Deep, Wet and Brazilian
Jun 26th, 2009 | By Byron King | Category: Featured, Oil Investment & Alternative EnergyOffshore areas of the world — especially in deep water — are the key to the world’s energy future. Far out and deep down. That’s where the last great hydrocarbon discoveries remain to be made.
That’s why, in my investment letter, Outstanding Investments, I’ve constructed a kind of end-to-end offshore energy mutual fund – from prospect to pipeline. Each company has a broad skill set. None is just a one-trick pony. Some of the companies overlap in skill sets, and even compete with each other.
A few of my favorite names include Norway’s offshore powerhouse StatoilHydro (STO: NYSE), as well as subsea equipment provider FMC Technologies (FTI: NYSE). Then there’s platform and pipeline builder McDermott Intl. (MDR: NYSE), as well as offshore services provider Superior Energy Services (SPN: NYSE).
Going forward, I’m be looking to recommend other deepwater plays…at the right price, of course. I’m looking for companies that can grab hold of key parts of the growing offshore business, and produce great profits in the coming years. I think you’re going to be astonished at what unfolds.
I recently attended the annual convention of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG). (Some guys go to classic car shows; I go to geologist conventions). I’ve been a member of AAPG for 30 years, and it’s always fascinating to spend some time there. The meeting rooms and poster sessions feature reports from the front lines of the search for petroleum, natural gas and other energy resources.
One theme emerged loud and clear from this year’s conference: Deepwater. Most of the major oil discoveries that remain to be found in the world will be offshore, in deep water.
The always-ebullient Brazilian geochemist, Marcio Mello — CEO of Brazil’s HRT Petroleum Co. — wowed the crowd with a discussion of the oil potential of the South Atlantic. “Six of the last ten giant oil discoveries in the world were offshore Brazil,” he pointed out. And then Marcio moved the discussion to the other side of the South Atlantic and gave an eye-popping description of the oil potential of the offshore regions of Namibia.
“The Namibian offshore is analogous to that of Brazil,” Marcio stated, with slides and hard data to back it up. Then he showed his proprietary research into natural offshore oil seeps off Namibia, and the geochemistry that demonstrates immense hydrocarbon potential. “But Namibia,” said Marcio, “is way underexplored. So you can put down a little money for the concessions and get very rich.”
The point for investors is how much of future world energy development will involve subsea systems.
For additional perspective, let’s examine the current structure of the American energy supply. Right now, most of the U.S. energy mix comes from burning coal, natural gas and oil. In fact, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, the U.S. gets 87% of its total energy mix from burning fossil fuels. Another 7% of U.S. energy supply comes from nuclear power. The total is 94%.
That leaves about 6% of the U.S. energy mix to come from so-called “renewable” and alternative sources. And 3% of that 6% is renewable hydropower from unique sources like the Hoover, Grand Coulee and other dams. And we’re not building any more big dams.
Thus, only about 3% of U.S. total energy comes from things that grow, blow or shine. Of that 3%, about half (1.5%) is from “biofuels,” and that’s if you count a company like Weyerhaeuser (WY: NYSE) burning sawdust to run the sawmills.
Finally, there’s a very minor part of the total U.S. energy mix — about 1.5% — that comes from windmills, solar and geothermal. For as much visibility as these things get in the media and pop culture, their energy output is tiny — slightly above statistical noise in the overall national mix.
So just follow the numbers. The “alternative” energy sources are a miniscule component of the current energy mix. That’s after a few good years of significant investment, with lots of political support and plenty of tax breaks.
It will take many years (many decades!) for these energy sources to expand and meet the energy needs of the U.S. And that’s despite whatever the politicians and policymakers wish for in their dreams.
That’s why the U.S. must continue exploring for oil and gas. I cringe when I look at the falling rig counts in the U.S. and around the world. Every well that’s NOT drilled is one less source of hydrocarbon in the years to come, as depletion causes output from current wells to decline…which brings us back to the South Atlantic, one of the world’s greatest petroleum provinces.
Some experts think that the hydrocarbon resources in the pre-salt formations off the Brazilian coast may rival those of Saudi Arabia in magnitude. We’ll see about that. But it’s beyond dispute that Brazil and its energy resources are a complete game-changer for that nation, and the rest of the energy-consuming world. It goes back to basic geology and the history of plate tectonics.
When South America started to pull away from Africa about 140 million years ago, an isolated seaway formed — a proto-Atlantic Ocean — that filled again and again with sequences of limestone, thin shales and, finally, massive salt beds. The processes of petroleum geology worked as advertised in the region. And these processes left utterly eye-popping volumes of petroleum locked in high-quality reservoirs covering vast areas.
The big downside (and it’s big and down, to be sure!) is that all that oil is under a mile or two of South Atlantic seawater, covered by three or four miles of rock and salt beds — it depends where you’re located on the continental shelf and slope.
But that’s why it takes companies with phenomenal technical and managerial skills, plus deep pockets, to play in this great game. The bottom line is that with the right companies working at it, there’s enough oil down there to produce a very big payday, not just for Brazil, but for many of the companies that contribute to the effort.
I’ll discuss at length the new developments offshore Brazil during my talk in Vancouver at the upcoming Investor Symposium, July 21-24. The title of my talk will be Is God Brazilian? So that ought to give you a clue about what I think lies under all that water column and rock down there.
Source: Deep, Wet and Brazilian
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Byron is now a contributing editor to Energy and Oil, Whiskey & Gunpowder and editor of Outstanding Investments. After Harvard, Byron has followed developments in the oil and gas industry for more than three decades.