资本纪律的代价:大型石油公司面临产量断崖式下跌


由《油田技术》助理编辑出版


伍德麦肯兹的分析显示,到 2040 年,全球 30 家最大的石油和天然气公司将面临合计 2200 万桶/日的产量缺口,才能维持其在石油和天然气需求市场的份额。

该集团的总产量约为5000万桶油当量/日,满足了全球近30%的需求。但伍德麦肯兹的最新报告预计,这30家公司现有商业项目的产量在2025年至2040年间将下降近40%。填补这2200万桶油当量/日的产量缺口,相当于新增近两个二叠纪盆地或14个圭亚那规模的油田。

行业巨头可以通过支出解决问题。在资本纪律和股东分红已成为公司估值的重要依据,而该行业本质上正走向成熟,因此公司面临着将30%至50%的经营现金流通过分红和股票回购返还给股东的压力。

“石油行业正在重新调整战略,回归上游,但多年来的活动减少使得许多油气公司的生产模式更符合净零排放路径,而非目前正在上演的高产量、高产出情景。核心战略挑战在于,当再投资率约为2010年代中期水平的一半时,如何维持产量和现金流,”伍德麦肯兹公司企业研究总监内万·博鲁杰迪表示。“并非所有公司都能成功,因此行业进一步整合势在必行。从根本上讲,各公司需要运用一切手段来应对这一挑战。”

过去十年,产能缺口翻了一番。

2015年,同一批企业面临着1100万桶油当量/日的产量缺口,才能在2030年前实现与需求同步增长。他们通过勘探、并购、新项目和提高采收率,弥补了这一缺口,额外增加了1900万桶油当量/日的产量。美国页岩油的扩张和中国国家石油公司上调国内前景评估是主要推动因素。但除非出现类似二叠纪盆地规模的新油田,否则这种情况不太可能重现。

伍德麦肯兹公司指出,即使各公司到2040年仍能保持目前的产量水平,它们仍将比维持其油气市场份额所需的产量少300万桶油当量/日。而且,如今填补这一缺口的选择也越来越少。美国页岩油产量已趋于稳定。许多最具吸引力的企业并购目标已被收购,而沙特阿拉伯、俄罗斯和伊朗等大型资源持有国仍然拒绝外国投资。

胜者和败者终将出现。

分析显示,石油行业能够提供满足峰值需求及后续需求的供应。但哪些公司最有能力提供这些供应,以及它们如何维持其在全球供应中的份额,目前尚不明朗。伍德麦肯兹指出,缺乏产品组合深度、质量和财务实力的公司要么会被收购,要么会萎缩。全球石油产量的份额将继续从国际石油公司向资源型国家石油公司转移。

技术和创新型资本结构为未来发展提供了途径。

企业需要运用一切可用手段,在满足投资者需求的同时,应对油气行业长期发展面临的挑战。提高现有油田的采收率,有望在全球范围内释放4700亿桶的石油储量。在2010年代末期数字化阶段投资数据基础设施的企业,将在部署大型语言模型以提高运营效率方面处于领先地位。埃克森美孚在二叠纪盆地的战略表明,专有技术如何能够提高采收率、减少非生产性资本,从而降低盈亏平衡点。

业务拓展将继续支撑投资组合,但企业需要更具创新性的策略来获取资金,并通过并购和勘探主导的资源更新实现可观的回报。战略合资企业也提供了一种替代性的商业模式。这些模式已在成熟的北海、非洲和东南亚地区释放了新的增长潜力。BP和埃尼在挪威和安哥拉的业务在战略合资结构的框架下蓬勃发展。埃尼与马来西亚国家石油公司(Petronas)在库泰盆地的合作,则利用其现金流充裕的传统资产为数万亿立方英尺天然气田的开发提供资金。

新的金融结构,包括售后回租安排和或有付款机制,提供了更多选择。

主要发现:

  • 到 2040 年,30 家大型油气勘探开发公司将面临总计 2200 万桶/日的产能缺口,才能维持其在石油和天然气需求中的份额。
  • 2025 年至 2040 年间,现有商业项目的产量预计将下降近 40%。
  • 只有三家公司有望在 2040 年的产量超过现在。
  • 欧洲主要石油公司和国家石油公司平均需要超过 100 万桶油当量/天才能弥补缺口(相当于当前基准的 50%)。
  • 未来 15 年维持生产所需的缺口几乎是 2015 年的两倍。
  • 即使复制 2015 年新增 1900 万桶油当量/日的业绩,在未来十年内仍将存在 300 万桶油当量/日的缺口,而预计到 2040 年全球需求将增长 6%,因此维持市场份额仍存在差距。
  • 目前,各公司将 30% 至 50% 的现金流返还给股东,将再投资率降至 2010 年代中期水平的一半。
  • 提高采收率可在全球范围内释放 4700 亿桶石油产能——在采收率方面,国际石油公司通常优于国家石油公司,从而为技术转让和“互利共赢”合作提供了更大的机会。
  • 石油和天然气公司在下一阶段以并购为主导的增长中需要更具创造力,包括部署战略性合资企业和新的财务结构。

在线阅读文章:https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/27022026/the-cost-of-capital-discipline-big-oil-faces-production-cliff-edge/

 

本文已添加以下标签:

石油天然气新闻


原文链接/OilFieldTechnology

The cost of capital discipline: Big Oil faces production cliff edge

Published by , Assistant Editor
Oilfield Technology,


Wood Mackenzie analysis reveals 30 of the world's largest oil and gas companies face a combined 22 million boe/d production shortfall by 2040 to maintain their market share of oil and gas demand.

The group collectively produces around 50 million boe/d, meeting close to 30% of global demand. But the latest report from Wood Mackenzie expects production from current commercial projects for these 30 companies to fall nearly 40% between 2025 and 2040. Filling the 22 million boe/d gap is the equivalent to adding nearly two Permian basins or 14 Guyana-scale plays.

The main industry players can’t spend their way out of the problem. With capital discipline and shareholder distributions now a defining feature of how companies are valued, in what is fundamentally a maturing sector, companies are under pressure to return between 30 - 50% of operating cash flow to shareholders through dividends and buybacks.

“Big Oil is recalibrating back to upstream, but years of reduced activity has left many oil and gas companies with production profiles more aligned with net zero pathways than the higher-for-longer scenario that is playing out. The core strategic challenge is how to sustain output and cash flow when reinvestment rates are roughly half of mid-2010s levels," said Neivan Boroujerdi, Director, Corporate Research at Wood Mackenzie. “Not every company will succeed, making further industry consolidation inevitable. Fundamentally, companies will need to deploy every tool in the playbook to square the circle."

The production gap has doubled over the last decade

In 2015, the same cohort faced a production gap of 11 million boe/d to grow production in line with demand to 2030. They closed it, delivering an additional 19 million boe/d through exploration, M&A, new projects and increased recovery. US tight oil expansion and Chinese NOC upgrades to their domestic outlooks dominated. But barring the emergence of a new Permian-scale play, this is unlikely to be repeated.

Even if companies replicated that performance out to 2040, they would still fall 3 million boe/d short of what’s needed to maintain their market share of oil and gas demand, according to Wood Mackenzie. And there are now fewer options to fill the gap. US tight oil production is plateauing. Many of the most attractive corporate M&A targets have been snapped up and big resources holders such as Saudi Arabia, Russia, and Iran remain closed to foreign investment.

Winners and losers will emerge

The industry can deliver the supply needed to meet peak demand and beyond, according to the analysis. Less certain is which companies are best placed to deliver it and how they maintain their share of global supply. Wood Mackenzie states that companies lacking portfolio depth, quality, and financial capacity will either be acquired or shrink. The share of global production will continue shifting from international oil companies to resource holding national oil companies.

Technology and creative capital structures offer paths forward

Companies will need to deploy every tool in the playbook to align the needs of investors while addressing the longevity challenge in oil and gas. Enhanced recovery from existing fields could unlock 470 billion bbls globally. Companies that invested in data infrastructure during the late 2010s digitalisation phase will lead in deploying large language models to deliver operational efficiencies. ExxonMobil's Permian strategy demonstrates how proprietary technology can boost recovery factors and reduce unproductive capital to drive breakevens down.

Business development will continue to prop up portfolios, but companies will need more creative strategies to access capital and deliver attractive returns from M&A and exploration-led resource renewal. Strategic ventures also offer an alternative business model. These have unleased new growth in the mature North Sea, Africa, and Southeast Asia. BP and Eni’s Norway and Angola operations have thrived under strategic venture structures. While Eni's Kutei Basin partnership with Petronas uses cash-generative legacy assets to fund development of multi-tcf gas discoveries.

New financial structures including sale-leaseback arrangements and contingent payment mechanisms provide additional options.

Key findings:

  • 30 major E&P companies face a combined 22 million boe/d shortfall to sustain their share of oil and gas demand by 2040.
  • Production from current commercial projects set to decline nearly 40% between 2025 - 2040.
  • Only three companies are positioned to produce more in 2040 than today.
  • European majors and NOCs require more than 1 million boe/d on average to close the gap (50% of current base).
  • The gap to maintain production over the next 15 years is nearly twice what it was in 2015.
  • Even replicating 2015 performance of adding 19 million boe/d of new volumes would leave a 3 million boe/d gap to sustaining market share over next decade with global demand forecast to grow 6% to 2040.
  • Companies are now returning between 30 - 50% of cash flow to shareholders, cutting reinvestment rates to half of mid-2010s levels.
  • Enhanced recovery could unlock 470 billion bbls globally – IOCs typically outperform NOCs when it comes to recovery factors, offering greater opportunities for technology transfer and ‘win-win’ collaboration.
  • Oil and gas companies will need to be more creative in their next phase of M&A-led growth including the deployment of strategic ventures and new financial structures.

Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/27022026/the-cost-of-capital-discipline-big-oil-faces-production-cliff-edge/

 

This article has been tagged under the following:

Oil & gas news