Future Exploration Investing Uncertain

Forecast: Fair to Partly Cloudy?

By KATHY SHIRLEY
EXPLORER Correspondent

To know where you’re going, sometimes you have to know where you are.

Pete Stark, vice president of industry relations with IHS Energy, will offer a picture of recent and current exploration successes, plus examine some of the critical issues impacting future exploration activity when he kicks-off the "Recent Discovery and Development Case Histories" forum at the AAPG Annual Meeting in Dallas.

The forum will be held from 8-9:45 a.m. Tuesday, April 20.

Stark’s talk is intended to provide the context for a bigger question that hangs over the industry: Is it time for companies to start re-investing heavily in exploration, or will access to large, undeveloped reserves in various countries continue to command prime attention?

Several factors — to be discussed in detail during the talk — "contribute to supply and price uncertainty and volatility, which hampers companies interested in investing substantial funds in exploration," Stark said.

"On the other hand, we see a growing number of companies who feel acquisitions and mergers have become more expensive — and some firms, particularly large independents, are growing through investment in exploration," he added.

"All of these factors, both negative and positive, add up to a cloudy future for exploration."

Giant discoveries, larger than 500 mmboe, continue to contribute a substantial part of reserves added by exploratory drilling. According to Stark, IHS Energy has tallied about 31 discoveries since January 2000 — fairly widely distributed — totaling 41.6 bboe, or 49 percent of reserves added exclusive of onshore North America. Moreover, 200 discoveries larger than 100 mmboe accounted for 75.8 bboe, or 90 percent of total discocveries.

Kazahkstan, with the super giant Kashagan discovery, is the leading country for discoveries since January 2000, with almost 14 billion barrels of oil equivalent. The rest of the top 10 includes:

Please log in to read the full article

By KATHY SHIRLEY
EXPLORER Correspondent

To know where you’re going, sometimes you have to know where you are.

Pete Stark, vice president of industry relations with IHS Energy, will offer a picture of recent and current exploration successes, plus examine some of the critical issues impacting future exploration activity when he kicks-off the "Recent Discovery and Development Case Histories" forum at the AAPG Annual Meeting in Dallas.

The forum will be held from 8-9:45 a.m. Tuesday, April 20.

Stark’s talk is intended to provide the context for a bigger question that hangs over the industry: Is it time for companies to start re-investing heavily in exploration, or will access to large, undeveloped reserves in various countries continue to command prime attention?

Several factors — to be discussed in detail during the talk — "contribute to supply and price uncertainty and volatility, which hampers companies interested in investing substantial funds in exploration," Stark said.

"On the other hand, we see a growing number of companies who feel acquisitions and mergers have become more expensive — and some firms, particularly large independents, are growing through investment in exploration," he added.

"All of these factors, both negative and positive, add up to a cloudy future for exploration."

Giant discoveries, larger than 500 mmboe, continue to contribute a substantial part of reserves added by exploratory drilling. According to Stark, IHS Energy has tallied about 31 discoveries since January 2000 — fairly widely distributed — totaling 41.6 bboe, or 49 percent of reserves added exclusive of onshore North America. Moreover, 200 discoveries larger than 100 mmboe accounted for 75.8 bboe, or 90 percent of total discocveries.

Kazahkstan, with the super giant Kashagan discovery, is the leading country for discoveries since January 2000, with almost 14 billion barrels of oil equivalent. The rest of the top 10 includes:

  • China.
  • Australia.
  • Brazil.
  • Angola.
  • Nigeria.
  • Indonesia.
  • Iran.

"Interestingly, the U.S. Gulf of Mexico ranked ninth in the world during this period with over three billion barrels of oil equivalent," Stark said.

Examined in total, there are significant clusters of discoveries, he said, to be found in the northern Caspian Sea region, which includes both Kazakhstan and Russia; Iran and Saudi Arabia; the northwest shelf of Australia (primarily gas condensate); and the Niger Delta and offshore Angola.

"In the Western Hemisphere Brazil recorded a series of giant discoveries, all of which were credited to Petrobras," he said. "During 2000-01 Trinidad and Tobago recorded several large gas-condensate discoveries, including the giant Red mango Field. BP’s Thunder Horse North discovery was the largest (discovery) recorded since January 2000 in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico."

Key Discoveries

Specific discoveries were key for a variety of reasons, ranging from their size to market implications — and, Stark added, natural gas has become a far bigger factor in recent years.

Some of those discoveries were:

  • China’s Sulige Field, with potential for 2.7 billion barrels of oil equivalent, is important not only for its size but also because it is just several hundred miles west of Beijing. "This field will certainly have important market implications for China," he said.

  • The Dhirudai gas field off the India’s west coast, with reserves of about 833 million barrels of oil equivalent, is important because India is rapidly expanding its natural gas markets — and Dhirudai provides substantial gas resources, he said.

  • The Nile Delta offshore Egypt, important because the added gas reserves from these discoveries are helping to generate a new LNG and gas pipe business in the eastern Mediterranean region.

    The Sapphire 1 (discovered in 2000) is the largest discovery to date in the Nile Delta with approximately 573 million barrels of oil equivalent.

  • Another key African discovery isn’t even considered a giant field, but its implications for future exploration off Africa’s West Coast of Africa are enormous, according to Stark; Woodside Petroleum’s discovery off the coast of Mauritania appears to be commercial and will extend the prospectively of the African Atlantic continental margin, he said.

  • Brazil has been the site of a series of geographically important gas discoveries. The No. 1-RJS-587 Petrobras gas and condensate discovery is the most significant find with an estimated 2.6 billion barrels of oil equivalent and although it will not be developed for another six to seven years it changes the gas supply outlook for Brazil — South America’s biggest gas consumer.

    "This discovery has interesting implications in the future to potentially restructure the demand situation and gas contracts in the southern cone," he said. "It will likely impact gas from countries such Bolivia and Argentina, affecting the regional market."

  • Australia’s northwest shelf of Australia has been the site of a series of large discoveries.

    "IHS has recorded six discoveries offshore the northwest shelf that are helping to stimulate a good deal of LNG competition targeted for China," he said. "These finds are changing the amount of gas available and allowing operators to chase new markets. The primary market for LNG from this region used to be Japan, but now new markets in China and even the West Coast of the United States can (now) be explored."

  • Offshore Malaysia. Murphy Oil’s Kikeh discovery in deep waters off Malaysia was significant because it was the first major oil find in the area.

    "Murphy apparently has an offset to the discovery that looks promising," he said, "and these finds are doubly important due to the declining oil supplies in the region."

Big Picture Trends?

Looking more long-term, in the last decade 426 discoveries with 100 million barrels of oil equivalent or more were found in 52 countries, with 108 different companies involved in the finds. During that time Iran, Kazakhstan, China, Angola, Australia, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and the U.S. Gulf of Mexico accounted for the largest number of new discoveries.

Not surprisingly, since 1998 over 40 percent of the discoveries greater than 100 million barrels of oil equivalent were in deep water. The number of large deepwater discoveries peaked in 2002.

While all this might seem like good news, Stark indicated there are reasons to be concerned about the state of exploration.

"When you look at global discoveries in five year increments, through 1980 every five-year period except one right after World War II added more resources than were brought on stream," he said. "That trend reversed during 1984. Since then, annual worldwide liquids consumption has exceeded new liquids discoveries. The petroleum industry, fortunately, has added sufficient new reserves by coaxing more oil from older fields or already discovered but undeveloped fields to offset consumption.

"As some point, exploration must once again contribute a larger share of new reserve additions," he said.

The global numbers from 2000 forward illustrates the seriousness of this situation, Stark said:

  • In 2000 IHS recorded 40.5 billion barrels of oil equivalent from new discoveries.
  • In 2001 the total was 18.9 billion.
  • In 2002 the total was 13.4 billion.
  • In 2003 the total was 11.4 billion, although at year-end there were still about 90 discoveries for which the firm did not yet have reserve figures.

"Current oil and natural gas liquids production is right at 27 billion barrels of oil a year, and the industry has not come close to replacing that production in years," Stark said. "Even in 2000 the liquids portion of the total 40.5 did not equal the 27 billion barrel production level, totaling only around 25 billion barrels of liquids."

In fact, Stark said 1991 was the only year since 1985 that new discoveries topped liquids production.

Another trend is the increasingly important role of natural gas liquids. Activity on Australia’s northwest shelf and in the Persian Gulf are indicative of this trend, since both of these areas have gas rich in liquids, he said.

"The liquids give these operators their profits and then they can play the LNG game with minimal risk," he said.

Stable oil prices and market situations will be critical for the exploration business.

"The industry still faces some paradoxes," he said. "We will see a significant amount of excess capacity growth in liquids over the next five years — almost four million barrels of oil equivalent per day of excess capacity more than even robust demand growth. It will be difficult for OPEC to cut back its production in the face of this capacity growth and maintain prices in its $22 to $28 target range."

Another complicating factor could be the lifting of sanctions in countries such as Iraq and Libya.

"These countries have a huge resource base of discovered but undeveloped large fields," he said. "All these factors will contribute to supply and price uncertainty and volatility, which hampers companies interested in investing substantial funds in exploration."

"On the other hand, we see a growing number of companies who feel acquisitions and mergers have become more expensive and some firms, particularly large independents, are demonstrating growth through investment in exploration," he said.

"All of these factors, both negative and positive, add up to a murky future for exploration."

You may also be interested in ...