世界石油


(彭博社)“本周,石油部长和化石燃料公司高管齐聚加拿大能源之都,参加世界石油大会。尽管油价有可能突破每桶 100 美元大关,但全球向清洁能源的过渡才是会议的焦点。以下是卡尔加里活动的一些主要收获。

世界石油大会:能源转型使石油、天然气行业“比以往任何时候都更加舒适”——石油和天然气 360

资料来源:世界石油

沙特展现实力由于新冠疫情打乱了无数的旅行计划,沙特队错过了 2021 年在休斯敦举行的上一届大会,但今年沙特队又以大力度回归。能源部长阿卜杜勒阿齐兹·本·萨勒曼亲王是周一开幕式上的明星。他表示,欧佩克的目标是市场稳定而不是价格上涨,并对中国的需求发出了警告。原油期货因他的言论而适当回落,但这只是凸显了沙特目前对石油市场的影响力。沙特阿美公司老板阿明·纳赛尔随后对石油消费峰值的想法进行了严厉的评估。

该国规模庞大的代表团在展厅中不容错过。周一结束时,沙特阿拉伯主办了一场丰盛的圆桌晚宴,出席嘉宾包括阿尔伯塔省省长丹妮尔·史密斯、投资者、分析师以及英国石油公司和其他公司的官员。

石油不会去任何地方制片人计划坚持的时间比他们的对手希望的要长得多。能源高管指出,全球能源需求不断增长,尤其是欠发达国家,以及完全依赖可再生能源面临的挑战。

这并不是说排放量被忽视,因为活动的大部分内容都是关于碳捕获和储存的讨论。艾伯塔省省长史密斯似乎总结了这种情绪。“我们正在摆脱排放,”她说。“我们并没有放弃石油和天然气。”

碳捕获正在发生从埃克森美孚公司、挪威的Equinor ASA到中国的中石化,卡尔加里会议上明显一致认为碳捕获与封存(CCS)是该行业未来的核心。

CCS 的崛起在很大程度上可以解释为它承诺使石油和天然气产量达到或接近当前水平,同时大幅削减碳排放。然后是 45 季度的税收抵免以及美国《通货膨胀削减法案》中的后续激励措施。这些抵免额“就像打了轮胎一样,所以我们现在获得了很多非常好的动力,几乎达到了这样的程度: “我们是自己成功的受害者。”埃德蒙顿 CCUS 项目总监 Corwyn Bruce 说道,该项目正在为艾伯塔省一家水泥厂开展项目。“这里有太多工作要做。”

过渡谈话并不可怕如果以本周的事件为例,石油和天然气行业比以往任何时候都更加接受能源转型的概念。

舒适度也与 CCS 的潜力相关,这为该行业提供了能够更多地按照自身条件实现排放目标的前景。业界明显感觉到,有关转型的对话不再由反对者主导。用代表华盛顿石油工业的美国石油协会首席执行官迈克·萨默斯的话来说,这场辩论更加“平衡”和“自然”。


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – Oil ministers and fossil-fuel company executives descended on Canada’s energy capital this week for the World Petroleum Congress. And even as oil prices threatened to break the $100-per-barrel mark, it was the global transition to cleaner energy that was the focus of proceedings. Here are some of the main takeaways from the event in Calgary.

World Petroleum Congress: Oil, gas industry “more comfortable than ever” with energy transition- oil and gas 360

Source: World Oil

Saudi show of strength. After missing the previous congress in Houston in 2021 as Covid scrambled countless travel plans, the Saudis were back this year, and in a big way. Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman was the star of the opening session on Monday. He said OPEC is targeting market stability and not higher prices, and sounded a note of caution on Chinese demand. Crude futures duly slipped back on his comments, but that only underlined the strength of Saudi influence on the oil market right now. Saudi Aramco boss Amin Nasser followed with a withering assessment of the idea of peak oil consumption.

The country’s sizable delegation was unmissable in the exhibition halls. Monday ended with a lavish roundtable dinner hosted by the Saudis and with guests including Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, investors, analysts, and officials from bp Plc and other companies.

Oil isn’t going anywhere. Producers are planning on sticking around for a lot longer than their opponents would like. Energy executives pointed to the relentless rise in global energy demand, especially in less developed countries, and the challenges in relying entirely on renewables.

That’s not to say emissions were ignored, as much of the event was taken up with discussion of carbon capture and storage. Smith, the Alberta premier, appeared to sum up the mood. “We are transitioning away from emissions,” she said. “We are not transitioning away from oil and natural gas.”

Carbon capture is happening. From Exxon Mobil Corp. and Norway’s Equinor ASA to China’s Sinopec, there was apparent unanimity in Calgary that carbon capture and storage, or CCS, is central to the industry’s future.

CCS’s elevation can be explained in large part because it promises to allow production of oil and gas at or close to current levels, along with significant cuts to carbon emissions. Then there’s the 45Q tax credit and the subsequent incentives in Inflation Reduction Act in the U.S. The credits “kind of pumped the tires on it, so we’ve got a lot of really good momentum now, almost to the point where we are victims of our own success,” said Corwyn Bruce, Project Director of Edmonton CCUS, which is working on a project for an Alberta cement factory. “There’s too much work to do.”

Transition talk isn’t scary. If this week’s event was anything to go by, the oil and gas industry is more comfortable than ever with the concept of the energy transition.

The comfort level is also tied to the potential of CCS, which offers the prospect of the industry being able to meet emissions targets more on its own terms. And there was a clear sense that the industry feels the dialog on the transition is no longer being dominated by its opponents. The debate is more “balanced” and “mature,” in the words of Mike Sommers, the Chief Executive Officer of the American Petroleum Institute, which represents the oil industry in Washington.