North Sea oil is definitely past Peak
Oil
markets spark fear in North Sea waters
Oil
industry officials told the BBC the more than 40 percent drop in the
price of crude oil is putting the regional energy sector in a state
of emergency.
UPI,
19
December, 2014
Oil
prices for the week are recovering from historic lows, though Brent,
a crude index based on North Sea oils, at one point fell below the
$60 mark for the first time in more than five years. Robin Allen,
chairman of the independent British exploration association Brindex,
told the BBC the regional industry was in a state of contraction.
"It's
close to collapse. In terms of new investments - there will be none,
everyone is retreating, people are being laid off at most companies
this week and in the coming weeks," he said. "Budgets for
2015 are being cut by everyone."
Major
international oil companies, from Marathon in the United States to
British energy major BP, have trimmed their investment forecasts with
oil trading in a bear market.
BP
in November said it could cope with an oil price as low as $60 per
barrel, though BP Chief Executive Officer Bob Dudley said the company
was working on a "simplification plan" in the current
market.
Oil
production from the North Sea has been in decline since the late
1990s. Government data show a decline of 7 percent from last year,
though the rate is slowing.
The
government in February said it was moving forward with
recommendations from retired businessman Ian Wood, who led a panel
tasked with finding ways to breathe new life into North Sea reserve
basins.
Wood's
panel found there may be an additional 4 billion barrels of oil
equivalent available for recovery in the North Sea.
Graham
Sadler, managing director of petroleum at business services company
Deloitte, told the British news service last week that if oil prices
stay below the $70 mark for long, North Sea producers will "start
to struggle."
The
British Department of Energy and Climate Change, meanwhile, said the
current market was presenting major challenges for North Sea
operations, though it's seen "very little evidence" to
suggest project were being cancelled as a result of low oil prices.
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