The UK offshore oil and gas industry is now in better shape to
compete for much-needed investment and confidence is slowly
returning to the UK Continental Shelf (UKCS) following an
intensive two-year drive to improve efficiency, streamline costs
and boost productivity.
Domestic oil and gas production continues to rise and unit costs
are improving, resulting in a more resilient and globally
competitive basin, despite on-going lower commodity prices,
according to Oil & Gas UK which today publishes
its Business Outlook Report
2017.
The report points to a further 5 per cent rise in output to 1.73m
boepd (630m boe pa) in 2016. Production has now been rising
since 2015, bucking a 15-year trend of decline, and should
continue to rise over the next two years to
peak at between 1.8 and 1.9m boepd by
2018. This is due to strong investment in new
development in recent years, which has brought a total of 34 new
fields into production since 2013, as well as improved
productivity on existing fields. A further 13 to 18 new fields
could start producing this year, building on recent success. By
2018 recent start-ups are expected to contribute up to 600,000
boepd, around one third of UKCS production.
Measures to bring the industry’s costs under control are taking
effect. Average unit operating costs have improved by half within
two years from $29.70/bbl to $15.30/bbl. Capital efficiency is
also improving. Development costs for newly approved projects
have reduced by more than 50 per cent since 2013 and are expected
to be lower again in 2017 reflecting costs trends as well as
investment constraints.
"Confidence is slowly returning to the basin,” says Oil & Gas
UK Chief Executive Deirdre Michie. “The revival is led chiefly by
exploration and production companies which may collectively see a
return to positive cash-flow for the first time since 2013,
provided costs are kept under control and commodity prices hold.
However, this is unlikely to translate immediately into
reinvestment or increased activity. The challenges for the basin
ahead, particularly for companies in the supply chain, are still
considerable. As one means to help address this, Oil &
Gas UK is asking the Treasury to extend the investment allowance
to operational activities that are focused on maximising economic
recovery.
“While the reduction in headline tax rates of recent years has
helped create one of the most competitive fiscal regimes for
upstream investment, certain adjustments are still required to
drive investment over the longer term.
As companies continue to adjust to lower commodity prices, they
remain focussed on near-term financial rebalancing and
consolidating recent efficiency improvements. Only a limited
number of competitive opportunities are able to secure investment
funding. As a result, investment in the UKCS is expected to
continue to fall. In particular, the wave of fresh capital
investment seen in recent years is declining rapidly as fields
currently in development come on-stream. The industry anticipates
a total spend of almost £17 billion in the UK this year, around 3
per cent lower than last year.
Exploration remains at record lows and the basin urgently needs
fresh capital to stimulate activity to unlock the UK’s estimated
remaining resource of up to 20 billion barrels of oil and
gas.
The impact on the supply chain has been particularly hard.
Companies have seen an average 30 per cent fall in revenues over
the last two years and are turning increasingly to overseas
markets to offset the shortfall in domestic activity. Exports of
goods and services are expected to be around £12 billion in 2017.
Although overseas revenues have fallen by £4 billion in since
2014, reflecting the contraction in global spend, they now
account for 43 per cent of supply chain revenues, demonstrating
the importance of international markets.
There are indications however that the bottom of the cycle may
have been reached and that business may at last begin to
stabilise. While $4 billion worth of asset and
corporate deals announced since January have been a significant
vote of confidence in the basin, Oil & Gas UK believes that
more can be done to facilitate the transfer of assets in the
basin and so stimulate additional investment. This is why
industry is continuing to ask the Treasury to revise the tax
treatment of decommissioning liability in support of
this.
Following a two-year downward trajectory, last year saw
the share price performance of listed supply chain
companies with a strong UK presence pick up gently
by 3 per cent. Moreover, approval
for new capital investment could potentially
rise this year with more than £1 billion of new field
developments being sanctioned. A number of multi-billion-pound
investment opportunities are also under consideration for
approval in 2018 and 2019.
Deirdre Michie adds: “It is crucial that these projects are
progressed efficiently through to development and new ones
matured to avoid a potentially significant production decline
after 2020 and provide much needed business opportunities for the
supply chain.
“The Government’s proposals for an Industrial Strategy is
therefore a timely intervention. Oil & Gas UK will be working
to ensure the oil and gas sector remains at the heart of UK
industrial policy and present a business case for a sector deal.
We need to ensure the competitiveness of the supply chain and
build resilience through diversification and exporting. Such an
approach will enable the whole industry to continue contributing
to overall UK productivity and economic performance.”