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Al-Naimi saidSaudi Arabia plans to increase its daily oil production capacity by 1.5 millions per day over the next four years to 12.5 million barrels per day. "Government policies aimed at reducing oil demand create another element of uncertainty for prducers," Naimi said in a reference to President Bush's comments in his State of the Union address on America's "addiction to oil." "This added risk is detrimental to timely investment decisions." Al-Naimi said that the world currently has 2 million barrels per day, "or less," of excess production capacity but not enough to keep markets calm that suppliers could offset a major output disruption. "We would be more comfortable if we had between five to seven million barrels per day, he said, assuming daily global demand of about 85 million barrels per day. The oil minister also also said that Saudi Arabia plans to build two new refineries - one in Jubail on the east coastand the other in Yanbu on the Red Sea coast - to increase its exports of refined products, such as petrol/gasoline and diesel. The refineries will have a capacity to refine 400,000 barrels of oil per day.
Together with other investments in refineries, in the United States and South Korea, Saudi Arabia plans to increase its refining capacity by 50 percent over the next five years to 6 million barrels per day. The price of light crude for March delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange fell more than a dollar on Tuesday. The price of light crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange is down to $62.84 per barrel. on Wednesday Feb. 8th.
BusinessWeek says that hiking its exploration-and-production expenditures by 50% since 2000, to $12 billion a year, Exxon Mobil Corp. expects to add more than 1.2 million bbl. per day of new supply by 2007 from 27 projects, including ones off the coast of Angola and Russia's Sakhalin Island. Chevron Corp. expects its Big Five fields in West Africa, Australia, the Gulf of Mexico, and Kazakhstan to generate 800,000 more bbl. per day by 2009 -- a third of its current production. "We've got that pretty well mapped out," says Chevron Vice-Chairman Peter J. Robertson. "Projects are more complex now. They take a little longer. There's still plenty of oil in the world." Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) has organised the energy conference in Houston A field-by-field analysis of global oil production and development shows the world is not running out of oil in the near- or medium-term, and a large increase in the availability of unconventional oils will expand global liquid hydrocarbons capacity by as much as one-fourth in the next ten years, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), testified to a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee .last December “We see no evidence to suggest a peak before 2020, nor do we see a transparent and technically sound analysis from another source that justifies belief in an imminent peak,” CERA Senior Consultant and Director of Global Oil and Gas Resources Robert Esser testified before a House Energy and Air Quality Subcommittee hearing on Understanding the Peak Oil Theory. “It will be a number of decades into this century before we get to an inflexion point that will herald the arrival of an ‘undulating plateau’ of global hydrocarbon production capacity,” Esser said. Expanding Sources CERA projects that world oil production capacity – including crude oil, condensate, natural gas liquids (NGLs), oil sands, gas-to-liquids (GTL), and other sources – has the potential to rise from 87 million barrels per day (mbd) in 2005 to as much as 108 mbd by 2015, with further growth in capacity continuing after that point. “A detailed new audit of our own analysis and the enormous scale of reserve upgrades in existing fields, confirmed by the most extensive and complete databases on field production – the proprietary databases of IHS, of which CERA is now part – contradicts those who believe that peak oil is imminent,” Esser testified. Between 2005 and 2010, production capacity expansion will be split between OPEC and non-OPEC countries, according to the CERA analysis; over the coming ten years, OPEC countries will produce a net gain of 12.2 mbd, almost 60% of the total expected capacity increase, with non-OPEC capacity rising 8.2 mbd. Regionally, the United States and North Sea capacity declines, while Canada, West and North Africa, Latin America, the Caspian and Middle East continue to increase. After 2010, increases in capacity will shift more to OPEC countries.
The increases flow from a large number of major projects in both OPEC and non-OPEC countries, with the top 10 projects being brought onstream each year together adding a cumulative gross capacity of 2.0 to 2.5 mbd per year until 2010. Many of these projects were approved under a much lower oil price regime, and will proceed even if the price of oil falls significantly, Esser observed. To evaluate assertions by some that the failure of global exploration to replace production in recent years is evidence of a peak, CERA and IHS reviewed detailed field-by-field data which indicated that production has been more than replaced by exploration plus upgrades of previous discoveries. For the period from 1995 through 2003, according to IHS figures and CERA analysis, global production of 236 billion barrels was more than compensated for by exploration success of adding 144 billion barrels and field upgrades of 175 billion barrels. Unconventional Liquids In addition to crude oil from conventional sources, CERA’s analysis concludes that non-traditional sources will continue their dramatic rise -- expanding to about 35% of total capacity in 2015, compared with 10% in 1990. Among the primary unconventional sources, many of which CERA expects to be considered traditional by 2015, are:
Above-Ground Risks While CERA’s outlook for capacity growth incorporates the uncertainties normally associated with exploration, development and production projects, it believes the major risks to this outlook are not below ground, but above ground. In the immediate term, these include shortages of qualified people, rigs, yard space and raw materials, as will as rising operating costs. Other above-ground risks include political turbulence, abrupt changes in contract terms, controversy over fiscal terms, weather and environmental effects, creeping nationalization and reconsolidation, and potential violence and insecurity. All these factors can limit expansion of exploration and slow the rate at which new projects will be sanctioned, Esser stated. Data Reliability Esser observed that one reason for debate over peak oil is the reliance of different observers on different data sets, with the most visible being those published by exploration and production companies and filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). “These data are overly conservative as evidenced by the extent to which upward reserve revisions outweigh downward revisions. This structural bias provides increasingly less useful information to investors and sets a confusing baseline for estimating future oil and natural gas supplies,” he testified. A CERA report published earlier this year identified a key weakness of the SEC reporting rules as the fact that, having been developed in the 1970, the rules reflect the industry’s technologies and structures of that time, and therefore cause large portions of discovered oil fields to be excluded from disclosure until late in their producing lives. Updating and modernizing the SEC rules to conform with the most widely accepted definitions for oil and gas reserves, as developed by the Society of Petroleum Engineers, would lead to the creating of a globally consistent data set covering the vast majority of the world’s reserves. “As the very definition of what is oil begins to change with the addition of non-traditional resources such as gas-related liquids, syncrudes, GTLs and even liquid fuels made from coal, a reliable dataset will be even more vital to inform the debate about when the world may face an undulating plateau of global oil production,” Esser said. Esser, CERA’s Director of Oil and Gas Resources, has led the company’s work on global oil and gas production analysis and forecasting for the past 15 years. He is the author with Peter Jackson, CERA’s Director of Oil Industry Activity, of the recent study, Worldwide Liquids Capacity Outlook to 2010: Tight Supply or Excess of Riches?, and of numerous CERA reports and analyses of global exploration and production for oil and gas, including The North American Gas Supply Challenge: The Role of the Gulf of Mexico. Prior to joining CERA, Mr. Esser worked as an exploration geologist and was responsible for Mobil Oil’s corporate energy resource analysis and oil and gas supply projections to support supply forecasts and oil and gas exploration strategies. He is a member of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) and a trustee of the AAPG Foundation, and holds degrees in geology from Yale University and Stanford University. RELATED: US refining capacity bottleneck boosts oil prices Oil sands put Canada second to Saudi Arabia in oil reserves © Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com |