A New Normal - Persistent Trend of Rising E&P Costs
A New Normal - Persistent Trend of Rising E&P Costs
A New Normal - Persistent Trend of Rising E&P Costs
February 2010
CIRU Research No 9
February 2010
Research Team:
Khairuddin Sani
General Manager
khairsn@petronas.com.my
Ext : 4613
Abd Rahim Mahmood
Senior Manager, Corporate Research
rahimma@petronas.com.my
Ext : 6750
M Faizal Othman
Manager, E&P
faizaot@petronas.com.my
Ext : 1391
1|Page
CONFIDENTIAL
2010, Corporate Information & Research Unit, CPDD, PETRONAS
No portion of this presentation may be reproduced in any form without prior written consent.
February 2010
Abstract :
This research on A New Normal - Persistent Trend of Rising E&P Costs will attempt to
provide insights on the rationale behind the escalating E&P cost, and why it would continue to remain
elevated in the foreseeable future. This research will also analyze the fundamental drivers of E&P
costs and illustrate how this new cost environment would impact and change the dynamics of the
E&P industry. In meeting these challenges, this report will also highlight key enablers and success
factors that can be implemented by E&P companies in order to maintain their long-term
competitiveness, growth and survival.
We foresee that the focus on cost optimization would once again return high on E&P companies
agenda as rebound in oil prices continues to exert upward pressure on the cost of equipment and
services. We believe that this elevated cost environment would continue to linger in the foreseeable
future as supported by several fundamental drivers that indicate a sustained period of high cost
environment. We are of the view that surviving in this new environment requires solutions from
outside the box especially in the way that companies manage the overall supply chain and
procurement system.
This report would also touch on strategic implications to PETRONAS and avenues that PETRONAS
could capitalize to navigate this challenging cost environment in its quest to pursue growth and
sustainability.
2|Page
February 2010
Contents
Page
The Big Picture
18
23
28
3|Page
14
February 2010
The period of sustained cost escalation in the E&P sector reached a breakpoint
in June 2009 when the upstream capital cost index (UCCI), which tracks the
cost associated with the construction of new oil and gas facilities, fell by 8.5%,
consequently punctuating the rally in E&P cost which began since 2000.
This development had prompted some industry observers to proclaim the end
of runaway cost escalation in the industry.
CIRU is of the view that the decline in cost is just a temporary phenomenon We believe that as activities in the oil patch return to normalcy - in tandem with
the global economic recovery, a new cost paradigm, which we termed as a
New Normal, will emerge. The defining feature of the New Normal would be
persistent trend of rising E&P costs.
The drivers of this new E&P cost paradigm include amongst others, greater
influence of the financial forces on the commodity market creating greater
volatility to the E&P cost base. The industry is one the largest consumers of
industrial metals either in raw form or as finished products.
This situation is compounded by the shake-out in the industrys service sector,
creating mega-service providers who command a larger share of the market
and through their monopolistic power feeds greater pressure on the E&P cost
base.
Against this backdrop, the E&P terrain continues to be challenging, as the cost
of production continues to be elevated due to the shift of supply from shallow
waters to frontier regions and the monetization of unconventional resources.
Surviving in this new cost reality would require companies to deploy innovative
solutions - such as executing defensive mechanisms in managing its supply
base.
4|Page
February 2010
demand
destruction
oilpricecollapsed
slowdown in E&P
activities
massive
retrenchment
2009 was indeed a challenging year for the E&P sector as the
sharp fall in oil prices due to the economic crisis had severely
dampened global E&P activities. Global rig count a key
barometer of the state of the E&P sector, fell from a high of 3,000
units in October 2008 to a low of 1,983 in May 2009 one of the
sharpest declines compared to the previous three downturns.
(Chart 1).
5|Page
February 20
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% dec
cline in net pro
ofits vs. simila
ar period in 20
008
0%
al performancee
2009 financia
has been disappointing
g
o the previouss
compared to
year
Q1 2009
9
Q2 2009
Q3 2009
-10%
-20%
-30%
-40%
-50%
-60%
-70%
Source: Bloo
omberg.
6|Page
Massiv
ve reductio
on in headco
ount
Compa
anies embarrked on dow
wnsizing exe
ercise in order to optimizze
cost. In
n our estima
ate, more tha
an 50,000 jo
obs were elim
minated.
Cha
art 3 : Numbe
er of staff rettrenched
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
Source: CIR
RU analysis
Total S.A
Conoco
Baker Hughes
Halliburton
OMV
PDVSA
BP
Schlumberger
0
Shell
m
The industryy went from
talent crunch
h situation in
n
2008 to taleent surplus in
n
2009
as
companiess
embarked on massivee
retrenchmenttexercise
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ncostis driven
n
The decline in
bylowerrawmaterialpricess
Chart 4
4: Cost esca
alation has moderated
d
Inde
ex
Upstream
m Capital Cost Index
240
220
200
180
160
140
120
Q3 2009
2008
Q1 2009
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
100
What to
o expect in 2010
Elevatted trend off oil prices beyond
b
201
10
nce of green
n
The emergen
shoot of glo
obal economicc
recovery spellls better dayss
aheadfortheE&Pindustry
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Oilpricesareexpectedto
strengthenin2010
E&Pactivitieswillrebound
in2010suppo
ortedbyhigherr
utilizationofd
drillingrigs
1
2
3
4
Morrgan Stanley
EIA
Gold
dman Sachs
Barcclays Capital
2010E
2
85
84
90
85
2011E
95
94
110
97
2012E
105
107
105
93
Source: Bloo
omberg
A susttained rebo
ound in E&P
P activities
E&P activities
a
are
e expected to
t regain itss lost mome
entum in 201
10
driven by stronge
er oil pricess on the b
back of global econom
mic
recove
ery. The rebound is evid
denced by th
he rise in drrilling activitie
es
which have been m
mounting sin
nce May 200
09 (Chart 6)..
noperation
Drillingrigsin
haverisensinceMay2009
1,400
1,300
1,200
1,100
1,000
900
E&Pcompanieesare
reactivatingd
deferred
projects
8|Page
Asizableshareofthenew
investmentswillbefocused
onthedevelopmentof
unconventionaloilandgas
resources
9|Page
February 2010
growth,
particularly
for
25%
52%
23%
Increase CAPEX
Source: Barclays Capital
Maintain CAPEX
Reduce CAPEX
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APEXis
GlobalE&PCA
expectedtoin
ncreaseto
US$400billion
nthisyear
ductioncould
Oilsandsprod
propelCanada
atobecome
theworlds3rddlargestoil
exporterby20
015
Thediscoveryofgiantoil
fieldsinGhanahasopened
upanewplayystretching
1,000kmacro
oss4countries
inWestAfrica
a
10
1 |Page
In line with the possitive outlook, we expecct the global E&P CAPEX
X
to rebo
ound to $400
0 billion in 20
010 (Chart 8
8).
Chart 8 : E&P CAPE
EX will incrrease in 201
10
CAPEX (in US$ billiion)
450
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
200
05
2006
2
2007
2008
2009
2010
Develo
opment of oil
o sands to
o intensify
Driven
n by stronger oil price
es, we expect the acttivities in th
he
Canad
dian oil sand
ds to intensiffy and return
n to growth in 2010 on th
he
resumption of defferred proje
ects by Exxo
on, Conoco
o, Suncor an
nd
Devon
n. Assuming all planned
d projects p
progressed as
a schedule
ed,
we be
elieve Cana
ada will be
ecome the worlds thirrd largest oil
exporter by 2015 (further elaboration in our forthcom
ming researcch
entitled
d Canadass Oil Sands
s: Dead Ca
at Bounce which will be
b
publish
hed in March
h 2010)
Emerg
gence of ne
ew oil produ
ucing provin
nce in Westt Africa
Driven by a few g
giant discove
eries in We
est Africa, we
w foresee th
he
emerge
ence of new
w group of oiil exporting ccountries fro
om this regio
on.
These countries arre Ghana, Sierra
S
Leone, Cote dIvoire and Liberria
(further insights arre available in our forth
hcoming ressearch entitle
ed
E&P Megatrends
M
which will be
b published
d in Februaryy 2010).
Higher prices of iindustrial metals
m
Prices of industria
al metals su
uch as stee
el, aluminum
m, copper an
nd
nickel to perform strongly in 2010 drive
in
en by the resurgence
r
manufa
acturing actiivities arising
g from the g
global econo
omic recoverry.
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Chart 9: Fo
our commod
dity super cycle
c
since 1990
Asupercycleisaprolonged
d
(decades)riseeofreal
commodityprrices,drivenbyy
urbanizationa
and
industrializatiionofmajor
economy
Source: CIR
RU analysis
Cost optimization
o
n will be the
e central the
eme for E&P in 2010
We als
so believe that the foc
cus in cost optimizatio
on will be th
he
centrall theme in the
t
E&P sec
ctor this yea
ar. This is because
b
mo
ore
than 60%
6
of a tyypical oil companys CA
APEX are spent
s
on E&
&P
activitie
es and highe
er costs erod
de profit margins (Chart 10).
E&Pcostwillrrisein2010
11
1 |Page
Chart
C
10: Hig
gher cost trranslates in
nto lower ma
argins
Net Profit Margin (%)
Index
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
250
200
150
100
50
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
Source: CIR
RU analysis, IHS CERA, Bloombe
erg
UCCI
Net Profit Margin
M
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Rising
g cost accep
pted as a n
new normal
Given the expectations of a po
ositive outloo
ok for the E&P sector th
his
year, we
w are of the
e view that cost
c
would n
not only stayy elevated but
b
has th
he potential to rise furrther. In our view, the cost declin
ne
witness
sed in 2009
9 (Chart 4) was only a temporary phenomeno
on
becausse of the syn
nchronized global
g
downtturn.
Thecostofdrrilling,
equipmentan
ndsupport
activitieshaveerisenin
recentmonthss
12
1 |Page
Index
4,000
250
3,500
200
3,000
2,500
150
2,000
Drilling Rig
R
100
1,500
UCCI
1,000
50
500
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
Anelevatedcosstenvironment
isanewnorma
alforthe
industry
Source: CIR
RU analysis, IHS CERA, Bloombe
erg
The tre
end of rising cost has be
een quite con
nsistent if we
e were to loo
ok
at the following
f
bre
eakdown of costs
c
:
i. High
her drilling ccost
The co
ost of drillin
ng (Chart 12
2) has been rising since Novemb
ber
2009 as
a a result of resumpttion of defe
erred projectts as well as
a
continu
ued development of uncconventional gas projectss.
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Dec-09
Nov-09
Oct-09
Sep-09
Aug-09
Jul-09
Jun-09
Jun 09
May-09
Apr-09
Mar-09
-4.0%
Feb-09
-2.0%
Jan-09
0.0%
ndforE&P
Higherdeman
equipmentstrriggers
upwardspresssureonprices
-6.0%
-8.0%
-10.0%
Source: CIR
RU analysis
ii. High
her equipme
ent cost
The co
ost of oil & gas machin
nery (Chart 13) has bee
en on the risse
since August 20
009 arising from high
her demand
d from E&
&P
compa
anies.
p
c
change
in the
Chart 13: Monthly percentage
cost of oil & gas production
p
machinery
Percentage
e
3.0%
13
1 |Page
2.0%
1.0%
-3.0%
Source: CIR
RU analysis
Dec-09
Nov-09
Oct-09
S
Sep-09
09
Aug-09
Jul-09
Jun-09
Apr-09
May-09
-2.0%
Mar-09
-1.0%
Feb-09
0.0%
Jan-09
Thecostofsu
upport
activitiesisrissingdueto
higherdeman
ndofE&P
services
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iii. High
her cost of support
s
activvities
The co
osts of oil & gas supp
port activitie
es (Chart 14
4) have bee
en
increassing since August
A
2009
9 as higherr level of acctivities in th
he
oilfields
s resulted in
n greater dem
mand for oil and gas serrvices.
Nov-09
Oct-09
Sep-09
Aug-09
Jul-09
Source: CIR
RU analysis
iv. Cos
sts of major E&P items to
t escalate by
b 2-5%
pect costs of m
major E&P ite
ems to escala
ate by betwee
en 2% to 5% for
f
We exp
this yea
ar (Chart 15).
Chart 15
5: Forecast cost escala
ation for selected E&P equipmentts
and services
J
Jun-09
09
Apr-09
-8.0%
-10.0%
Offshore rig
Equipme
ent
Yards and fabrication
Offshore installation vessels
v
Construc
ction labor
Subsea
14
1 |Page
May-09
-6.0%
Mar-09
-4.0%
Feb-09
0.0%
-2.0%
Jan-09
ajor
Thecostofma
equipmentiseexpectedto
escalatebetw
ween25%in
2010
Forecast
(% chang
ge from Q3 200
09)
3.1
3.0
5.0
3.4
2.0
4.0
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A New No
ormal
Why the
e high cost environment is here to
o stay
Several fundamental
f
l indicators support
s
the view of a prrevailing hig
gh
cost environment in tthe medium to long-term
m. These include:
Consolidationintheservice
sectorhavecrreatedmega
servicecompa
anies
Assuch,E&Psservicesare
beingdomina
atedbyasmall
numberofsup
pplierswhich
provideserviccesatpremium
m
rates
E&P co
ompanies depend on se
ervice provid
ders to provvide myriad of
o
essenttial service
es such as seismic data acquisition an
nd
interpre
etation, drillling, fabrica
ation, offsh
hore installa
ation, projecct
manag
gement etc. Over the
e years, th
he service sector ha
as
underg
gone rapid cconsolidation
n resulting in
n the formattion of mega
aservice
e companie
es which co
ontrols a g
greater share of globa
al
capacity (Chart 16, 17, 18 and
d 19).
The co
oncentration
n of skills an
nd expertise
e in the han
nds of a few
w
major players on the back of
o growing demand for specialize
ed
service
es creates a sellers environment
e
t. This stren
ngthens the
eir
bargain
ning leverag
ge that inccludes price arbitration and marke
et
syndica
ation.
C
Chart
16: Market share
e of seismic
c equipmentt (%)
17%
15
1 |Page
Conso
olidation of E&P servic
ce sector
Se
ercel
21%
62%
ION
Otthers
S
Source:
CIRU ana
alysis
Chart 17
7: Market sh
hare of offs
shore drilling rig servic
ce providers
s
(%)
20%
41%
18%
Transoc
cean
Ensco
Noble
21%
So
ource: CIRU ana
alysis
Others
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Chart 18
8: Market sh
hare of subsea tree (%
%)
15%
50%
Othe
ers
So
ource: CIRU ana
alysis
Ch
hart 19: Market share of
o gas turbine generato
or (%)
20%
41%
18%
GE
Alsto
om
Siem
mens
21%
Othe
ers
So
ource: CIRU ana
alysis
Asfieldsmatu
ure,costof
productionwo
ouldrise
Limitedaccesssibilityforces
companiestooperatein
frontierareasswherecostis
higher
16
1 |Page
Cameron
FMC
35%
The prractice of de
eveloping larrger and eassily accessib
ble fields firsst
has cre
eated a dem
mand vacuu
um for marg
ginal field de
evelopment at
a
a later stage. A su
ustained periiod of high oil
o prices the
en triggered a
deman
nd rush tow
wards technology, serrvices, equipments an
nd
talentss specializing
g in margina
al field devellopment. The smaller th
he
size off the remainiing resource
e (relative to its initial res
source base
e),
the mo
ore expensivve it is to be
e developed,, albeit in the absence o
of
improvvement in tecchnology.
Higher cost of prroduction frrom deepwa
ater areas
70% of the worldss reserves are
a located in the Middle
e East wherre
accesss is limited. As such, E&P compan
nies have be
een forced to
t
move into deepwa
ater regionss in the Gulff of Mexico,, West Africca
and Latin Americca. For this
s year alon
ne, it is esstimated tha
at
deepw
water blockss would co
ontribute up
p to 25% of
o global oil
o
produc
ction. Howevver, the costt of productio
on in deepw
water areas is
high to
o match the operational
o
complexity w
which requirres a differen
nt
set of expertise an
nd technolog
gy. As a com
mparison, th
he productio
on
cost of
o deepwate
er oil may range
r
betwe
een $60 - $80
$
a barre
el
relative
e to conventtional offshore oil producction at abou
ut $40-$60.
February 2010
Monetizationof
unconventionalresources
requirescuttingedge
technology
Theshareofunconventional
oilinglobalsupplymixis
rising
Unconventional oil such as oil sands and extra heavy oil are
claiming a larger share of the worlds oil production (Chart 20).
However, the cost of producing unconventional oil is high
compared to conventional crude oil (Chart 21). This is because,
additional facilities are required to be built in order to upgrade this
heavy crude into lighter crude oil. For instance, oil sands produced
in Canada would be processed into synthetic crude oil before it is
sold to the refineries.
Chart 20: Breakdown of global oil supply
Conventionaloilisrelatively
cheapertoextractthan
unconventionaloil
17 | P a g e
February 2010
Statetaketendstoincrease
inhighoilprice
environment
Variouscountrieshave
imposedwindfalltaxtoseek
higherrevenue
Commoditymarketwill
exertgreaterinfluenceto
theE&Pcoststructure
Steel (US$/tonne)
1400
1200
Copper (RHS)
Aluminum (RHS)
30,000
25,000
1000
20,000
800
15,000
600
10,000
400
5,000
200
Source: Bloomberg
18 | P a g e
Steel (LHS)
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Mitigatin
ng strategy
y to tackle cost
c
escalattion
hisnew
Survivinginth
environmentw
wouldrequire
theexecutionofinnovative
strategyintheesupplychain
Alliancewithsservice
providerscoulldprovide
accesstocriticcalequipment
t
andservicesa
atlowerrates
Oneofthestrrategyto
enhanceallian
ncesisto
moveawayfr
fromthe
contractualreelationshipto
collaborativeandbusiness
nership
buildingpartn
19
1 |Page
The ex
xisting conttractual rela
ationship ten
nds to be short
s
term in
i
nature, focusing on
o project to project b
basis. By elevating
e
this
relation
nship to a more strate
egic level b
by establish
hing strategic
alliance
e with key ssuppliers an
nd service providers
p
in critical area
as
(engine
eering, equipment, fabrrication and drilling) E&P companie
es
would be able to benefit
b
from the econom
mies of scale
e through th
he
consolidation and aggregation of critical ite
ems (turbine
e, generatorss,
pumpss or raw ma
aterials such
h as steel) o
on a portfoliio of projectts
rather than individu
ual project basis.
b
An exa
ample of a strategic allliance betwe
een an IOC
C and servicce
provide
ers is shown
n below (Cha
art 23).
Cha
art 23: BPs
s strategic alliance
a
with
h service prroviders
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onindesignoff
Standardizatio
upstreamfaciilitiesreduces
costandprojeectcycletime
ExxonsDesiignOne,Build
Manyhasyieelded
substantialco
ostsavings
Forwardplann
ningcould
resultinthea
aggregationof
equipmentan
ndservices
whichcouldtrranslateinto
lowerrates
20
2 |Page
Chart 24
4: Exxons Kizomba A,
A deepwater Angola is an example
e
of a successful exe
ecution of Design One
e, Build Man
ny concep
pt
By u
using our dessign one, build
d
many concept with the Kizomba
aA
projecct offshore An
ngola, we havve
significa
antly reduced
d the capital cost
of the
e Kizomba B project,
p
saving
g
around
d $400 million
n and improvin
ng
implem
mentation time
e by 20 perce
ent
versus Kizom
mba A.
- Rex Tillerson,
T
CE
EO ExxonMob
bil
Effective forward
d planning
Effectivve forward planning
p
enssures better visibility of requirementts
of upsttream projeccts. By appllying this principle, com
mpanies coulld
ensure
e the continuity of supp
ply of equip
pment and services an
nd
able to
o leverage on
n demand where
w
scale is advantage
eous.
Throug
gh forward p
planning, co
ompanies ca
an leverage on the scalle
and sc
cope of their business by
y managing projects req
quirements on
o
a portffolio basis ra
ather than managing
m
on
n project to project
p
basiss.
In othe
er words, ccompanies forecast
f
their needs accross severa
al
projectts by aggrregating an
nd standard
dizing dema
and for raw
w
materia
als (such as steel), equipments and services.
More often than not, compa
anies lack e
effectiveness in forwarrd
plannin
ng resulting in increased costs (e.g
g., unanticipa
ated deman
nd
ChinaandRussiacould
becomeanalternative
providerforequipmentand
services
Talentsfromdeveloping
countriesarecheaperto
hire
21 | P a g e
February 2010
from project teams lead to rushed orders that incur additional cost
and expedited freight charges which feeds into the cost of
production). In some instances, lacking skill to forecast forward
demand burdens the companies with extra storage charges just to
keep the excess inventory.
Broaden supply base
Instead of restricting suppliers from developed countries, some
companies engage the services of companies from China and
Russia. Both of these countries have a long history of oil and gas
production, and are capable of providing goods at competitive
prices compared to established companies from developed
countries. A study revealed that service providers from developing
countries charges lower rates due to lower labor cost (Chart 25).
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oolisageing
E&Ptalentpo
Chart 26
6: Age profille of E&P professionalls
Percen
ntage
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
55-59
50 54
50-54
45-49
40-44
35-39
30-34
25-29
A
Age
<25
Developingco
ountries
produceahighernumberoff
petro-personnelcompared
nations
todevelopedn
Source: SP
PE
Chart 27:
2 Numberr of enginee
ering graduates produced yearly
No. of engineering
ates (in thousa
and)
gradua
25
50
20
00
15
50
10
00
50
5
0
22
2 |Page
USA
Source: Booz Allen and Ham
milton
Europe
India
China
February 20
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andthecosttislower
Additio
onally, com
mpanies ma
ay also consider emp
ploying E&P
professsionals from
m developing countries - which may
m
cost lesss
compa
ared to their counterpartss from US an
nd Europe (C
Chart 28).
Ch
hart 28: Average yearly
y salary of E
E&P profess
sionals
Annu
ual salary
(US$
$000)
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
USA
A
UK
K
India
a
China
a
Implic
cations and
d Opportun
nity to PET
TRONAS
Projectecono
omicswould
beunderpreessure
Soarin
ng cost en
nvironment poses a th
hreat to E&
&P projects
s
viability
A high cost environment
e
would re
ender some
e projects
uneco
onomic. Thiis could ressult in the cancellation
n of these
projeccts and ultim
mately impac
ct the growtth of future oil
o and gas
produ
uction. Add
ditionally, ongoing
o
p
projects wh
hich were
sanctioned based
d on lower cost estimates may ta
ake longer
time to generate
e sufficient returns or would turn out to be
unpro
ofitable at all.
Highe
er possibility of projectt delays
Projectdelaysswould
translateinto
oopportunity
lossintermso
ofproduction
23
2 |Page
We be
elieve that th
here is a hig
gher likelihoo
od of cost ov
verruns and
d
projects exceeding
g its comple
etion schedule. This is driven by the
e
difficullties faced by companies in estim
mating the cost
c
of raw
w
materials, equipm
ments and services due
e to the vola
atility in the
e
marke
et as well as bottleneck in the supplyy chain.
A stud
dy revealed
d that 40% of mega-p
projects had
d exceeded
d
budge
et and sche
edule (Chart 29). Cha
art 30 prov
vides some
e
examp
ples of high profile projects ope
erated by IOCs which
h
encountered simila
ar problems.
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Percentage
40
35
30
25
Exceed Budg
get
(%)
20
15
Exceed Schedule
(%)
10
5
0
Mega-p
project (>US$ 1 billion) Normal
N
project (<US$1 billion)
C
Chart
30: Ma
ajor projects
s which had
d exceeded budget
Cost
(US$ billion)
25
20
15
Revised Costts (US$ billion)
10
5
Gassi Touil
Skarv
Kashagan
Snohvit
Sakhalin-2
Megaprojecttsareprone
tocostandscchedule
overruns
ProjectsmanagedbyIOC
arealsoexpo
osedtocost
overruns
Higherdeman
ndforPetro
personneltra
anslatesinto
higherwagess
Soarin
ng manpow
wer cost
The co
ost of manp
power would continue to
o rise as grea
ater demand
d
for skkilled and experienced
e
personnel globally exxerts upward
d
pressu
ure on wag
ges. Generrally, the ssalary of skilled petro
operson
nnel moves in tandem with
w oil pricess (Chart 31).
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B
Brent
(Index)
Salary (In
ndex)
170
4
450
160
4
400
150
3
350
140
3
300
6-9
9 years
130
2
250
15
5-19 years
120
2
200
110
150
100
100
nce
Experien
Ind
dex price of Brent
B
2009
2008
00
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
20
0-24 years
Longe
er delivery llead time
We ex
xpect that the
t
delivery lead timess for E&P equipment
e
to
o
lengthen in 2010. For example, OCTG wo
ould take ab
bout 9 weekss
to be delivered co
ompared to only 4 wee
eks in Janua
ary last yearr.
Steel would take 4 weeks to
o be deliverred compare
ed to only 2
weekss in December 2008 (Chart 32).
Chart 32: D
Delivery lea
ad time for E
E&P equipm
ment
Weeks
Weeks
Source:
S
Bloombe
erg, Purchasing Manager
M
Dec 09
Dec-09
Nov-09
Oct-09
Sep 09
Sep-09
Aug-09
Jul-09
H Rolled Shee
Hot
et & Strip (RHS)
May-09
Apr-09
Mar-09
Mar
09
Feb-09
OCTG
G (LHS)
Jun-09
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Jan-09
Longerdeliveerytimefor
criticalequipm
ments
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
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Lowerr exploratio
on spending
g
We arre of the viiew that an
n elevated cost
c
environ
nment would
d
result in lower exxploration sp
pend. As illu
ustrated by Chart
C
33, ass
cost riises (repressented by UCCI on the right axis), the amoun
nt
spent on exploratiion decrease
es (on left a
axis). These phenomena
a
could be attribute
ed to the fa
act that exploration is a high riskk
venturre whereby companies may or mayy not strike oil in drilling
g
explorration wells.
In view
w of this riskk coupled with
w the high
h cost involvved in drilling
g
explorration wells ((between US
S$20 million
n to US$60 million) E&P
P
compa
anies would rather alloca
ate a major portion of th
heir capital to
o
monettize oil resou
urces rather drilling explo
oration wellss.
%
25
240
Exploratio
on as %
of total CA
APEX
UCCI
220
200
20
180
160
15
140
120
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
100
2001
10
2000
Companiesteendtospent
loweronexplloration
activitieswheenE&Pcostis
higher
Inexperienced
dE&P
personnelma
aycontribute
tohigherHSEEincidents
Highe
er risks of safety relate
ed incidents
s
The tig
ght supply o
of skilled personnel mayy force serviice providerss
to hire
e inexperien
nced person
nnel in proje
ect executio
on. This mayy
pose higher safetty risk due to their unfa
amiliarity to oil and gass
operattions.
Creatingalliancewith
otherNOCscouldcreate
economiesofscalein
securingequipmentsand
services
Establishingstrategic
alliancewithservice
providersensureaccessof
criticalequipmentsduring
periodsoftightcapacities
Greatercollaboration
betweenstrategicplanning
andsupplychaincould
createclearerlineofsight
insecuringfuture
upstreamsupplies
Incentivesandpenalties
couldbeusedtospur
contractorsperformance
Lowerdutiesongoodsand
servicesprovidedbythe
FTAscouldtranslateinto
lowercost.
February 2010
Wood Mackenzie
27 | P a g e
February 2010
Epilogue
February 2010
DISCLAIMER
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this research report.
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