伍德麦肯兹:即使商业储量增加50%,北海产量仍可保持在排放目标范围内


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根据伍德麦肯兹的最新分析,英国可以在遵守最严格的国际气候路径的同时,提高北海油气产量。这项研究是在政府经过磋商后,对该盆地的未来进行思考之际进行的。

伍德麦肯兹的研究表明,到 2050 年,英国大陆架 (UKCS) 生产价值链的排放量将比政府间气候变化专门委员会的全球净零排放路径高出 2500 万至 5000 万吨二氧化碳当量/年。

这为英国大陆架到 2050 年额外生产 26 亿桶油当量创造了理论上的空间。盈余仍符合气候科学的要求,同时带来巨大的经济和环境效益。

伍德麦肯兹北海上游研究总监盖尔·安德森表示:“北海正处于十字路口,但我们的分析显示出一条平衡气候科学与能源安全的清晰路径。鼓励国内生产,包括针对已知发现的合理许可政策,将延长关键基础设施的使用寿命,同时与进口替代品相比,带来显著的减排和成本效益。”

此项研究结果发布之际,英国政府正权衡是否根据其未来英国大陆架生产的“科学导向”方法,禁止发放新的勘探许可证。伍德麦肯兹的分析揭示了最大化国内产量而非进口的显著优势。每额外生产一万亿立方英尺的英国大陆架天然气,在取代美国液化天然气进口的同时,就能减少1500万吨范围一和范围二的二氧化碳当量排放。

安德森表示:“英国大陆架的产量越高,排放量就越少,英国的进口支出也就越少。这种方法将确保未来几十年的产量,并支持北海的能源未来。”

勘探活动跌至历史最低水平

北海勘探活动已跌至前所未有的低点。由于近期的财政动荡,2025年将成为自1960年以来首次没有一口勘探井的年份。

伍德麦肯兹的分析主张,定向许可应侧重于已发现的、可与现有基础设施挂钩的资源。禁止所有新的许可将忽视选择性开发的战略价值。

安德森补充道:“如果他们拥有可与主机平台挂钩的已发现资源或“旧油田”,则可以考虑授予科学奖。”

伍德麦肯兹在7634个已开放和已放弃的区块中发现了23亿桶油当量,其中天然气占三分之一以上。只有34个区块的资源量超过2000万桶油当量。然而,这些区块的总储量高达14亿桶油当量,为维持其基础设施的可行性提供了至关重要的回接机会。

进口依赖威胁排放目标

随着进口依赖度的不断增长,英国面临着严峻的能源转型挑战。到2035年,随着挪威管道天然气进口量的下降,英国60%以上的天然气供应将依赖美国液化天然气。这一转变将使英国天然气供应的排放强度增加两倍,从目前的3.7克二氧化碳当量/兆焦耳增至11.3克二氧化碳当量/兆焦耳。

排放影响十分严重:到2050年,英国天然气供应源90%的范围一和范围二排放将来自美国液化天然气。伍德麦肯兹的分析表明,英国大陆架额外增加1万亿立方英尺天然气产量,可减少1460万吨二氧化碳当量的范围一和范围二排放。这可能超过北海过渡局(North Sea Transition Authority)提出的中期平台电气化情景下到2050年1340万吨二氧化碳当量的减排目标。

经济效益与环境效益并存。英国大陆架天然气供应的短期成本几乎是美国液化天然气的一半,凸显了国内生产的双重优势。

欧洲一体化维护供应安全

批评人士认为,英国大陆架原油对能源安全贡献甚微,因为大部分原油都出口了。但实际情况却更加微妙。尽管英国精炼原油中不到20%来自英国大陆架(低于2010年的40%以上),但英国大陆架仍然是欧洲一体化市场的核心。

2024年,英国大陆架四分之三的原油出口流向荷兰(48%)、德国(11%)、波兰(8%)和瑞典(8%)。英国通过复杂的商品流通从这些国家进口成品油。这种一体化通过复杂的贸易关系确保了英国及其邻国的原油供应。

其他欧洲国家也越来越认识到国内供应的价值。荷兰气候与绿色增长部长今年4月同意最大限度地提高北海天然气产量,以减少对进口的依赖,并减轻气候影响。

建议采用平衡过渡方法

英国大陆架的排放量仅占英国领土净排放量的3%,但与其他经济部门相比,该行业面临的压力却格外巨大。伍德麦肯兹主张采取平衡的措施,鼓励碳氢化合物、碳捕获与封存、氢气以及北海风能。即使在净零情景下,英国每天仍将消耗约50万桶油当量,并仍将是石油和天然气的净进口国。

安德森补充道:“政府面临限制北海生产的压力,但这有可能损害气候目标和能源安全。英国需要各种类型的能源,应该鼓励更多地利用北海的碳氢化合物、碳捕获与储存、氢气和风能。这种平衡的方法将实现承诺的公平能源转型,支持气候目标,降低英国的能源成本,同时加强供应安全。”

政府关于“构建北海能源未来”的磋商结果即将公布。最终决策将决定该盆地未来几十年的发展轨迹。

 

 

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Wood Mackenzie: North Sea production can remain within emissions targets even if commercial reserves were increased by 50%

Published by , Senior Editor
Oilfield Technology,


The UK could boost North Sea oil and gas production while remaining within the strictest international climate pathways, according to new Wood Mackenzie analysis. The research comes as the government mulls the basin's future following a consultation process.

Wood Mackenzie's research shows the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS) production value chain emissions outperform the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's global net zero emissions pathway by 25 - 50 million t CO2e per annum through to 2050.

This creates theoretical headroom for the UKCS to produce an additional 2.6 billion boe by 2050. The surplus remains within climate science requirements whilst delivering substantial economic and environmental benefits.

"The North Sea stands at a crossroads, but our analysis shows a clear pathway balancing climate science with energy security," said Gail Anderson, Research Director, North Sea Upstream at Wood Mackenzie. "Encouraging domestic production, including a smart licensing policy targeting known discoveries, would extend critical infrastructure life, whilst delivering substantial emissions and cost benefits over importing alternatives."

The findings emerge as the government weighs whether to ban new exploration licences under its "science-aligned approach" to future UKCS production. Wood Mackenzie's analysis reveals compelling advantages of maximising domestic production over imports. Every additional trillion cubic feet of UKCS gas produced would save 15 million t CO2e of scope 1&2 emissions when displacing US LNG imports.

“The more the UKCS produces, said Anderson, the less emissions will be released, and the less the UK will spend on imports. Such an approach will ensure production for decades to come and support the North Sea’s energy future.”

Exploration activity collapses to historic low

North Sea exploration has plummeted to unprecedented lows. Due to recent fiscal turmoil, 2025 is set to become the first year since 1960 without a single exploration well.

The Wood Mackenzie analysis advocates targeted licensing focused on existing discovered resources that could tieback to existing infrastructure. A ban on all new licencing would ignore the strategic value of selective development.

“Licence awards could be considered if they hold discovered resources or “old fields” which could be tied-back to host platforms” adds Anderson.

Wood Mackenzie identifies 2.3 billion boe across 7634 open and relinquished blocks, with gas comprising over one-third. Only 34 blocks contain resources exceeding 20 million boe. However, these blocks hold a total of 1.4 billion boe and offer crucial tie-back opportunities to maintain host infrastructure viability.

Import dependency threatens emissions targets

The UK faces a stark energy transition challenge as import dependency grows. By 2035, the country will rely on US LNG for over 60% of its gas supply as Norwegian piped imports decline. This shift will triple the emissions intensity of UK gas supply from 3.7 to 11.3 gCO2e/MJ by 2035.

The emissions impact proves severe: 90% of scope 1&2 emissions from UK gas supply sources will come from US LNG by 2050. Wood Mackenzie's analysis demonstrates that an additional 1 trillion ft3 of UKCS gas production could deliver scope 1&2 emissions savings of 14.6 million t CO2e. This potentially exceeds the North Sea Transition Authority's mid-range platform electrification scenario savings of 13.4 million tCO2e to 2050.

Economic benefits compound the environmental case. The short-run cost of UKCS gas supply runs at almost half that of US LNG, highlighting dual advantages of domestic production.

European integration maintains supply security

Critics argue that UKCS crude contributes little to energy security because most gets exported. The reality proves more nuanced. Whilst less than 20% of crude refined in the UK comes from the UKCS – down from over 40% in 2010 – the country remains central to integrated European markets.

In 2024, three-quarters of UKCS crude exports flowed to the Netherlands (48%), Germany (11%), Poland (8%) and Sweden (8%). The UK imports refined products back from these countries in complex commodity flows. This integration secures supply for both the UK and its neighbours through sophisticated trading relationships.

Other European countries increasingly recognise domestic supply value. The Netherlands' minister for climate and green growth in April agreed to maximise North Sea gas production to reduce import dependency and mitigate climate impacts.

Balanced transition approach recommended

UKCS emissions account for just 3% of net UK territorial emissions, yet the industry faces disproportionate pressure compared to other economic sectors. Wood Mackenzie argues for a balanced approach encouraging hydrocarbons, carbon capture and storage, hydrogen and wind from the North Sea. Even under a net zero scenario, the UK will consume around 500,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day and remain a net importer of oil and gas.

"The government faces pressure to restrict North Sea production, but risks undermining both climate goals and energy security," added Anderson. "The UK needs all types of energy and should encourage more hydrocarbons, carbon capture and storage, hydrogen and wind from the North Sea. This balanced approach would deliver the promised fair energy transition, support climate objectives and reduce UK energy costs whilst strengthening supply security."

The outcome of the government's consultation on "Building the North Sea's Energy Future" will soon be published. Decisions made will shape the basin's trajectory for decades to come.

 

 

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Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/08102025/wood-mackenzie-north-sea-production-can-remain-within-emissions-targets-even-if-commercial-reserves-were-increased-by-50/

 

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