Total
Production by the Top Five Oil Majors Has Fallen by a Quarter Since
2004
The
combined crude oil production of the five main international oil
companies (Exxon, BP, Shell, Chevron and Total) hit an historic high
in 2004. Since then, it has fallen by 25.8%, despite large increases
in investments.
19
April, 2013
Total
crude oil produced by the majors was 10.760 million barrels per day
(MB/D) in 2004. In 2012, it reached only 7.981 MB/D. It has decreased
by 2.779 MB/D in 8 years (-1/4), as I have been able to calculate
from figures that appear in the twelve latest annual reports of those
five companies.
Is
this a clear early indication of an imminent decline in the worldwide
production of black gold, a phenomenon predicted since 1998 by former
oil company scientific executives, from the French Total group in
particular?
The
majors are all facing a decline in their crude oil production, which
began in each case before 2007. This comes despite extremely large
growth in their investments, allowed by the significant increase in
crude oil prices experienced since the late 2000s. Total, for
example, has seen its production fall by almost 20% since 2007,
although the French giant now has at least 40% more extraction wells.
Since
2004, the total oil production by the majors has only increased once,
between 2008 and 2009, and by just 0.13 MB/D, despite the
unprecedented level of sales and purchases of oil assets experienced
in recent years. So-called production sharing contracts, which
allocate a larger share of production to the host country when the
price per barrel rises, do not appear to explain the lowering of
production by the majors, far from it. The production share of the
five majors in worldwide production dropped from 13.39% in 2004 to
9.98% in 2011. It diminished further in 2012.
Worldwide
crude oil production rose by 4% between 2004 and 2011. It has hardly
increased at all since 2006, however: since then it has been on an
undulating plateau, within a small margin of less than 1.25%.
The
significant decline in extractions by the majors has been compensated
for by the OPEC countries (+ 2.189 MB/D), primarily Iraq and Saudi
Arabia, and also by the countries of the former Soviet Union (+ 2.131
MB/D). In the rest of the world, where the majors often occupy the
key positions, oil production (excluding agrofuels) has fallen by
1.104 MB/D, once again between 2004 and 2011.
In
2012, worldwide production appears to have increased significantly,
firstly thanks to the boom in shale oil in the United States; full
detailed information is not yet available (to follow).
The
case of BP
Since
2011, the decline in the total production of the majors has been
significantly amplified by the sale to the Russian national company
Rosneft of parts of the BP group with TNK-BP, an important joint
venture established in Russia in 2003. The sale of TNK-BP alone has
eliminated around 40% of BP's previous production. This production
reached its record level in 2005. If this sale had not taken place,
total production by the five majors would have still declined by
17.7% in 8 years, reaching 8.86 MB/D in 2012. And BP's production
would still have been in sharp decline.
Since
2011, BP has had to sell other major production assets in order to
settle the account for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.
In this case, as in that of TNK-BP, it is the need to go in search of
intact sources of oil in increasingly extreme conditions that has
hindered BP's development: the drill site responsible for the
catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico holds a drilling depth record; the
conflict between the TNK-BP shareholders at the root of the sale of
parts of BP was about the opportunity of a huge drilling campaign in
the Arctic Ocean, where the oil majors, notably BP, have recently met
with a number of failures.
The
"seven sisters" have aged
Exxon,
Shell, Chevron, BP and Total are still forces to be reckoned within
the oil industry, as much for their still considerable outputs, for
their investment capacities and technical expertise, as for their
strategic role as the preferred providers of consumers in the old
Western industrial powers. These Western majors, starting with the
most powerful, Exxon, remain, now more than ever, at the top of the
ranks of the largest private companies on the planet.
The
majors came into existence between the late 19th century and the
early 20th century. Long dubbed the "seven sisters", they
are now only five in number as a result of the mega-mergers that have
taken place over the last two decades.
Until
the 1960s, the Anglo-Saxon majors, as well as the forerunners of the
French company Total, largely dominated worldwide production. The
OPEC cartel of oil producing countries was created in 1960 to stand
up to the restricted and secretive cartel of the "seven
sisters", which reigned supreme outside the United States for
half a century.
Throughout
the 1960s, and especially in the 1970s, as the OPEC member countries
nationalised their oil fields in the wake of Algeria, Libya and Iraq,
the control wielded over production by the Western majors was
reduced.
The
response at the end of the 1970s broadly stabilised the balance of
the market share, thanks in particular to the launch of the North Sea
and Alaska, two extraction areas that have been in significant
decline for more than a decade because of the exhaustion of their
crude oil reserves.
OPEC
is now content with a little over 40% of worldwide production. But it
controls more than 70% of the planet's proven reserves.
Consequently,
as the known oil fields are getting depleted, production should
become more and more concentrated in the major OPEC countries,
starting (or finishing) with Saudi Arabia, as well as, to a lesser
extent, in the former Soviet Union.
It
seems unlikely for the moment that the development of
non-conventional and extreme sources of oil, in particular shale
hydrocarbons, will be able to change that fact. We will come back to
this again.
For
this translation, a very big thank to Laura Bennett:
culturetranslation.com
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