U.S. Gulf of Mexico oil producers consolidation accelerates
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[August 16, 2021] By
Gary McWilliams
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Oil and gas producers
in U.S. Gulf of Mexico have consolidated at a faster rate during the
pandemic, new government data shows, as crashing prices squeezed out
smaller drillers who had been seen as the industry's future.
The dominance of the top producers in the Gulf looms large as the
industry's technology showcase, the Offshore Technology Conference,
officially gets underway in Houston on Monday. The event, which in prior
years drew more than 60,000 people and 1,000s of exhibitors, will be
smaller this year due to company cutbacks and coronavirus-induced travel
restrictions.
The pandemic, along with recurring hurricane shut-ins, hastened the
demise of some Gulf of Mexico producers. Smaller, private-equity backed
firms that pushed into offshore fields last decade have struggled,
leading several to exit while others slipped into bankruptcy.
"We’re only going to see further consolidation," said Colin White, an
analyst with consultant Rystad Energy. Private-equity backed producers
are being swallowed up by larger firms or are abandoning exploration for
safer infrastructure investments, he said.
The top 10 producers - led by Royal Dutch Shell, BP Plc and Chevron -
this year pumped 86% of the region's 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd),
up about 11 percentage points since 2017, data from regulator Bureau of
Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) shows.
Two closely-held offshore drillers, Fieldwood Energy and Arena Energy,
fell into bankruptcy in 2020 as crude oil prices plummeted. U.S. energy
experts forecast output will return to its peak
https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/
detail.php?id=47536 of 1.9 million bpd by 2022.
Arena emerged with its debt extinguished and a reduced drilling program.
But the U.S. suspension of offshore auctions "has certainly chilled any
potential investors," said Michael Minarovic, chief executive.
NEW PROJECTS TAKE WING
BP plans its first production early next year on a 140,000-bpd project,
Shell recently approved a 100,000 bpd field that will begin producing in
2024, and Chevron is preparing to tap a super-high pressure field that
could pave the way for a series of new wells, said Neil Menzies,
Chevron's general manager of capital projects for its Gulf of Mexico
business unit.
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People stand next to a logo at the Offshore Technology Conference in
Houston, Texas, U.S., August 14, 2021. Picture taken August 14,
2021. REUTERS/Gary McWilliams
"We plan to grow to about 400,000 bpd by the middle of the decade," said Starlee
Sykes, BP's senior vice president over the Gulf operations, from about 350,000
bpd now. With advanced seismic and high-pressure technologies, "I’m optimistic
the Gulf of Mexico will be around for a very long time," she said.
The consolidation has reduced the number of Gulf producers to about 49 today
from 60 five years ago. Financing for smaller firms has dried up, leaving future
wells in the hands of big operators that can self-finance operations.
"The amount of regulation and overhead makes it difficult (for smaller
companies)," said Ryan Smith, senior director of commodity research, at energy
data provider East Daley Capital. "Bigger operators are used to the overhead."
Oil majors are renewing investments because of the region's lower carbon
intensity for production. Offshore wells are under high pressure, meaning oil
flows readily to the surface instead of needing carbon-emitting boosters. U.S.
regulators' ban on routine flaring also has fed an extensive pipeline network
resulting in a lower carbon footprint than many onshore fields, executives said.
Royal Dutch Shell, among others, plans on increasing its investment in offshore.
U.S. permitting of projects have not been affect by the Biden administration's
review, executives said.
The U.S. Gulf oilfields, with their proximity to onshore refineries and gas
processing plants, are "the closest thing the energy industry has to
farm-to-table" restaurant, said Bill Langin, Shell's senior vice president of
deepwater exploration.
(Additional reporting by Jessica Resnick-Ault in New York; editing by David
Gregorio)
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