I’d like to explore the following:
The lack of new mega field discoveries is due in part to several factors:
1) the emergence of energy trusts
2) $10/barrel oil in the late 90’s
3) it is genuinely harder to find the mega fields
Most of the threads on this site have pinned the lack of mega fields squarely on factor #3. And when it comes to the ghawars’ of the world, that’s pretty obvious. But, is it possible that factors 1) and more importantly 2) are significant contributors?
A couple of articles in the Globe and Mail make this very point. As a quick aside, the Globe and Mail is running a week long series of articles entitled “
Crude Awakening– how oil is changing the world”. Lots of great articles are available.
One article in today’s edition (which isn’t directly a part of the series, and you need to be a premium subscriber to read it) talks about how $10 oil in the late 90’s led many companies to radically slow down their exploration efforts. (The
article is here if you want to become an inside edition subscriber) It also suggests that even at these higher oil prices companies are still reluctant to explore because much of it has to be done in geologically or politically hostile environments, which means they want an even higher price to justify the risk.
Another article (again need to be an insider, but it is
here) talks about the proliferation of energy trusts, and how many of these trusts are “focusing on the “P” in P/E” and that energy trusts are typically laggards on the exploration front.
So, seeing as many at ASPO feel that 2007/2008 will be important because of the lack of mega discoveries coming online, I was wondering what the consensus is here about the impacts of 1) and 2) above. Or more succinctly “We don’t have many mega discoveries coming online because of the lack of exploration.”
Granted, even if they found some now, it would be many years before they could come online. Also granted, they are having to “go to the ends of the earth” to make these discoveries and they won’t buy enormous amounts of time. But, if the claims have some merit, what we could have is a small dip in production before ramping up again to an eventual peak. For example maybe 2007/2008 is when production does dip, but maybe some new megafields will come online in 2010 or later, giving us another ride up to the true production peak?? Or will the depletion from existing wells far outweigh any potential megafields. (I’ll admit I haven’t crunched the numbers.)
Thoughts?