Where Will Future Oil Production Come From and How Can Investors Profit Today, Part 2
May 23rd, 2008 | By Dan Denning | Category: Oil Investment & Alternative EnergyThe IEA forecast for a daily increase in global oil production of 31 million barrels by 2030—a 37% jump—sounds like pure fantasy. Do the facts support it? Are big oil companies already searching for that future oil and finding it? Do they have plans to produce it?
To answer those questions we turn to a report published in late March by UBS energy analyst Jon Rigby and his team in London. Their incredibly useful report is called, “Will there be enough production capacity?” UBS has been battered by its huge sub-prime related losses. But their work on where future oil production will actually come from nearly redeems them. They have asked just the right question at the right time, and answered it in detail.
The report reaches a number of surprising conclusions about the global oil market. It also includes a useful database of oil projects scheduled to enter production in the next five years. These are projects which could add meaningful capacity (100kbpd or more) to global oil production. We’ll look at who stands to benefit in a moment. But first, some of the report’s findings [emphasis added is ours]:
- “Declining existing basins, rising costs, increased technical challenges, stretched supply chains, geopolitical blocks and tightening fiscal terms all seem impediments to growing global production capacity for oil and gas, despite the clear pricing signals.
- “There is no obvious wall of new production coming to the market in response to high prices.”
- New projects scheduled to come on-line from National Oil Companies (NOCs) belong mostly to three major firms: Aramco, Petrobras, and Gazprom.
- New project cost is rising and becoming more technologically challenging, especially deep-water.
- “Nominal growth rates tied to global GDP now look more unrealistic as potential upstream growth slows. This appears reasonably consistent with a growing view that oil production may actually not exceed 100Mbbl/d.”
The idea that global oil production may never exceed 100mbbl/d is worth a much closer look. I’ll get to that later. But before we look at the end, let us look at the beginning of the end and where new production might come from as the world’s oil producers try to bridge the gap between 87mbpd and 117mbpd.
The good news is that there IS new production capacity in the pipeline this year and next. Keep in mind that the final investment decision on the projects entering into production this year was made anywhere from 3-6 years ago. That shows you how far in advance you have to plan for new production (assuming you’ve even found oil in the first place).
There is no such thing as just-in-time oil production. But let’s take a look at projects that will come on line between now and 2010. We’ve selected only those projects that will produce more than 200kbp or more:
| Country | Project Name | Oil (kb/d) | Operator | Project Type |
| Kazakhstan | Tengiz Expansion | 250 | Chevron | Conventional |
| United States | Thunder Horse | 250 | BP | Deepwater |
| Saudi Arabia | Hawiyah NGL | 370 | Aramco | Conventional |
| Saudi Arabia | Khursaniya | 500 | Aramco | Conventional |
| Saudi Arabia | Shaybah Expansion | 250 | Aramco | Conventional |
| Saudi Arabia | Khrurais expansion | 1,200 | Aramco | Conventional |
| Azerbaijan | ACG Phase 3 | 400 | BP | Deepwater |
| Nigeria | Agbami | 250 | Chevron | Deepwater |
| UAE | Upper Zakum | 200 | ExxonMobil | Conventional |
| Qatar | Pearl GTL | 210 | Shell | GTL |
If you include LNG and the barrels of oil equivalent produced from it, your list expands a little more to include the following projects:
| Country | Project Name | Oil (kboe/d) | Operator | Project Type |
| Qatar | RasGas3, Train 6 | 291 | ExxonMobil | LNG |
| Qatar | RasGas3, Train 7 | 291 | ExxonMobil | LNG |
| Peru | Camisea | 224 | Hunt Oil | LNG |
| Qatar | Qatargas4, Train 7 | 251 | Shell | LNG |
Beyond 2010, the future is murkier. But the UBS team has identified projects for which the final investment decision has been made. Assuming cost blowouts can be avoided and the projects aren’t cancelled, here are some of the bigger projects that could come on-stream between 2011 and 2015:
| Country | Project Name | Oil (kb/d) | Operator | Project Type |
| Saudi Arabia | Manifa | 900 | Aramco | Conventional |
| Kazakhstan | Kashagan Phase 1 | 450 | Eni | Conventional |
| Iran | Yadavaran | 300 | NIOC | Conventional |
| Kuwait | Kuwait North Redevelopment | 450 | KPC | Conventional |
| Kazakhstan | Kashagan Phase 2 | 550 | Kazakh JV | Conventional |
There are some massive LNG and natural gas projects coming on-stream between 2011 and 2015. Gazprom, Shell, BP, and ExxonMobil all look like big winners, should oil prices stay high and pass through to higher LNG prices.
The new oil finds off-shore in Brazil’s Santos Basin are not included in the UBS report because they are not likely to enter into production during the next five years. They will be difficult to produce in any event. Petrobras says the Tupi find may contain as many as 8 million barrels, while the Carioca field may have 33 billion barrels of reserves, of which about 10 billion could be recoverable, according to Citigroup.
Current Production Trumps Reserves
One UBS claim which may surprise older oil hands is that, “the capacity to produce—not reserves—is critical to energy markets.” UBS does not conclude that current producers should be valued differently that companies with large reserves but current production challenges. But it’s worth thinking about.
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Dan Denning is a contributing editor to Diggers & Drillers and a regular columnist for Money Weekly, a Taiwanese financial publication. From 2000 to 2006, Dan was the editor of Strategic Investment of Agora Publishing. His reporting and analysis for The Daily Reckoning is read by more than 500,000 people regularly.