by azur » Sun 27 Feb 2005, 16:04:00
MissingLink,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') have trouble believing a number like 10 dollars on the deep water oil.
How could a number like this be possible?
Some of you have questioned the $10/bbl production cost I suggested for deepwater fields. Happy to have my numbers challenged. Here is the back-up.
Each deepwater field is obviously unique, and has a specific field development plan – there is no such thing as a ‘standard’ project in this business. Hence, I propose some numbers for a fictitious field typical of many currently being developed.
Assume a 200 million bbl recoverable field in deepwater, remote from any infrastructure, which will produce 100,000 bpd at plateau and decline over a 10 year life.
Say you need 10 wells – 6 production and 4 water injection, which will cost $150 million to drill and complete.
Add the subsea hardware (Xmas trees and risers), which will cost another $200 million to procure and install.
Lease a floating production facility (FPSO). Typical all in lease rate could be around $200,000/day including crew, maintenance, spare parts, etc. Fuel to run the FPSO will come from the produced gas and is assumed to be accounted at zero cost. Surplus gas would be re-injected.
Add logistics and local support costs $50,000/day.
All up capital cost is then around $350 million, i.e. an average of $1.75 /bbl
Operating costs, including the FPSO lease cost, averages $4.5/bbl over the 10 years.
Oil shipping costs from the FPSO to a refinery would add say $1 to 2/bbl, depending on location.
In total, this gives $7.25 to 8.25 / bbl.
This excludes initial block license fee, seismic survey and exploration well costs, which could round the number up to $10/bbl total.
Local taxation is also ignored, since this varies widely from area to area.
This is obviously a simplistic analysis, ignoring time.
Run a more complex NPV calc on this at $40/bbl and you will find and NPV of around $4.3 billion for this project, i.e. an average of $21.5/bbl discounted (8% discount rate assumed).
Run it again at $25/bbl and you find the NPV drops to $2.2 billion.
Now you can see why the oil majors are reporting massive record profits this year.