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Autor Tópico: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal  (Lida 297313 vezes)

I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1580 em: 2023-01-25 01:37:28 »
Mais um artigo e um comentário interessantes, acerca da energia e da segurança energética:

«Energy Security Was The Most Important Topic In 2022
By Alex Kimani - Jan 19, 2023, 9:00 AM CST

    Energy security became a leading topic among decision-makers last year.
    Decarbonization takes a back seat amid the rush to secure sufficient energy supplies.
    Energy Intel: European oil majors to continue to succumb to pressure on decarbonization spending.

The Energy Intelligence 2023 outlook report sheds light on a very important sentiment that will guide the market this year: It’s not the energy transition or even the affordability of energy that is on the top of everyone’s mind. It’s the security of supply that trumps everything.

The industry priority is energy security this year, and while that does not mean that decarbonization will be sidelined, it does mean that it’s not the year’s top priority. Even more shocking, based on the results of a Energy Intel’s survey is that affordability does not top the agenda despite the wildly high oil and gas prices we saw in the first half of 2022.

“Energy Intelligence does not believe the crisis will derail decarbonization. Rather, energy security challenges will underscore the transition’s untidy trajectory (uneven pace, regional differences),” the outlook noted.

Over 60% of industry figures surveyed by Energy Intel said security of supply topped their agendas, while fewer than 30% chose affordability and only around 10% chose decarbonization.

Europe is the biggest risk to global energy security, according to the report, with the continent’s energy system set to “face the greatest shocks, as it continues to slash its dependence on Russian energy and reorder its energy mix”.

Particularly for natural gas, the global energy industry sees Europe’s quest to source new supplies as forcing prices higher and prompting more government intervention as a result. While Energy Intel analysts hold the view that while LNG supply looks good long-term, the market’s current tightness will take years to sort out.

The report cites some 70 million tons per year of LNG ventures set for FDIs this year, which will help with energy security in the long term, but do little to assuage tightness in the short-term. A new supply wave is expected around 2025 or 2026 to help counteract that tightness with another 150 million tons under construction, but until then, supply will be an issue. Energy Intel is also concerned about the 70 million tons per year that could reach a final investment decision this year. There are issues that may get in the way of that, including cost inflation that could lead to FDI delays. Additionally, if market participants start to feel that we might get into a state of oversupply in the future, some of those projects might be delayed as they take stock of the situation.

What does this all mean for decarbonization?

While new low carbon technology will continue to lead the energy transition this year, it has taken a back seat to concerns about energy security.

Related: UK’s Top Oil Producer To Cut Jobs Over Windfall Tax

The energy transition has not been derailed, nor has it lost its momentum; however, Energy Intel notes that its progress will be “uneven” and “untidy”.

Even though energy supply tops the agenda, Energy Intel expects European oil majors to continue to succumb to pressure on decarbonization spending and sees them having limited flexibility to spend on oil and gas in any aggressive manner. American companies will have an easier time spending on upstream oil and gas, but will also be expected to maintain a strong focus on the energy transition. National oil companies in the rest of the world will continue to try to increase oil and gas output.

The issue of energy security is clearly topping the industry’s agenda in the United States, though shareholders will continue to maintain pressure on companies for their transition strategies.

The American Petroleum Institute (API) has placed new oil and gas permitting reform at the top of its agenda for U.S. lawmakers to address this year, noting that “In the past year, the global energy crisis, driven by surging post-pandemic demand outstripping supply and exacerbated by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, has shown that the world needs American energy leadership now more than ever.”

It’s also a key issue at the World Economic Forum (WEF) going on now in Davos, Switzerland, where the Saudi foreign minister reminded everyone on Tuesday that geopolitical stability is the key. While noting that Saudi Arabia is investing nearly $200 billion in renewable energy, “in the meantime, we need to maintain a supply of traditional energies that are priced in a way that ensures stability …”.

The bottom line, which appears to be supported by Energy Intelligence’s own 2023 outlook report, is that energy security takes top priority. And if it is not given top priority, it would likely serve to undermine a net-zero transition.

As Davos unfolds, this becomes even clearer. While Putin’s war has sent the world into upheaval and sparked an energy crisis, an article published by WEF warns against blaming the entire crisis on this event, which would mean dangerously “ignoring other underlying risks to energy security”.

“Even in the absence of the attack, risks to energy security would loom on the horizon as an unprecedented upheaval of the energy sector unfolds in unpredictable ways,” the article notes. “The transition to clean energy is among the most geopolitically disruptive forces of the 21st Century, even while the prospect of a net-zero future will mitigate some traditional energy security risks.”

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com»


«Mamdouh Salameh on January 19 2023 said:

I start with the premise that the global economy will continue to be driven by oil and gas throughout the 21st century and probably far beyond.

If this is the case, then energy security (meaning the availability of energy for the proper functioning of the global economy at whatever level of prices) is quintessential. It follows that energy security and the needs of the economy twill always take precedence over the dictates of climate change, energy transition and zero emissions.

A case in point from the distant past is the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour which brought the United States into WW2. It was energy security that prompted Japan to attack Pearl Harbour. In July 25, 1941 the United States announced a freeze on Japanese funds in US banks necessary for Japan to buy American crude oil and petroleum products, which in practice meant an embargo on oil thus leading to the attack on Pearl Harbour.

In 2022 it was energy security that has led the EU to resume its use of coal and to resurrect coal-fired electricity-generation plants despite the fact that before the crisis, the EU never stopped lecturing the world virtually on daily basis about energy transition and climate change.

Another case in point is China. Energy security occupies China’s strategic thinking all the time. The Chinese government views the country’s dependence on imported oil as a chink in its armour that must be defended at any cost. That is why China currently spending billions of dollars on defending the shipping lanes that are vital to its oil lifeline, namely the Straits of Hormuz and Malacca. It has also been building oil pipelines to enhance its energy security such as the China-Myanmar crude oil pipeline which runs from the port of Kyaukpyu on Myanmar’s west coast and enters China at Ruili in Yunnan Province. China has also been considering a multi-billion-dollar pipeline that would carry crude oil from Pakistan’s coastal port of Gwadar to Western China.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert »

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Energy-Security-Was-The-Most-Important-Topic-In-2022.html
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1581 em: 2023-01-26 00:41:56 »
Outro artigo interessante e actual:


«Windfall Taxes Will Stifle Oil Industry Investments

By Irina Slav - Jan 19, 2023, 7:00 PM CST


    As the energy crisis triggered a cost-of-living crisis governments around the world have turned to windfall taxes on the oil industry to raise funds.
    While it might seem like a good short-term solution, the consequence of windfall taxes on the future of the oil and gas industry could be significant.
    Plenty of energy companies have been complaining about the losses and warning of falling investments, while others are suing governments.


Windfall taxes have suddenly become quite popular. With oil and gas companies reaping record profits from the rally in energy commodity prices, governments have been unable to resist the temptation to skim a bit more of these profits.

It’s hard to blame them - the energy crisis has pushed most governments in Europe to come up with billions in aid for households and businesses. In the UK, millions have slipped into energy poverty, and the government has had to act urgently, too. India has also imposed a windfall tax on crude oil and fuels.

Yet while it seems like an easy way to find some extra money to spend on helping businesses and households survive the cost-of-living crisis, windfall taxes are tricky because they discourage investments.

Windfall taxes are counterproductive for the oil industry at a time when oil demand is forecast to outpace supply, Aramco’s chief executive Amin Nasser told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble this week. And they would also discourage investments in decarbonization efforts.

“I would say it’s not helpful for them [in order] to have additional investment. They need to invest in the sector; they need to grow the business, in alternatives and in conventional energy, and they need to be helped,” Nasser said.

“Decarbonizing existing resources also costs a lot of money,” he said. “So we need to see the support from the policymakers and from the capital markets at the same time. Capital markets [are] putting a lot of pressure also on these companies, where it makes it too difficult for them to make some of these investments and get the right funding and capital,” Aramco’s top executive also said.

Related: High Oil Prices And Mineral Demand Fuel Growth In Latin America

Indeed, so far, the windfall tax has been presented to the public as something of a punishment for Big Oil for making so much money from oil and gas when millions have been struggling to pay their bills—a well-deserved punishment. There has been no mention of what the impact of these taxes would be on future investment decisions, at least not from politicians.

The oil and gas companies themselves have been quite vocal about that impact. UK oil and gas producer Harbour Energy this week announced job cuts stemming from the 35-percent windfall tax that the industry has been slapped with. Shell said the windfall taxes in the EU and the UK will cost it some $2.4 billion.

Total estimated the hit from the windfall levy at around $2.1 billion after saying it would reduce investments in the North Sea by a quarter this year. The UK’s windfall tax will cost the French supermajor around $1 billion.

Some are going further than complaining. Hungarian energy major MOL is suing the government of Slovakia for the windfall tax it imposed on energy firms. Exxon is suing the entire European Union, arguing it exceeded its legal authority with this move. And the energy industry association in Britain has warned that financing for new oil and gas projects will dry up because of the additional levy.

It makes sense that when additional taxes discourage investments, they won’t only discourage specific investments but would rather lead to a comprehensive reconsideration of investment plans, including low-carbon projects.

What’s more, the European Union has targeted wind and solar power producers with windfall taxes, too, arguing that they have raked in massive profits from producing low-cost electricity because prices are formed on the basis of gas prices, and these have been sky-high. This, too, has prompted a backlash.

All this is happening at a time when the International Energy Agency—a champion for a quick energy transition—forecast oil demand will this year grow by 1.9 million bpd while supply growth slows to 1 million bpd. It’s hardly the best time to discourage any energy investments.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Windfall-Taxes-Will-Stifle-Oil-Industry-Investments.html
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1582 em: 2023-01-26 03:52:11 »
Mais um artigo interessante, desta vez acerca da exploração de petróleo no Suriname:


«Suriname’s Oil Boom Hits A $10 Billion Snag
By Matthew Smith - Jan 20, 2023, 5:00 PM CST

    Suriname’s offshore oil basins have shown tremendous promise.
    Conflicting seismic data has delayed Apache and TotalEnergies FID on a key block in the region.
    There is some speculation the FID will be made by mid-2023.


A series of high-quality oil discoveries in Block 58 offshore Suriname combined with investment bank Morgan Stanley estimating that the block contains 6.5 billion barrels of oil sparked optimism that Suriname will replicate Guyana’s immense oil boom. This is bolstered by evidence that the U.S. Geological Survey grossly underestimated the Guyana-Suriname Basin’s oil resources. Disappointingly, after Block 58’s partners Apache and TotalEnergies made five commercial discoveries since 2020 they have delayed making the final investment decision (FID) which was expected by the end of 2022. That FID is crucial for moving Suriname’s nascent oil boom from the exploration phase to production. This development means the former Dutch colony will not become a major oil producer and exporter as soon as anticipated, thereby delaying the tremendous economic windfall anticipated by the national government in Paramaribo.

The first oil discovery in offshore Suriname was announced by Apache in January 2020, five years after ExxonMobil struck oil in neighboring Guyana in what is now the very prolific offshore Stabroek Block. That first find was made with the Maka Central-1 well in Block 58, which struck 240 feet (73 meters) of oil pay and 164 feet (50 meters) of light oil and gas condensate pay. This, according to Apache, at the time, confirmed the geological modeling of the block. The partners then went on to make four further commercial oil discoveries and two non-viable finds in Block 58. The most important is the Sapakara discovery which Apache estimates to contain 400 million barrels or more of recoverable oil resources. Appraisal activities are ongoing at the Sapakara South-2 well, where flow-test operations were being undertaken during November 2022. Apache and TotalEnergies have yet to provide an update on those activities.

Offshore Suriname Block 58 is believed to possess considerable oil potential because it is situated adjacent to offshore Guyana’s prolific Stabroek Block and is predicted to contain the same petroleum fairway.

Source: Apache Investor Update September 2022.

Block 58 is believed to hold at least five billion barrels of recoverable oil resources, perhaps as high as 6.5 billion barrels, according to modeling conducted by U.S. investment bank Morgan Stanley. Apache’s August 2022 oil discovery with the Baja-1 well in Block 53 offshore Suriname, which gave the former Dutch colony’s oil prospects a solid boost, also confirmed the considerable hydrocarbon potential thought to be contained in Block 58. Suriname’s national oil company Staatsolie anticipates that the impoverished former Dutch colony’s territorial waters could contain as much as 30 billion barrels of recoverable oil resources. This will be a tremendous economic boon for a deeply impoverished South American nation where gross domestic product contracted 3.5% during 2021 when other regional countries experienced strong post-pandemic growth.

Apache and TotalEnergies’ discoveries are comprised of medium to light sweet crude oil and condensates with API gravities of 34 degrees to 60 degrees and low sulfur content. Those characteristics are like the crude oil found by ExxonMobil in the neighboring Stabroek Block offshore Guyana, with Liza grade petroleum possessing an API gravity of 32 degrees and 0.58% sulfur content. This is particularly important because of the growing push to decarbonize the global economy and ever stricter emission regulations for fossil fuels. Lighter, sweeter petroleum is easier, cheaper and less carbon-intensive to extract than the heavier sourer grades lifted in South America such as Venezuela’s Merey, Colombia’s Castilla and Ecuador’s Napo. They are also less complex and cheaper to refine into high-quality low, emission fuels.

Those attributes enhance offshore Suriname’s attractiveness as an area for foreign energy companies seeking to boost oil reserves and production, especially with the world economy being progressively decarbonized. It is for these reasons industry analysts and Suriname’s government in Paramaribo were expecting a massive oil boom, mirroring that in neighboring Guyana, to takeoff with production forecast to reach an impressive 650,000 barrels per day by 2030. There are signs, however, this will not occur with the first oil still some way off because it will take considerable time and investment to ramp up operations to the point where production reaches anywhere near that volume.

A major headwind is Apache and TotalEnergies’ decision to delay the FID for Block 58. Paramaribo had anticipated the FID would occur before the end of 2022 but owing to a range of anomalies detected by TotalEnergies, which became the operator of Block 58 on 1 January 2021, it has been deferred. TotalEnergies’ CEO Patrick Pouyanne blamed the delay on contradictory seismic data and results from delineation wells. There has also been a sharp increase in the volume of dry wells being drilled in Block 58, contrary to the expectations set by earlier discoveries and geological data, magnifying concerns about the commercial viability of operations.

In late November 2022, it was announced that the Awari exploration well was found to be non-commercial, capped and abandoned. That disappointing result came on the back of the August 2022 announcement that the Dikkop well in Block 58 encountered water-bearing sandstone, which saw it capped and abandoned. Apache also announced during November 2021 a non-commercial black oil discovery in Block 58 at the Bonboni-1 well. The single pay zone of 52 feet, or 16 meters, containing black oil with an API gravity of 25 degrees was deemed insufficient to support the commercial development of the discovery. Those poor drilling results, which are in stark contrast to earlier discoveries and conflicting geological data, are a key reason for TotalEnergies’ decision to delay the FID.

At this time, there is no indication as to when the FID will be made other than speculation that it will occur by mid-2023. The considerable concern regarding the outlook for Block 58 is justified when it is considered that it will take up to $10 billion to develop what is shaping up to be a problematic block that may not be the next Stabroek. This is weighing on Paramaribo’s plans to develop Suriname’s offshore oil potential and give the economy a solid boost through a massive oil boom. Neighboring Guyana saw its GDP expand by a whopping 58% in 2022. These latest developments could also impact the success of Suriname’s long awaited Demara Bid Round, which was opened in November 2022, where six offshore blocks are on offer and bids close on 28 April 2023.

By Matthew Smith for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Surinames-Oil-Boom-Hits-A-10-Billion-Snag.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1583 em: 2023-01-26 17:38:32 »
Entretanto, o frio intensifica-se... (será o famoso "global warming"?)  :(

«China's Northernmost City Sees Lowest Temperatures Ever Recorded
Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
Tuesday, Jan 24, 2023 - 04:40 AM

China's "North Pole" recorded its lowest temperature since records began.

The Chinese city of Mohe dropped to minus 53 degrees Celsius Sunday, according to China Daily, citing data from the country's local weather bureau.

The frigid temperatures broke a previous record of minus 52.3 degrees Celsius. Temperatures have been below minus 50 degrees Celsius for three consequence days.»


https://www.zerohedge.com/weather/chinas-northernmost-city-sees-lowest-temperatures-ever-recorded
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1584 em: 2023-01-26 18:48:46 »
«O Inverno mais frio dos últimos 15 anos, que viu as temperaturas baixarem até -34 graus Celsius»

«Frio

Inverno afegão: mais de 160 pessoas já morreram com o frio

As pessoas não conseguem pagar combustível para aquecer casas com temperaturas abaixo de zero, no Inverno mais frio dos últimos 15 anos. “As crianças acordam de frio e choram à noite, até de manhã.”
Reuters   
26 de Janeiro de 2023, 18:44

Use as ferramentas de partilha que encontra na página de artigo.
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https://www.publico.pt/2023/01/26/azul/noticia/inverno-afegao-160-pessoas-ja-morreram-frio-2036526

"Até agora, 162 pessoas morreram devido ao frio desde 10 de Janeiro", disse Shafiullah Rahimi, porta-voz do Ministro da Gestão de Catástrofes. Cerca de 84 das mortes ocorreram na última semana.

O Inverno mais frio dos últimos 15 anos, que viu as temperaturas baixarem até -34 graus Celsius, atingiu o Afeganistão no meio de uma grave crise económica.

Muitos grupos de ajuda suspenderam parcialmente as operações nas últimas semanas devido a uma decisão da administração Talibã de que a maioria das trabalhadoras de ONG não podia trabalhar, deixando as agências incapazes de operar muitos programas no país conservador.

Num campo coberto de neve no oeste da capital afegã há crianças a vasculhar o lixo à procura de plástico para queimar para ajudar as suas famílias, impossibilitadas de comprar lenha ou carvão.

Nas proximidades, o lojista Ashour Ali, de 30 anos, vive com a sua família numa cave de betão, onde os seus cinco filhos tremem de frio. "Este ano, o tempo está extremamente frio e não podíamos comprar carvão", confirmou, acrescentando que a pequena quantidade de dinheiro que ganha da sua loja já não é suficiente para pagar o combustível.

"As crianças acordam de frio e choram à noite, até de manhã. Estão todas doentes. Até agora, não recebemos qualquer ajuda e não temos sequer pão suficiente para comer a maior parte do tempo".

Durante uma visita a Cabul esta semana, o chefe da ajuda humanitária da ONU, Martin Griffiths, disse que a organização mundial estava a procurar isenções à proibição da maioria das trabalhadoras humanitárias que chegou numa das alturas mais vulneráveis para muitos afegãos.

"O Inverno afegão, como todos no Afeganistão sabem é o grande mensageiro da desgraça para tantas famílias, e à medida que atravessamos estes muitos anos de necessidade humanitária vemos algumas das consequências na perda de vidas", disse Griffiths à Reuters.»


https://www.publico.pt/2023/01/26/azul/noticia/inverno-afegao-160-pessoas-ja-morreram-frio-2036526
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1585 em: 2023-01-27 23:51:55 »
Mais um artigo e comentários interessantes.


«Offshore Oil And Gas Is Back, Baby
By Irina Slav - Jan 23, 2023, 7:00 PM CST

    A flurry of massive deals has breathed life into the offshore oil and gas industry.
    The biggest deal was QatarEnergy’s contract with McDermott for expanding the production capacity at the North Field.
    Offshore drilling is picking up everywhere as demand shows no signs of declining, no matter what apocalyptic visions climate speakers try to paint.

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At last week’s World Economic Forum gathering in Davos, several speakers had harsh words for the oil and gas industry, including UN head Antonio Guterres and the IEA’s chief Fatih Birol. Their message was clear: we need to stop producing oil and gas to solve the climate problem.

While this was happening, however, the world continued to need energy, and oil and gas continued to be the optimal form of energy for most of the things we need energy for. So, with demand forecast—including by the IEA—to surge this year above the growth rate of supply, new drilling is flourishing. Especially offshore.

In December last year, Oilprice reported that the stocks of offshore drilling contractors such as Transocean, Valaris, and Noble Corp were skyrocketing amid robust demand for their services, with day rates for drilling rigs surging as well.

Now, the Wall Street Journal is reporting that rates could top $500,000 per day, up from about $400,000 at the moment, with offshore drilling picking up everywhere as demand shows no signs it is about to start declining, no matter what apocalyptic visions climate speakers try to paint.

“Over the past year and a half, everyone started drilling again offshore, and they want to use the most efficient rigs and all of a sudden, bam!” Noble Corp chief executive Robert Eifler told the Wall Street Journal. “After eight years we basically have full utilization of the high-end drillship fleet.”

A roundup of the biggest deals signed in the offshore drilling industry last year reinforces the perception of a strong revival. The biggest deal was QatarEnergy’s contract with McDermott for expanding the production capacity at the North Field, which McDermott said is one of the largest single deals in its history.

Qatar was also involved in the second-largest offshore deal for 2022, with Italy’s Saipem, again for the North Field, which is understandable as the Qatari government plans to boost the country’s LNG production capacity from 77 million tons annually to 110 million tons. That means there will be a lot of work for offshore drilling contractors.

Adnoc is also boosting its production capacity with the help of Schlumberger and Halliburton, which got two contracts with the Emirati major last year worth some $4 billion. The same is true for Aramco, which has announced plans to increase its oil production capacity by 1 million barrels daily to a total of 13 million. According to Evercore, most of Saudi Arabia’s—and the UAE’s—new capacity will come from offshore developments.

Norway is also eyeing strong expansion of its oil and gas drilling, all of which takes place offshore, despite previous government pledges for a gradual reduction in oil and gas production and a shift towards renewable energy. Earlier this month, Norway’s petroleum ministry awarded 47 new exploration licenses to 25 companies.

Offshore drilling is booming in Brazil, Guyana, and Suriname as well, per the Wall Street Journal. Brazil’s Petrobras said it will boost spending between 2023 and 2027, with most of the money going into exploration and production. Guyana is enjoying the results of a string of offshore discoveries that have boosted the tiny nation’s oil exports by 164 percent in 2022, with revenues hitting $1.1 billion. Suriname is seemingly on Guyana’s path to oil riches, although it is meeting some challenges.

Analyst expectations about the offshore drilling market appear to be upbeat. Oil prices are higher than they were in 2019, oil demand is strong, and offshore drilling contractors are turning a nice profit. Deepwater drilling is particularly attractive since that’s where most of the world’s untapped oil resources are.

According to data from Westwood Global Energy Group, some 90 percent of the world’s offshore rigs were contracted to work or were already working as of last December. That’s up from about 60 percent five years earlier, the WSJ noted in its report.

This surge in demand for offshore drilling, especially in deep waters, has also revived demand for drillships that were put offline during the pandemic and the industry downturn it caused. Drillships cost about $100 million to put back online, and owners are demanding most of the money upfront.

And their clients are paying it: the WSJ notes a deal between Valaris and Equinor for a drillship that was sent to drill in the deep waters offshore Brazil. Of the total value of the deal—$327 million—$86 million was paid upfront, including for the reactivation of the vessel.

So, despite increasingly loud calls for what effectively amounts to shutting down the oil and gas industry, the real world is demanding more oil and gas, and the industry is delivering. From the shores of Brazil to the North Sea and the Persian Gulf, drilling contractors are putting up rigs to pump more oil and gas from underneath the seabed. Analysts are calling it a supercycle.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com»


«Lee James on January 24 2023 said:

I agree that off-shore drilling has been given a short shrift. It is part of maligning the fossil fuel industry, in general.

However, last time I looked carefully, off-shore work is very expensive. We will need to look not only at the investment dollars devoted to off-shore, but also the return on investment.

We need the petroleum. Now to see whether oil prices will support high production cost.

It is in part the higher cost for producing fossil fuel that also drives the effort to find alternatives, like clean energy.»


«Mamdouh Salameh on January 24 2023 said:

Both The UN Head Antonio Guterres and the IEA Chief Fatih Birol tried to ingratiate themselves with the environmental lobby when they spoke last week at the World Economic Forum gathering in Davos, Switzerland calling for a halt to the production of oil and gas to solve the climate change.

But they are out of touch with reality by ignoring that fossil fuels will continue to drive the global economy throughout the 21st century and probably far beyond.

The whole world knows that at the root of the current global energy crisis is underinvestment in the exploration for oil and gas and the expansion of their production capacity and also the hasty and reckless policies of the EU in trying to accelerate energy transition to renewables at the expense of fossil fuels.

Therefore, any investments to develop offshore oil and gas should be welcomed with open arms.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Offshore-Oil-And-Gas-Is-Back-Baby.html
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1586 em: 2023-02-02 00:06:08 »
Um artigo interessante e muito recente:


«U.S. Monthly Crude Oil Production Falls

By Julianne Geiger - Feb 01, 2023, 5:30 PM CST

Crude oil production in the United States fell in November, new data from the Energy Information Administration shows.

U.S. crude oil production fell to an average of 12.375 million bpd in November—down 35,000 bpd from the month prior. It is the latest monthly production data to be released by the EIA. It is the highest average monthly production level since March 2020.

In November 2019, U.S. crude oil production reached an all-time high of 13 million bpd, but fell spectacularly in early 2020 after the pandemic set in.

EIA figures for the weekly production of crude oil in the United States painted a different picture of November production, with each week reportedly averaging 12.1 million bpd. Weekly production shows December production nearly the same, with a slight 100,000 bpd uptick so far during the first three weeks of January.

Meanwhile, EIA data showed that demand for U.S. crude oil—and the petroleum products associated with it—rose 178,000 bpd in November to 20.59 million bpd.

In its most recent Short-Term Energy Outlook, the EIA projected that the United States would produce 12.4 million bpd this year and 12.81 million barrels of crude oil per day by 2024—with both years breaking the annual record average of 12.3 million bpd reached in 2019.

The EIA’s projections see output from the Permian increasing by 470,000 bpd to a record 5.7 million bpd this year—a figure that has been questioned by some industry analysts.

The EIA has estimated that the price of a Brent barrel will drop by 18% this year compared to 2022 levels, with WTI falling to $77 per barrel this year.

The millions of barrels of crude oil sold into commercial inventories from the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserves came to an end in the first week of January, and in combination with falling production, could be seen as a bullish signal.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com»


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/US-Monthly-Crude-Oil-Production-Falls.html
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« Responder #1587 em: 2023-02-04 14:36:55 »
Mais efeitos do famigerado "aquecimento global":


«Coldest wind chill ever recorded in continental US, say forecasters

    Published

    10 hours ago

Media caption,

A powerful arctic blast grips North America
By Sam Cabral & Nadine Yousif
BBC News, Washington and Toronto

Forecasters say the coldest wind chill ever has been recorded in the continental US as an Arctic cold snap freezes a swathe of North America.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said the icy gusts on Mount Washington in New Hampshire on Friday produced a wind chill of -108F (-78C).

Nearly 100 million people across the north-eastern US and Canada are shivering in the frigid blast.

Authorities warned frostbite could strike in less than 10 minutes.

Residents from Manitoba to Maine are being urged to limit their time outdoors until Saturday in the "once-in-a-generation" cold snap.

The NWS said the actual temperature on the summit of Mount Washington at 20:00 on Friday (01:00 GMT Saturday) was down to -46F - the coldest ever recorded there.

    What is wind chill factor?
    A guide to surviving extreme cold
    Mild winter leaves famed skating rink on thin ice

The combined effect of wind and cold is also expected to bring some of the lowest wind chill temperatures since the 1980s in the New England state of Maine, as well as in Quebec and parts of eastern Canada.

Power companies were expecting historic levels of energy consumption into Saturday morning during the coldest period.

Boston is under a cold emergency. Public schools have been closed in the city, as well as in nearby Worcester and in Buffalo, New York.

New York City - which could see wind chills as low as -10F (-23C) - has enacted an emergency designation that allows the homeless to go to any shelter to seek warmth.

Nor were the Midwestern states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Indiana, Illinois and Ohio spared by the freezing temperatures.

Parts of Canada were expecting temperatures as low as -58F. An extreme cold advisory issued by Environment Canada on Friday morning blanketed the Maritimes, most of Quebec and all of Ontario, spilling into Manitoba.

In Toronto, the wind chill plunged the temperature to -29C (-20F) on Friday.

Forecasters predict temperatures will rebound by the end of the weekend.

The drop in temperatures is attributed to a powerful Arctic front that stretches from the Canadian maritime provinces to the core of the US.

The brutal winter weather follows this week's deadly ice storm in parts of Texas, where temperatures have begun to climb above freezing, and ice was expected to melt on Friday.

At least 11 people have died in the bad weather in the US south since Monday. There were eight fatalities in Texas, two in Oklahoma and one in Arkansas.

More than 250,000 people were still without power as of Friday night in Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee and New York, according to poweroutage.us.»


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-64485092
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« Responder #1588 em: 2023-02-06 02:25:32 »
Mais um artigo interessante e o respectivo comentário do bem conhecido especialista Dr Mamdouh G. Salameh:


«WoodMac: 2022 Saw Bigger Better And More Strategic Oil Discoveries
By Alex Kimani - Feb 01, 2023, 7:00 PM CST

    After years of low exploration expenditure, oil companies were spending more on exploration in 2022.
    WoodMac: exploration well numbers in 2022 were less than half the numbers during pre-pandemic years, but the volumes were good.
    WoodMac: the highest value came from several new deepwater discoveries in Guyana and Brazil; world-class discoveries in a new deepwater play in Namibia; and resource additions in Algeria.


When the energy crisis hit a nadir two years ago, highly indebted oil and gas companies quickly changed their playbook, adopting stricter cost discipline, cutting back on expensive drilling programs and vowing to return more cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks. Many energy companies are still reluctant to go back to their trigger-happy exploration and drilling days despite high oil and gas prices and record profits, and have mainly been falling back on their dwindling stocks of drilled but uncompleted wells (DUCs) to keep going.

But these companies have also perfected a new trick: focusing their energies on low-cost, lower-carbon but high-yield assets. According to Wood Mackenzie’s ‘Oil and gas exploration 2022 edition, exploration well numbers in 2022 were less than half the numbers during pre-pandemic years, yet the total volume of 20 billion barrels of oil equivalent matched was comparable to the average in the 2013 – 2019 period, creating at least $S33 billion of value.

“2022 was a standout year for exploration,” says Julie Wilson, Director of global exploration research at Wood Mackenzie. 

While volumes were good, Wilson says, they aren’t “stellar”.

Still, she says, “explorers were able to drive very high value through strategic selection and focusing on the best and largest prospects”.

Related: Everybody Loves Oil Again

The end result is that we’re seeing new discoveries with higher-quality hydrocarbons in portfolios. And it’s also better for the climate because these more strategic discoveries allow companies to “reduce carbon by displacing less advantaged oil and gas supplies while also meeting the world’s energy needs,” according to Wilson.

Wood Mac says that the highest value came from several new deepwater discoveries in Guyana and Brazil; world-class discoveries in a new deepwater play in Namibia; and resource additions in Algeria.

The average discovery last year was over 150 million boe, more than double the average of the previous decade. National oil companies (NOCs) and oil majors accounted for nearly 75% of new discoveries, with Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) TotalEnergies (NYSE:TTE), Petrobras (NYSE: PBR) and QatarEnergy leading the way in net new discovered resources.

Another interesting development: Liquids accounted for 60% of new discoveries, marking just the third time in two decades that liquids made up the majority of new discoveries.

Exxon Makes More Oil And Gas Discoveries Offshore Guyana

Back in October, U.S. oil and gas major Exxon Mobil announced that it had made two more discoveries at the Sailfin-1 and Yarrow-1 wells in the Stabroek block offshore Guyana, bringing discoveries on the block to more than 30 since 2015.

Exxon revealed that the Sailfin-1 well was drilled in 4,616 feet of water and encountered 312 feet of hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone, while the Yarrow-1 well was drilled in 3,560 feet of water and encountered 75 feet of hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone. Exxon, however, did not disclose how much crude oil or gas it estimates the new discoveries to contain, but hiked a previous output forecast for the third quarter from older discoveries in the region.

The company says it has ramped up development and production offshore Guyana at a pace that "far exceeds the industry average”, Exxon’s two sanctioned offshore Guyana projects, Liza Phase 1 and Liza Phase 2, are now producing above design capacity and have already achieved an average of nearly 360K bbl/day of oil. Exxon recently guided its Permian holdings to hit ~1M boe/day in production by 2027, up from a previous forecast of 800K. The company also increased gross production in Guyana by more than 160K bbl/day.

Exxon said a third project, Payara, is expected to launch by year-end 2023 while a fourth project, Yellowtail, could kick off operations in 2025.

Exxon is the operator of the Stabroek block where it holds a 45% interest while partners Hess Corp. (NYSE: HES) and Cnooc (OTCPK: CEOHF) hold a 30% and 25% interest, respectively. Exxon’s oil and gas production are well below record levels, averaging 3.7M boe/day at midyear, in-line with last year but nearly 9% below 4.1M boe/day achieved in 2016.

On Monday, Exxon reported Q4 Non-GAAP EPS of $3.40, beating the Wall Street consensus by $0.12 while revenue of $95.43B (+12.3% Y/Y) beat by $5.22B. In 2022, Exxon Mobil earnings skyrocketed 160% to $14.06 per share while sales edged up 45% to $413.68 billion. For the full year, the oil and gas giant generated earnings of $55.7 billion and $76.8 billion of cash flow from operating activities. Net-debt-to-capital ratio improved to about 5%, with the company managing to retire $7.2 billion in debt in 2022 and managed to close the year with a cash balance of $29.7 billion, providing greater financial flexibility and further strengthening the balance sheet.

XOM stock is up 8.9% in the year-to-date and is trading close to its all-time high.

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com»



«Mamdouh Salameh on February 02 2023 said:

International Oil Companies (IOCs) have no alternative but to use advances of technology in their choice of exploration sites and invest in low-cost and high-yield prospects. The reason is that time is running out on them.

The global oil market is undergoing a major shift in the balance of power from IOCs to National Oil Companies (NOCs). This shift is being accelerated by growing resource nationalism by oil-producing nations wanting to develop whatever oil resources are left underground to maximize their revenues before these resources are depleted.

Combined remaining proven reserves of the top ten IOCs are projected to last from 8-10 years compared with the NOCs Like Saudi Aramco, UAE’s ADNOC and Kuwait National Oil company and others who have access to reserves lasting up to 100 years.

As this trend accelerates, IOCs will become much smaller in size and could easily become vulnerable to hostile takeover by major predators including NOCs.

Of course there are those who maintain that by 2030 new oil and gas assets could end up as stranded assets. My answer to that that they are deluding themselves since oil and gas are projected to continue driving the global economy throughout the 21st century and probably far beyond.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/WoodMac-2022-Saw-Bigger-Better-And-More-Strategic-Oil-Discoveries.html
« Última modificação: 2023-02-06 02:27:22 por Kaspov »
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« Responder #1589 em: 2023-02-11 10:44:55 »
O movimento do petróleo esta semana foi de subida, mas acho que vai ser "sol de pouca dura" pelo que vejo quedas já na proxima semana. (Não estou investido)

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« Responder #1590 em: 2023-02-11 13:31:25 »
O movimento do petróleo esta semana foi de subida, mas acho que vai ser "sol de pouca dura" pelo que vejo quedas já na proxima semana. (Não estou investido)

É bem possível. O preço do petróleo oscila muito...
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« Responder #1591 em: 2023-02-14 20:23:01 »
Um comentário fresquinho:


«Mamdouh Salameh on February 14 2023 said:

UAE’s Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei warned that the real problem that will face the global oil market in 2024 will be a lack of supply rather than demand as evidenced by production decline in many oil-producing countries. This trend is the result of years of chronic underinvestment in exploration and expansion of oil and gas production capacities.

His message echoed a similar message yesterday from Saudi Aramco’s CEO Amin Nasser who warned yesterday that the global oil industry and energy security could suffer badly as a result of a strict implementation of the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investment with outright bias against the oil industry. The end result will be a continuous underinvestment and also rising cost of investment capital.

The UAE Energy Minister suggested that OPEC+ will not rush to change production quotas in light of Russia’s announcement last week that it would cut its production in March by 500,000 barrels a day (b/d).

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-UAE-Is-Worried-About-An-Oil-Supply-Shortage-In-2024.html
« Última modificação: 2023-02-14 21:32:10 por Kaspov »
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« Responder #1592 em: 2023-02-23 23:14:53 »
Um artigo e um comentário que me parecem muito interessantes e actuais:


«Global Oil Demand Hit Record High In December

By Charles Kennedy - Feb 20, 2023, 9:00 AM CST

    In December, global crude oil demand jumped to 1.3 million barrels per day, the highest level on record.
    While global demand soared in December, production fell to a five-month low due to lower supply from the U.S. and UK.
    The growth in demand in December was mainly driven by higher consumption in Japan, Indonesia, and South Korea.


Global oil demand surged by 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) to a new record high in December, with total demand at 102% above the pre-Covid levels in December 2019, data from the Joint Organizations Data Initiative (JODI) showed on Monday. 

Rising consumption in Japan, Indonesia, and South Korea drove the growth in global oil demand in the last month of 2022, according to the JODI data shared by the Riyadh-based International Energy Forum (IEF). In Japan, total product demand jumped by 512,000 bpd to a 12-month high.

In November, world demand hit a nine-month high, thanks to solid demand in China, India, and Japan, the JODI data showed last month.

In December, while global demand soared, crude oil production fell to a five-month low, dragged down by lower supply from the United States and the United Kingdom, IEF said.



Markets tightened in December compared to November, but global inventories of crude oil and refined products increased counter-seasonally by 5.46 million barrels, according to the data. Yet, inventories remain 354 million barrels below the five-year average.

In other highlights in the report, Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports increased by 157,000 bpd to 7.44 million bpd in December, while crude production dropped by 33,000 bpd to 10.44 million bpd. Crude oil inventories in the world’s top crude exporter declined by 3.05 million barrels in December, while product inventories climbed by 2.66 million barrels, the JODI data showed.

U.S. crude oil production declined by 288,000 bpd to 12.09 million bpd, while total product demand rose by 169,000 bpd to 20.76 million bpd. U.S. crude oil closing stocks fell by 6.55 million barrels to the lowest level recorded in JODI data going back to January 2002. 

World natural gas demand rose in December, but natural gas inventories in the European Union and the UK dropped by 9.5 bcm in December, less than the seasonal average draw of 11.5 bcm, per JODI’s data.   

By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com


(...)


    Mamdouh Salameh on February 20 2023 said:

    This is in line with OPEC+’s projection for global demand growth of 2.3 million barrels a day (mbd) in 2023 rising from 101.3 mbd in 2022 to 103.6 mbd this year.

    This was accounted for by rising consumption in Asia and global oil inventories being 354 million barrels below the five-year average.

    An odd development is that although Saudi crude oil exports rose in December to 7.44 mbd, its production declined to 10.44 and its crude oil inventories also declined by 3.05 mbd at a time it is consuming 3.30 mbd. This confirms what I have been saying all along that Saudi production currently ranges from 6.5-7.0 mbd only with the balance to its production of 10.44 and exports of 7.44 made up from 3.05 mbd withdrawn from its oil inventory.

    Another odd development is that while US crude oil production declined by 288,000 barrels a day (b/d) in December, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) was claiming a US crude production of 12.4 mbd. This is at a time when US shale oil which accounts for 64% of US crude production is a spent force incapable of lifting production beyond 9.5-10.0 mbd. Moreover, US crude imports must have risen in December to 9.06 mbd at a time when the EIA was forecasting that US could become a net crude oil exporter in 2023.

    Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
    International Oil Economist
    Global Energy Expert »


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Global-Oil-Demand-Hit-Record-High-In-December.html
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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1593 em: 2023-03-03 03:47:13 »
Uma previsão fresquinha:


«Mamdouh Salameh on February 27 2023 said:

With a robust global oil demand, OPEC+’s projection of a rise of 2.3 million barrels a day (mbd) in global demand in 2023 and China’s economic rebound, Brent crude oil price could probably hit $90 a barrel in the first half of 2023 and touch $100 during the year.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Top-Energy-Trader-Expects-Oil-Prices-To-Enter-The-90-100-Range.html
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« Responder #1594 em: 2023-03-08 06:18:42 »
Mais um comentário interessante de Harris Kupperman:

«I Just Don’t Know…
February 1, 2023»

«As I analyze the world today, I don’t see many easy calls to make. What sectors are cheap and inflecting positively? In my view, not much outside of offshore energy services and physical uranium. Even guessing the price of oil (where I have a lot of exposure) is fraught with risk—while I think oil is going much higher, there are plenty of variables that go into that calculus, potentially deferring my thesis. At least with offshore energy services, I can look at the backlog and have a good degree of confidence that results will get dramatically better, and with physical uranium, I believe the deficits will blow out to such ludicrous levels that barring a nuclear accident, I cannot fathom how the price isn’t higher in a year. In my view, these are such easy calls to make, that I’ve made them into very substantial positions. Everything else seems like a crapshoot based on macro factors that are difficult to predict over the coming year. That’s not to say that I don’t have other positions, but I have far less confidence that this is the year that they work. Hence, I’m not sizing them up.»

https://adventuresincapitalism.com/2023/02/01/i-just-dont-know/
« Última modificação: 2023-03-08 06:22:23 por Kaspov »
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« Responder #1595 em: 2023-03-08 14:47:21 »
About China:


«Mamdouh Salameh on March 06 2023 said:

Even a China GDP growth of 5% in 2023 could be the envy of the world when compared with the United States’ 2.5% or the anaemic EU’s GDP growth of 0.8%. For a mature economy like China a growth of 5% is a great achievement.

And while the International Monetary Fund (IMF) projects a 5.2% GDP growth for China in 2023, other projections see China’s GDP grow by 6.5% in 2023 and also help the global economy to add 1% to its GDP.

As the world’s largest economy based on purchasing power parity (PPP), the largest importer of crude oil and the biggest consumer of energy, China is and will continue to be the driver of the global economy well into the future.

That is why China’s bullish rebound will eclipse any bearish forces including inflation concerns, further hiking of interest rates by the US Federal Reserve Bank and rumours about a split inside OPEC+ and UAE considering leaving OPEC+.

The UAE derives a lot of benefits from being in OPEC+ prominent among them the influence it derives from belonging to the most influential player in the global oil market. This outweighs by far freeing itself from the shackles of OPEC+s production cuts.

Based on the above, Brent crude could be projected to hit $90 in the first half of 2023 and touch $100 before the end of the year.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert »


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Oil-Price-Rally-Unravels-As-China-Fails-To-Impress.html
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« Responder #1596 em: 2023-03-09 22:33:33 »
«It might be coming to an end...»   (Goehring & Rozencwajg, 2023)


«The End of Abundant Energy: Shale Production and Hubbert's Peak

03/ 09/ 2023

Topics: Commodities, Energy, Contrarian, Oil

The article below is an excerpt from our Q4 2022 commentary.»


«Crude oil fundamentals are very tight and risk getting considerably tighter. Investors continue to starve energy companies of much-needed capital, the lifeblood of a solid supply base. Although the trend of lower spending has been in place for several years, our models tell us we are nearing a critical inflection point: the growth in shale oil production -- the only source of non-OPEC+ production growth over the past two decades --- may be coming to an end.

 

Few of us properly appreciate the importance of the shales. Not only were they the only source of incremental growth over the past decade, but they were also tremendous in absolute terms. Between 2010 and 2020, US shale oil production grew by 7.6 mm b/d, while natural gas liquids (nearly all from shale) increased by 4.0 m b/d. Total liquid production from the US shales grew by 11.6 mm b/d – more than Saudi Arabia’s production of 10.5 m b/d. Shale gas production grew an incredible 65 bcf/d over the same period. When converted to barrels of oil equivalent, shale gas added another 10.8 m boe/d – equivalent to a second Saudi Arabia.

 

Few people have acknowledged shale’s importance to global oil and natural gas markets. History books discussing Saudi Arabia in the middle of the last century devote most of their attention to oil industry developments. On the other hand, when people think of shale producers, they often think of “value destruction.” Instead of focusing on “value destruction,” commentators should emphasize the importance represented by unlocking the US oil and gas shales. In just ten years, oil companies brought online the equivalent of two Saudi Arabias in the same country. An incredible achievement, and yet today, the shales are primarily mentioned in the context of E&P company value destruction and climate degradation.

 

Shale development had many consequences, including massively shifting the US current account deficit and reducing the geopolitical influence of foreign oil-producing countries.

 

In 1973, President Nixon announced “Project Independence,” an attempt to make the United States an energy exporter. For the next 35 years, the United States went in the wrong direction—importing more and more oil and gas. However, by the end of the 2010s, the US had finally become a net energy exporter, thanks to the shales.

 

Surging shale production also allowed many investors and analysts to forget about the energy challenges society had faced in years past. For example, in the early 2000s, investors were fixated on “running out of oil.” The rise of Chinese energy demand was running into a period of lackluster non-OPEC production growth, resulting in surging prices and widespread fear. Oil ran from $25 to a record $145 per barrel in just five years. 

 

Amid such widespread concern, several theories surrounding resource depletion and energy economics took hold. Once shale production began to surge, most of these theories – which investors had taken seriously only a few years prior – were discarded and openly mocked.

 

In recent years, Goehring & Rozencwajg has become convinced that shale production growth will slow and eventually turn negative. So far, the data has confirmed our thesis. If current trends continue and the shales do indeed plateau and roll over, global oil markets will have lost their only source of growth. Many of the resource depletion theories of the 2000s will likely return as critical issues in the 2020s. Investors would be wise to study them now.

 

The first theory we revived in 2018 was energy return on investment (EROI). Professor Charles Hall of the University of Syracuse first developed the concept in the 1980s. His work focused on studying how much energy was required to produce usable work. Professor Hall’s work was prevalent last decade as oil companies struggled to replace reserves and grow supply. The industry was forced into developing fields that required more and more energy (either oil sands or deep water offshore) for the same production level. Hall and others argued that ever-lower EROI would eventually impact economic growth. This thesis went from popular to ridiculed as soon as the shales ushered in a period of intense production growth. We found Professor Hall’s work on EROI extremely important and used it to assess the poor efficiency of renewable energy.

 

The next theory we would like to revisit is Peak Oil. Ironically, today many analysts refer to peak oil demand, but originally peak oil referred to supply. The theory is associated with M. King Hubbert, a controversial Shell geologist from the 1950s and 1960s. Hubbert believed that an oil field production curve would resemble a bell-shaped curve under ideal unconstrained circumstances. Production would grow at an accelerating rate, then level off, plateau, and ultimately decline at a rate mimicking its growth phase. Hubbert also developed techniques known as “linearization” to estimate a field’s total recoverable reserves. He believed that production would peak when half its reserves had been produced. At the Society of Petroleum Engineers meeting in 1956, Hubbert used his theories to predict that US crude production would peak in the 1970s at around 10 mm b/d. Hubbert made two predictions in his 1956 speech: one, assuming 150 bb barrels of recoverable oil, the other based on 200 bn barrels. In 1962, he repeated his 200 bn barrel projection, which implied production would peak at 10 mm b/d in the early 1970s. His presentation was shocking: US production had grown steadily over the previous years. When US supply did indeed peak in 1970 at 10 mm b/d, Hubbert’s work gained widespread attention.

 

US Crude Production 1920 - 2008

Between 1970 and 2008, US production fell steadily. By the 2000s, most people saw oil as a scarce resource and believed society should treat it dearly.

 

The development of shale oil spelled the end of public interest in Peak Oil. Like Professor Hall, many openly dismissed and even ridiculed Hubbert’s work., US production bottomed at 4 mm b/d in 2008 and, driven entirely by the shales, has grown since to become the largest oil producer in the world.

 

US Crude Production 1990-2022

Given surging production over the past decade, it is easy to understand why EROI and Peak Oil have been thrown aside and labeled “blown calls.” However, we think it is completely irresponsible to dismiss them entirely. There are valuable insights in both theories; those investors that ignore them, do so at their own risk. In the case of EROI, a proper understanding of the framework predicted the disastrous impacts of renewable energy we all face today. In the case of Peak Oil, we would argue that shale trends have completely obfuscated trends in the rest of the world.

 

While Hubbert’s predictions look ridiculous when considering total US liquids production, focusing only on conventional crude production suggests Peak Oil is alive and well. Last year, the US produced 3 m b/d of conventional crude oil – 7 m b/d or 70% below the peak reached 52 years ago. In other words, the shales bailed out total US production but did nothing to change the forces underpinning Peak Oil and depletion. On a global basis, conventional oil production (total production ex shale and Canadian oil sands) has exhibited no growth in 17 years.

 

Conventional Crude Production 1920 - 2022

We agree with critics who argue that Peak Oil neglects the impact of new technologies that improve oil recovery. Shale development itself would fall into this category. However, it is equally imprudent to implicitly suggest the dramatic shale growth of the 2010s will continue forever and neglect the underlying forces of depletion and Peak Oil entirely. In the case of EROI, it regained relevance once we applied the framework to another energy source (renewables). In the case of Peak Oil, we believe Hubbert’s theories will regain relevance once shale production rolls over and the underlying depletion problems of conventional oil are exposed. Our models tell us that the inflection point may be quickly approaching.

 

In 2019, we announced the results of some very original research regarding shale drilling productivity. We wanted to understand better why wells in the Big Three basins (Eagle Ford, Bakken, and Permian) were producing more and more oil. Between 2014 and 2018, the average well in the Eagle Ford, Bakken, and Permian grew by 50, 20, and 100%, respectively. Given such high levels of productivity, the industry was able to grow shale production by 1.6 m b/d in 2018.

 

The conventional wisdom at the time attributed the increased productivity to better drilling and completion performance. In other words, the industry was getting better at drilling shale wells. We built an artificial neural network to help us better understand all the underlying forces that could impact shale gas drilling and production. Our artificial intelligence engine confidently told us what inputs were driving drilling productivity improvement. Drilling location was the most significant factor influencing drilling productivity, not how companies drilled the wells.

 

E&P companies successfully determined over time the “sweet spots” of the basins, where attributes such as thermal maturity, thickness, permeability, porosity, and organic content were ideal. In 2014, we estimate 45% of all drilling occurred within Tier 1 areas, whereas by 2018, it had surged to over 65%. If the industry were getting better at drilling wells, then previously low-productivity drilling locations would be converted into high-productivity locations, allowing production to continue to surge. Instead, we determined the industry was “high-grading” or drilling its best wells first. Our neural network told us that companies were drilling their best top-tier locations in all their basins. If our neural network was correct, we argued in 2019 that per well productivity would peak and begin to fall as tier 1 prospects dwindled, leaving the industry to either drill many less productive wells or, if not, see their production decline.

 

Simply put, we concluded the shales suffered from a depletion problem. Our conclusion was highly controversial at the time. Given the shale’s prodigious production growth, almost everyone believed they were limitless. Analysts talked about chronic oversupply without once thinking about the underlying geological constraints. Although the shales are extremely large, we determined they behaved precisely like traditional (albeit enormous) fields. We concluded that shale basins exhibited Hubbert-style production profiles: they ramped up, plateaued, peaked, and declined. The two earliest shale basins, the Barnett and Fayetteville, peaked between 2011 and 2014 and have both since declined by 70%.

 

Barnett and Fayetteville Production

Both of these early shale basins were gas fields, but our understanding suggested to us that shale oil fields would behave similarly. Looking at the Barnett and Fayetteville, we observed that production stopped growing once half of all the best wells were drilled and began to fall sharply once Tier 1 development reached 65%.

 

Looking at the Bakken and Eagle Ford, we concluded in 2019 that both fields had likely reached maximum production and would undergo a consistent decline. Our neural network determined that Tier 1 development reached 55% and 50% by late 2019 in the Eagle Ford and Bakken, respectively. Almost immediately after we published our findings, COVID resulted in widespread shut-ins of producing wells and a drilling decline of 70%, making our predictions impossible to verify.

 

With COVID impacts now behind us, and after two years where oil averaged $81 per barrel, we can assess our results. Exactly as we expected, neither Bakken nor the Eagle Ford has been able to grow. Since the end of 2019, combined production from both basins fell by 500,000 b/d. Even an increase in drilling activity has had little impact. Since the end of 2020, completions in both plays have grown by 50%, yet production over that time has been flat. The explanation is well productivity, which has fallen by 10-20% since making its high in 2019. Our neural network was correct – the Eagle and Bakken were suffering depletion and running out of high-quality inventory. As you can see in the two charts below, both the Eagle Ford and the Bakken are tracing out near-perfect Hubbert Curves. In our following letter, we will discuss the forces that are working at producing these curves in both fields and how these same forces are firmly at work in the Permian today. 

 

Bakken and Eagle Ford Production with Hubbert Curve

In our 1Q19 letter, we explained how the Permian still had room to grow. We estimated that Permian production would peak at 6.5 m b/d – 900,000 b/d above current levels. Compared with the Bakken and Eagle Ford at nearly 50% Tier 1 development, we estimated the Permian still had 65% of its Tier 1 wells left to drill. According to our estimates, the Permian would reach maximum production sometime in 2024-2025 and then begin to peak and decline like the other two basins. Again, our models were correct. Unlike the Bakken and Eagle Ford, the Permian grew by 800,000 b/d since the end of 2019 and by 1.2 m b/d since 2020. Production fell during COVID but quickly rebounded and surpassed the old highs.

 

Interestingly, the Permian has been the only basin to grow drilling activity since the end of 2019. In the Bakken and Eagle Ford, activity remains 10% below pre-COVID levels, whereas, in the Permian, activity is 5% above late-2019 levels. The answer is the superior inventory of remaining Tier 1 locations.

 

Unfortunately, this superior inventory is being drawn down. We estimate that closer to 45% of all Tier 1 Permian locations have been drilled. The Permian is quickly approaching the same level of development as the Bakken and Eagle Ford in 2019. Our models tell us the results will be similar: Permian production will peak, plateau, and decline much sooner than anyone expects.

 

Since building our first neural network, we have dramatically improved model design and data quality. Our original model used longitude and latitude to help predict productivity. We now have access to subsurface geological data, such as thickness, thermal maturity, clay content, organic content, permeability, and porosity. Of course, we also have three additional years of data since we first published the results of our original model.

 

In our following letter, we will detail the results of our work. The early results confirm our intuition: we have mostly drilled out our best areas in the Permian, and once Permian production declines begin, shale growth will be difficult, if not impossible, to achieve from there.

 

As shale growth slows, investors will be re-confronted with the concepts of depletion and Peak Oil. The development of the US shales has allowed us all to forget about these problems for over ten years. We urge investors to familiarize themselves with these topics because our models suggest they will be crucial in navigating markets in the future.

 

Investors and policymakers tend to fight the last war and often are blind to the changes that will impact the future. In the early 2000s, investors’ focus on Peak Oil left many unable to see shale’s transformative potential. Today, investors remain convinced the shales are endless and fail to see that depletion problems have already taken hold.

 

Along these lines, we want to leave you with a curious thought. On December 22, 1975 – three years after OPEC stopped shipments to the West, ushering in the first oil crisis -- President Ford signed a bill that limited US crude exports. Ford announced the bill would pave the way towards energy independence – something few believed possible. Only five years after signing, oil prices peaked at $35 per barrel and spent the next 18 years falling 70%. Ford was fighting the last war and neglected to appreciate the new oil development in Alaska, the Gulf of Mexico, and the North Sea. Ford’s law was repealed in 2015, allowing US crude exports for the first time in forty years. Lawmakers argued the legislation was outdated, given the massive surge in domestic production. They argued that the US was no longer at risk of embargoes; energy independence was imminent. Ford’s predictions took five years to begin being proven incorrect. COVID likely delayed “peak shale” by a few years due to slower drilling activity. However, our models suggest that eight years after repealing the ban, the idea of abundant US energy has also been proven incorrect. We believe the result will be much higher oil prices from now on. We predict new interest in Hubbert’s theories. Investors should familiarize themselves and be prepared for the potential arrival of Hubbert’s Peak. The economic dislocations and investment opportunities will be massive.

 

Intrigued? We invite you to revisit our entire Q4 2022 research letter, available below. »


https://blog.gorozen.com/blog/the-end-of-abundant-energy?utm_campaign=Weekly%20Blog%20Notification&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=249485625&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_nf9xnr9uW5t48Bu3V_qUISy4nf1fifwzk0IJ7osjtfds6p0KVb5FHL_48rYMpuSaJrG_w_ANbSjiSTgjGpOhWu-TX5w&utm_content=249485625&utm_source=hs_email
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I. I. Kaspov

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1597 em: 2023-03-12 16:30:34 »
«The Global Energy Squeeze Is Riskier Than We Thought

By Gail Tverberg - Mar 08, 2023, 3:00 PM CST

    Energy shortages could have a more significant impact on the economy than originally anticipated.

    When energy per capita falls, it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain the complexity that has been put in place.

    Without enough energy products to go around, conflict tends to rise, and economic growth slows and turns to economic contraction, creating huge strains for the financial system.»


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Global-Energy-Squeeze-Is-Riskier-Than-We-Thought.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1598 em: 2023-03-15 23:31:01 »
Mais um comentário interessante:


«Mamdouh Salameh on March 10 2023 said:

OPEC+ has emerged from the pandemic as the most influential player in the global oil market and will maintain this position as long as it continues cooperation with Russia. By contrast, US shale oil has been a spent force since it was decimated by the pandemic in 2020. Any reported rise in US shale production will be overwhelmingly hype by the US Administration (EIA) and only a tiny bit realistic.

Even in 2019 when the Trump administration was encouraging the shale oil industry to flood the market even at huge loss for the sake of undermining OPEC and claiming oil independence and boasting that the United States is the world’s largest crude producer producing more than 12.0 million barrels a day (mbd), it was overwhelmingly hype orchestrated by the EIA in cahoots with Rystad Energy and the International Energy Agency (IEA). Production could never have really hit 12.0 mbd because there is a difference of 1.5-2.0 mbd between the EIA’s weekly and monthly figures, hence the EIA vowing on 6 March to improve the accuracy of its oil data.

OPEC+’s market share is projected to rise to more than 50% in the foreseeable future because of plans by Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait to expand their production capacity with Russia projected to add 1.5 mbd from Arctic oil by 2026/27 thus adding more clout to the group.

Moreover, the balance of power in the global oil market has been shifting overwhelmingly in favour of the National Oil Companies (NOCs) at the expense of the International Oil companies (IOCs). This is partly due to a resurgent resource nationalism.

Whilst top IOCs such as Total, BP, Shell, Chevron, ENI, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, Equinore and Repsol have reserve estimated to last from 8.0-10.5 years, the NOCs of countries like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Venezuela, Russia and Kuwait to name but a few have access to proven reserves which could last from 66-91 years.

Overall average IOCs’ reserves in place have fallen by 25% since 2015 with less than 10 years of total annual production available. For instance, oil supermajor Shell expects to have produced 75% of its current proven oil and gas reserves by 2030, and only around 3% after 2040.

In fact, the last three produced barrels of oil in the world will come from three regions: the Arab Gulf region, Venezuela’s Orinoco Belt and Russia’s Arctic with the very last barrel most probably coming from Iraq.

Dr Mamdouh G Salameh
International Oil Economist
Global Energy Expert »


https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/OPEC-Is-Back-In-Control-Of-The-Oil-Market.html
Gloria in excelsis Deo; Jai guru dev; There's more than meets the eye; I don't know where but she sends me there; Let's Make Rome Great Again!

vbm

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Re: Petróleo / Crude / Oil / Natural Gas - Tópico Principal
« Responder #1599 em: 2023-03-16 00:23:44 »
Temos de permitir o nuclear
e voltar ao fóssil. A OPEP
há-de parar de rir.