。你真的可以看到它超过了所有其他资源。”Wood Mackenzie 总监 Julie Wilson 在 5 月 3 日的小组讨论中说道。“过去 10 到 15 年里,我们在新领域进行了一些伟大的探索。这些资源现在正在投产,巴西盐下等地的产量正在增加,圭亚那也在增加产量,还有很多阶段即将投产。”

这些地方只是深水增长的几个例子,还有无数项目即将投产。2022 年,Wood Mackenzie 参与了 22 个国家的深水项目生产。到 2032 年,这个数字将增至 33 个国家。

据伍德麦肯齐称,已发现的碳氢化合物数量是满足全球能源需求所需的两倍多,但由于存在太多问题,这些资源从未得到开发。资源往往太脏、离市场太远或太昂贵而无法安全开发。

未来10年,满足需求增长所需的石油和天然气投资每年为5000亿美元。迄今为止,投资额仅为约3000亿至4000亿美元。需要勘探新资源,以找到比现有运营商组合中现有资源更好的碳氢化合物。

正如 Hess 南美勘探总监克莱尔·加德纳 (Clare Gardner) 所说:“如果我们只依靠现有的已探明资源,就会出现巨大的供应缺口。”

勘探工作持续发现低碳、盈亏平衡点低的优质资源——至少每两年到五年一次。过去15年,西半球利润已交付1500亿桶油当量的资源。圭亚那-苏里南盆地就是一个例子。

圭亚那-苏里南省因其富含碳氢化合物的储量而吸引了超过 15 家国际石油公司。加德纳表示,圭亚那提供的“优势桶”排放量低,盈亏平衡点也低。该地区前四个获批项目的盈亏平衡点在 29 美元/桶至 35 美元/桶之间。圭亚那是世界上经济增长最快的国家之一,该盆地从发现到首次发现石油只用了不到五年的时间,而且还有更多储量有待发现。Stabroek 区块有 50 多口勘探和评估井,其资源支撑着六个以上的枢纽级项目。

积极寻找低排放储备并不是运营商遏制温室气体排放的唯一方法。

过去三年,BP 开发了 14 个新的石油和天然气项目,年底前还将开发 4 个项目。虽然石油和天然气一直并将永远是英国石油公司商业模式不可或缺的一部分,但他们已经开始转向其他能源。

“炼油确实成为 BP 产品组合中令人兴奋的一部分,”BP 采购副总裁莎拉·希尔 (Sarah Hill) 表示。该公司正在“将这些炼油厂转变为能源中心,并真正着眼于未来的每一个建设。我们在生物燃料领域为这些炼油厂规划了五个新的重大项目。”

英国石油公司一直在与希尔所说的“供应商”合作,开发更可持续的解决方案。这些解决方案包括使用绿色钢铁(尽管目前数量不适合大规模使用),以及跟踪其供应链的碳足迹,并使用循环方法来确定减少、再利用、回收和回收的机会。

巴西国家石油公司也采取了与英国石油公司类似的方法,将石油和天然气与可持续发展结合起来。巴西国家石油公司研发主管 Maiza Goulart 表示,该公司是石油行业中碳效率最高的公司之一。她说,他们的项目似乎证明了这一点。2022年,他们完成了世界上最大的碳捕获、利用和封存项目。该公司回注了 1060 万吨 (MMtonne) CO 2从2008年到2022年,巴西国家石油公司总共回注了40 MMtonne CO 2Goulart 表示,该公司承诺“到 2025 年积累 80 MMtonne CO 2” 。

巴西国家石油公司是高压分离技术 (HISEP) 的发源地,该技术可分离并重新注入与石油一起在海底产生的高 CO 2含量的气体。该公司还在建造两艘全电动配置的FPSO

正如 TechnipFMC 新能源业务总监布兰登·芬利 (Brandon Finley) 所说,“针对不同的转型领域,您需要不同的技术和不同的解决方案。”

” ”将需要深水。如果你考虑一下这个国家的部分地区,比如美国西海岸,深水是必不可少的,”芬利说。“在葡萄牙这样的地方,如果你想走向近海,深水可再生能源是必不可少的。在全球范围内做到这一点非常重要,因为您可能在某些市场不需要它,但其他市场会需要。[转型]将需要我们所有人——我们是一家公司,我们想赚钱,但现实是,工作量和未来的需求,我们不需要担心竞争。

“需要担心如何推动能源转型。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Like It or Not, Deepwater Oil and Gas Holds the Key to Energy Transition

Developments in deepwater oil and gas play a critical role in the quest to transition to cleaner energy.

Maiza Goulart of Petrobras, Brandon Finley of TechnipFMC, Sarah Hill of BP, Romain Chambault of Baker Hughes, Clare Gardner of Hess and Julie Wilson of Wood Mackenzie sit during their Deepwater’s Role in the Energy Transition Journey at OTC 2023. (Source: Hart Energy)

Oil and gas has long been the lifeblood of the energy industry. And even though it has provided great benefits to the world, a large slice of society wants to shift from hydrocarbons to alternative, more sustainable sources of energy.

Even in the face of such opposition, industry experts during the Deepwater’s Role in the Energy Transition panel at the 2023 Offshore Technology Conference said that hydrocarbons still play an essential role in the search for a more sustainable source of energy.

“Deep water production is going to grow more quickly than any other resource. This is where we're going to see most production grow out to 2030. You can really see it outstripping all other resource,” Julie Wilson, director at Wood Mackenzie, said during May 3’s panel. “We’ve seen some great exploration in new frontiers over the past 10 to 15 years. And those resources are now coming on stream, places like Brazil pre-salt are growing production and Guyana is growing production as well, with lots of phases to come on stream.”

Those places are only a few examples of deepwater growth, with a myriad of projects set to come onstream. In 2022, Wood Mackenzie was involved in 22 countries producing deepwater projects. By 2032, that number will grow to 33 countries.

According to Wood Mackenzie, more than twice the amount of hydrocarbons needed to meet global energy demands have been discovered, but the resources have never been developed due to a plethora of issues. Resources were oftentimes too dirty, too far from market or too expensive to safely develop.

The oil and gas investment required to meet demand growth is $500 billion per year for the next 10 years. So far there has only been an investment of approximately $300 billion to $400 billion. Exploration of new resources is required to find better hydrocarbons than are already in the current portfolio of operators.

As Clare Gardner, South America exploration director for Hess, put it: “If we just rely on the proven resources we have, there will be [a] significant supply gap.”

Exploration has continued to uncover high quality resources that are low carbon with a low breakeven point — at least once every two years to five years. Western hemisphere margins have delivered 150 billion boe resources over the past 15 years. One example of this is the Guyana-Suriname Basin.

The Guyana-Suriname province has attracted over 15 international oil companies due to its hydrocarbon-rich reservoirs. Guyana delivers “advantage barrels” which Gardner said are low emission and have a low breakeven point. The breakeven for the first four sanctioned projects in the area were between $29/bbl and $35/bbl. Guyana has one of the fastest growing economies in the world, as the basin went from discovery to first oil in less than five years with more reserves yet to be discovered. There are over 50 exploration and appraisal wells in the Stabroek Block, with resources underpinning more than six hub-class projects.

Actively searching for low emission reserves isn’t the only way that operators are looking to curb greenhouse gases.

BP has developed 14 new oil and gas projects over the past three years, with four more to come before year’s end. While oil and gas has and always will remain an integral part of BP’s business model, they have begun transitioning to other energy sources.

“Refining is really become an exciting part of BP's portfolio,” said Sarah Hill, BP vice president of procurement. The company is “transitioning these refineries to becoming an energy hub and really looking at every build for tomorrow. We have five new major projects in the biofuel space planned for these refineries.”

BP has been collaborating with what Hill calls “top suppliers” to develop more sustainable solutions. Those solutions include the use of green steel, although volumes aren’t currently suited for mass use, as well as tracking the carbon footprint of their supply chain and using circular methodology to identify opportunities for reduction, reuse, recycling and recovery.

Petrobras is also taking a similar approach to BP, marrying oil and gas with sustainability. Petrobras is among the most carbon efficient in the oil industry, said Maiza Goulart the company’s head of research and development. Their projects seem to bear that out, she said. In 2022, they completed the world’s largest carbon capture, utilization and sequestration project. The company reinjected 10.6 million tonnes (MMtonne) of CO2. From 2008 to 2022, Petrobras has reinjected a total of 40 MMtonne CO2. The company has a commitment to accumulate “80 MMtonne CO2 by 2025,” said Goulart.

Petrobras is home to the high-pressure separation technology, or HISEP, which separates and reinjects gas with high CO2 content produced alongside the oil while still on the seabed. The company is also constructing two FPSOs with an all-electric configuration

As Brandon Finley, commercial director of new energy at TechnipFMC, said, “You need different technologies and different solutions for the different areas of transitioning.”

“Deepwater will be needed. If you think about parts of the country, like the west coast of the U.S., deepwater is essential,” Finley said. “In places like Portugal, deepwater renewables are essential if you want to go offshore. This is going to be very important on a global scale to do this, because you may not need it in some markets, but other markets will. [Transition] is going to take all of us… We’re a company, and we want to make money, but the reality is that the amount of work and the demand going forward, we don't need to worry about competition.

“We need to worry about how to move the energy transition forward.”