非洲能源商会顾问表示,未来存在着巨大的碳氢化合物机遇

非洲能源商会 2022 年 2 月 21 日

非洲能源商会 (AEC) 与 Nicolas Bonnefoy 就非洲石油和天然气生产状况、非洲国家吸引投资的最佳实践以及非洲大陆石油和天然气行业在满足全球不断增长的能源需求方面可以发挥的作用进行了交谈。

博讷富伊
博讷富伊

Bonnefoy 是伦敦律师事务所 ASAFO and Co. 的石油、天然气和采矿业合伙人、AEC 顾问委员会成员和 AEC 监管事务委员会主席。

AEC:生产表现不佳对非洲意味着什么?

Bonnefoy:全球产量下降,不仅仅是非洲。也就是说,生产表现不佳对于非洲过度依赖碳氢化合物的经济体来说显然是个坏消息。然而,早在疫情爆发之前,该行业就已经经历了一场深刻的结构性危机,COVID-19 引发了额外的业务中断并加速了能源转型。据领先的咨询公司 Rystad Energy 称,自 2014 年危机以来以及整个 2020 年危机期间,全球石油和天然气资本支出 (capex) 已下降 50%,仅非洲的勘探资本支出就下降了 80%。因此,非洲碳氢化合物生产国有足够的时间来适应这场危机,甚至有更多的时间来实现经济多元化。

碳氢化合物行业仍然存在重大机遇。预计从 2020 年到 2050 年,可再生能源消耗量将翻一番,但美国能源信息管理局 (EIA) 预测,可再生能源只会增加能源结构,因为其容量无法取代同等比例的碳氢化合物。美国EIA预测,2030年至2050年,煤炭、原油和天然气产能的需求和消耗将继续上升。

因此,非洲国家的责任在于抓住可再生能源和碳氢化合物方面的机遇,为全球消费做出有意义的贡献,并消除非洲的能源贫困。

AEC:您认为影响非洲产量下降的主要原因是什么?

Bonnefoy:非洲碳氢化合物生产国是吸引投资的全球竞争市场的一部分。石油和天然气公司首先考虑岩石有意义的地方,然后才审查该地方碳氢化合物勘探和开采的管理制度。他们评估了该政权的总体吸引力:不仅包括政府对石油运营的整体采取和干预、其权利的稳定性和可执行性,而且还包括一系列不断增长的地上问题,这些问题远远超出了通常的环境、社会和治理问题。

此外,随着时间的推移,这项赛事逐渐变得更加全球化。例如,全球有 60 多个国家计划在 2021 年至少获得一轮许可。虽然石油和天然气公司最初专注于一个国家或一个地区,但现在它们正在全球范围内寻找最佳机会。因此,2022 年投资额减少的全球​​竞争将非常激烈。在这种背景下,只有最具吸引力的地质前景和地质区才有机会吸引投资。缺乏吸引力或设计不当的制度将不可避免地无法吸引投资,甚至更糟的是继续阻碍投资,因此投资只会流向其他地方。

非洲的一些石油制度可能不够有吸引力,甚至阻碍投资,原因有很多。主要是政府过度获取、政府过度参与、过度干预石油运营、不确定或不全面的石油制度、腐败和人权或整体治理方面的不良记录。每个国家都会认识到自己的恶魔。同样,与此同时,石油和天然气公司只会在其他地方投资。

AEC:可以采取什么措施来扭转这一局面?

Bonnefoy:首先,制定国内碳氢化合物资源开发战略至关重要。该战略需要成为更广泛的能源政策的一部分,以满足特定地区可用的所有形式的能源。许多非洲国家没有适当的碳氢化合物资源开发战略。

其次,这一战略的实施需要一个行动计划,其关键组成部分是有吸引力的石油制度。例如,一方面与特定领土上可用石油资源的吸引力一致的制度,另一方面与世界各地类似资源相比具有竞争力。这将需要定期重新评估,以确保石油制度随着时间的推移实际上仍然具有吸引力。过去十年来,许多非洲国家一直在努力发放石油许可证和开发碳氢化合物资源,正是因为它们的石油制度要么不够有吸引力,要么更糟糕的是实际上阻碍了投资。

第三,该战略的实施需要一个由个人组成的实施团队,专注于行动计划的成功推出。这就是缺乏所需的技术技能、政治干预、短期经济利益和个人政治议程可能会出现问题的地方。

实际上,热衷于吸引投资的非洲国家应将其石油制度的整体吸引力与世界各地碳氢化合物行业的主要原则、最佳实践和最新趋势进行比较。石油体制的初步构建应达到体制稳定性和灵活性之间的最佳平衡。进一步设计应在国家的合理关切与投资者的主要目标之间达到最佳平衡。

确定公平的政府份额显然是最敏感的问题:最佳份额应设定在一个水平,低于该水平,国家将无法获得其碳氢化合物资源的最佳价值,但高于该水平,则考虑到当前的竞争环境。

不幸的是,没有神奇的数字,也绝对没有“一刀切”的政府份额水平。该水平不可避免地会根据一系列特征而有所不同,主要是碳氢化合物资源的性质、碳氢化合物资源的位置、开发类型,并且必须进行调整,以考虑到更具体的问题,例如碳氢化合物资源国开展的工作计划。投资者、投资者分配的预算以及技术上具有挑战性的地上地点或地下石油工程的性质。这一水平还必须定期重新评估和调整,以确保政府份额随着时间的推移仍然具有吸引力。

人们对非洲碳氢化合物的潜力一直感兴趣,最近的发现也达到了预期:纳米比亚的壳牌、科特迪瓦的埃尼、南非的 TotalEnergies 等。非洲大陆目前还在莫桑比克和塞内加尔开发两个世界级的天然气项目。尽管如此,根据 Rystad Energy 的数据,非洲在全球石油和天然气资本支出中所占的份额仍然非常低,远低于全球石油和天然气资本支出的 10%。非洲国家有能力抓住机遇并改变这一现状。与此同时,世界其他国家将继续满足不断增长的能源需求。

AEC:作为非洲天然气货币化和融资的行业方法,您有何建议?

Bonnefoy:非洲的碳氢化合物行业需要采取综合和结构化的方法,将所有生产国聚集在一起支持行业领导者,以保护、促进和发展各自的利益。非洲石油生产者组织(APPO)在将所有生产国聚集在一起方面取得了良好的开端。它采取了各种旨在协调石油政策、分享知识和提供培训的举措。它甚至是唯一对管理碳氢化合物勘探和开采活动的石油制度进行比较分析的组织,提供主要原则、最佳实践和最新标准清单,并将其纳入有史以来第一个示范生产分成协议(a此事,我有幸与 APPO 一起承担)。

据我所知,除了APPO 18个成员国准备的模型外,世界上还没有其他模型的产品共享协议。东盟经济共同体旨在将碳氢化合物生产国之间的一体化和协调提升到一个新的水平。成为行业领导者已成为AEC 的正当目标。这就是我加入AEC顾问委员会并担任监管事务委员会主席的原因。我们监管事务委员会的任务之一是协助非洲碳氢化合物生产国评估和加强其石油制度的吸引力。天然气货币化是这方面的关键问题之一。

其目的是将边际天然气储量(在某些情况下甚至更大的储量)货币化,以供应非洲国内市场和/或为国内市场发电。天然气储备货币化在消除非洲能源贫困方面具有巨大潜力。每个国家都需要根据自己的能源政策评估自己的潜力,并相应地设计自己的碳氢化合物制度。我们正在远离公用事业规模的开发,在过去的十年里,公用事业规模的开发变得越来越困难,更重要的是融资越来越困难。当前的趋势是开发较小规模和模块化的天然气项目。通过在尽可能靠近消费地点产生能源和/或电力来缓解运输和分配问题。此类项目有可能比公用事业规模项目更快地实现盈亏平衡,因此更容易融资。浮动液化天然气在这方面可以发挥关键作用。涉及天然气(能源转型燃料)的正确设计和商业结构的项目将继续吸引资本,而涉及原油的项目已经变得越来越难以融资。

AEC:新的独立人士在进入不断变化的非洲能源行业时应该考虑什么?

Bonnefoy:传统的独立人士格局在过去十年中发生了巨大变化。一些较大的独立机构最近已经进一步进行了整合,但不幸的是,许多其他独立机构在危机期间消失了,或者只是过去的影子。

对于其他专注于非洲勘探和生产的独立公司来说,一切如常。他们的高技术专长、对非洲环境的深入了解和灵活性使他们能够不断适应不断变化的情况并渡过危机。过去五年里,新型小型独立企业进入了非洲市场,但传统的勘探投资组合模式已经不复存在。目前的趋势包括以下几个方面:

  • 重点关注现有成熟盆地和低风险区域
  • 趋势是让专业人士引领高影响力勘探的潮流
  • 建立一个更有限但核心的投资组合,具有近期发展,以获得短周期回报
  • 与非洲政府直接谈判,而不是漫长的许可回合
  • 避免没有吸引力的碳氢化合物制度,专注于具有最佳财务条款和流动性选择的最佳司法管辖区
原文链接/worldoil

African Energy Chamber advisor says significant hydrocarbon opportunities lie ahead

African Energy Chamber February 21, 2022

The African Energy Chamber (AEC) spoke to Nicolas Bonnefoy about the status of oil and gas production in Africa, best practices for African countries to attract investment and the role the continent’s oil and gas sector can play in meeting growing energy demand globally.

Bonnefoy
Bonnefoy

Bonnefoy is Partner – Oil, Gas & Mining with London-based law firm ASAFO and Co., member of the AEC Advisory Board and chairman of the Regulatory Affairs Committee at AEC.

AEC: What does this production underperformance mean for Africa?

Bonnefoy: Production has declined globally, not only in Africa. That said, production underperformance is clearly bad news for over-reliant hydrocarbons economies in Africa indeed. The industry has, however, been through a deep structural crisis long before the pandemic, with COVID-19 triggering additional business disruption and accelerating the energy transition. Since the 2014 crisis and throughout the 2020 crisis, oil and gas capital expenditure (capex) had already decreased by 50% globally, with exploration capex alone crashing by 80% in Africa, according to consulting leader Rystad Energy. Therefore, hydrocarbon-producing countries in Africa have had plenty enough time to adjust to this crisis and even more time to diversify their economies.

Significant opportunities in the hydrocarbons sector continue to lie ahead. Renewable consumption is expected to double from 2020 to 2050 but the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) forecasts that renewables will just add to the energy mix as their capacity will not be able to replace an equivalent share of hydrocarbons. The US EIA predicts demand and consumption of capacity from coal, crude oil and natural gas will continue to rise from 2030 through 2050.

The ball is therefore in African countries’ court to seize this opportunity both in terms of renewables and in terms of hydrocarbons to make a meaningful contribution to global consumption and eradicate energy poverty in Africa.

AEC: What do you feel are the primary reasons influencing a decline in production in Africa?

Bonnefoy: Hydrocarbons-producing countries in Africa are part of a global competitive market to attract investment. Oil and gas companies initially consider the places where the rocks make sense, and only then review the regime governing the exploration and exploitation of hydrocarbons in this place. They assess the general attractiveness of the regime: not only the overall government take and interference in petroleum operations, the stability and enforceability of their rights, but also an ever-growing series of above-ground concerns, which extend far beyond the customary environmental, social and governance issues.

In addition, the race has progressively become more global over time. For instance, more than 60 countries around the world were planning on at least one licensing round in 2021. While oil and gas companies were initially focused on a country or a region, the same are nowadays looking for the best opportunities worldwide. There is therefore significant global competition for a reduced amount of investment in 2022. In this context, only the most attractive geological prospects and regimes will stand a chance to attract this investment. Unattractive or otherwise poorly designed regimes will inevitably fail to attract investment or even worse continue to deter investment, which will, therefore, just go somewhere else.

There are many reasons why some petroleum regimes in Africa may not be attractive enough or even deter investment. Mainly, excessive government take, excessive government involvement, excessive interference in petroleum operations, uncertain or uncomprehensive petroleum regime, poor record in terms of corruption and human rights or overall governance. Each country will recognize its own demons. Again, in the meantime, oil and gas companies will just invest somewhere else.

AEC: What can be done to turn this around?

Bonnefoy: Firstly, it is critical to have a domestic strategy for the development of hydrocarbons resources. This strategy needs to be part of a broader energy policy that caters for all forms of energy available on a given territory. Many African states do not have a proper strategy for the development of hydrocarbons resources.

Secondly, the implementation of this strategy requires an action plan, the key component of which is an attractive petroleum regime. For example, a regime consistent with the attractiveness of petroleum resources available on a given territory on the one hand, and competitive compared to similar resources around the world on the other hand. This will require reassessment on a regular basis to ensure that the petroleum regime actually remains attractive over time. Many African countries have struggled to award petroleum licenses and develop hydrocarbons resources over the past decade precisely because their petroleum regime either is not attractive enough or even worse actually deters investment.

Thirdly, the application of this strategy requires an implementation team of individuals focused on the successful rollout of the action plan. This is where the lack of the required technical skills, political interference, short term financial interest and personal political agenda may come in the way.

In practical terms, African countries keen to attract investment should assess the overall attractiveness of their petroleum regime compared to the main principles, best practices and latest trends in force in the hydrocarbons industry around the world. The petroleum regime shall be initially structured to reach the optimal balance between stability and flexibility of the regime. It shall be further designed to reach the optimal balance between the legitimate concerns of the state on the one hand and the key objectives of the investor on the other hand.

The determination of a fair government share is clearly the most sensitive issue: the optimal share shall be set at a level below which the state would not be capturing the optimal valorization of its hydrocarbons resources but above which it would start to deter investment, considering the current competitive environment.

There is unfortunately no magic figure and definitely no “one size fits all” level of government share. That level will inevitably differ depending on a series of features, mainly the nature of hydrocarbons resources, the location of hydrocarbons resources, the type of development and will have to be adjusted to take into account more specific issues such as the work program undertaken by the investor, the budget allocated by the investor, and technically challenging locations overground, or the nature of petroleum works underground. That level will also have to be reassessed, and adjusted as the case may be, on a regular basis to ensure that the government share remains attractive over time.

There is sustained interest in the hydrocarbons’ potential in Africa and recent discoveries have delivered on expectations: Shell in Namibia, Eni in Ivory Coast, TotalEnergies in South Africa to name a few. The continent is also currently hosting two world class natural gas project developments in Mozambique and in Senegal. Still, Africa’s share of global oil and gas capex is very low - it is well below 10% of global oil and gas capex, according to Rystad Energy. It is within African countries’ power to seize the opportunity and change this. In the meantime, other countries in the world will continue to supply the growing energy demand.

AEC: What would you recommend as an industry approach to gas monetization and financing in Africa?

Bonnefoy: The hydrocarbons industry in Africa requires an integrated and structured approach to bring all producing countries together behind an industry leader to protect, promote and develop their respective interest. The African Petroleum Producers Organisation (APPO) has had an excellent start at it bringing all producing countries together. It has had various initiatives aimed at coordinating petroleum policies, sharing knowledge, and providing training. It has even been the only organization to perform a comparative analysis of petroleum regimes governing hydrocarbons exploration and exploitation activities, to provide a list of the main principles, best practices and latest standards and incorporate the same into the first ever model production sharing agreement (a matter, which I was fortunate to undertake together with the APPO).

To the best of my knowledge, there is no other model production sharing agreement available in the world, but the model prepared by the 18 members states of the APPO. The AEC is intended to bring integration and coordination between hydrocarbons producing countries to the next level. Becoming an industry leader has become the legitimate ambition of the AEC. This is the reason why I joined the advisory board of the AEC and act as the chairman of the Regulatory Affairs Committee. One of our mandates at the Regulatory Affairs Committee is to assist hydrocarbons producing countries in Africa in assessing and strengthening the attractiveness of their petroleum regime. Gas monetization is one of the key issues in this context.

The aim is at the monetization of marginal (and even larger reserves in some cases) reserves of natural gas to supply domestic markets in Africa and/or generate power for domestic markets. The monetization of gas reserves has an enormous potential in the fight against energy poverty in Africa. Each country will need to assess its own potential in the context of its own energy policy and design its own hydrocarbons regime accordingly. We are moving away from utility scale developments, which have become increasingly difficult to structure and more importantly to finance over the past decade. The current trend is on the development of smaller scale and modular gas projects. Transport and distribution issues are mitigated by generating energy and/or power as close as possible to the place of consumption. Such projects have the potential to break even much faster than utility scale projects and are therefore far easier to finance. Floating LNG has a critical role to play in this context. Properly designed and commercially structured projects involving natural gas, the energy transition fuel, will continue to attract capital, whereas projects involving crude oil have already become increasingly difficult to finance.

AEC: What should new independents consider while entering a changing African energy sector?

Bonnefoy: The traditional independents landscape has changed dramatically over the last decade. Some of the larger independents have gone further to a recent consolidation process, a lot of others have unfortunately disappeared during the crisis or are just the shadow of what they used to be.

For the other independents focused on exploration and production in Africa, this is business as usual. Their high technical expertise, deep understanding of the environment in Africa and flexibility have allowed the same to continue to adjust to ever-changing circumstances and sail through the crisis. A new breed of small independents has hit the African market over the past five years, but the traditional exploration portfolio model has gone. The current trends include the followings:

  • Focus on existing mature basins, and low risk areas
  • Trend to leave the majors lead the charge for high impact exploration
  • Build a more limited but core portfolio with near-term developments for short cycle returns
  • Enter direct negotiation with African governments, rather than lengthy licensing rounds
  • Avoid unattractive hydrocarbons regimes, focus on best jurisdictions with best financial terms and liquidity options