WARNING:
The Global Oil & Gas Industry Is Cannibalizing Itself To Stay
Alive
13
June, 2017
While
the Mainstream media continues to put out hype that technology will
bring on abundant energy supplies for the foreseeable future, the
global oil and gas industry is actually cannibalizing itself just to
stay alive. Increased finance costs, falling capital
expenditures and the downgrade of oil reserves are the factors, like
flesh-eating bacteria, that are decimating the once great oil and gas
industry.
This
is all due to the falling EROI – Energy Returned On Investment in
oil and gas industry. Unfortunately, most of the public and
energy analysts still don’t understand how the Falling EROI is
gutting the entire system. They don’t see it because the
world has become so complex, they are unable to connect-the-dots.
However, if we look past all the over-specialized data and analysis,
we can see how bad things are getting in the global oil and gas
industry.
Let
me start by republishing this chart from my article,
The
global oil industry only found 2.4 billion barrels of conventional
oil in 2016, less than 10% of what it consumed (25.1 billion
barrels)
.
Conventional oil is the highly profitable, high EROI oil that should
not be confused with low quality “unconventional” oil sources
such as OIL SANDS or SHALE OIL. There is a good reason why we
have just recently tapped in to oil sands and shale oil…. it wasn’t
profitable for the past 100 years to extract it. Basically,
it’s all we have left…. the bottom of the barrel, so to speak.
Now,
to put the above chart into perspective, here are the annual global
conventional oil discoveries since 1947:
You
will notice the amount of new oil discoveries (2.4 billion barrels)
for 2016 is just a mere smudge when we compare it to the precious
years. Furthermore, the world has been consuming about an
average of 70 million barrels per day of conventional oil production
since 2000 (the total liquid production is higher, but includes oil
sands, deep water, shale oil, natural gas liquids, biofuels and
etc). Conventional oil production has averaged about 25 billion
barrels per year.
As
we can see in the chart above… we haven’t been replacing what we
have been consuming for quite a long time. Except for the large
orange bar in 2000 of approximately 35 billion barrels, all the years
after were lower than 25 billion barrels. Thus, the global oil
industry has been surviving on its past discoveries.
That
being said, if we include ALL liquid oil reserves, the situation is
even more alarming.
Global Oil Liquid Reserves Fall In 2015 & 2016
According
to the newest data put out by the U.S. EIA, Energy Information
Agency, total global oil liquid reserves fell for the past two
years. The majority of negative oil reserve revisions came from
the Canadian oil sands sector:
Of
the 68 public traded energy companies used in this graph, total
liquid oil reserves fell from 116 billion barrels in 2014 to 100
billion barrels in 2016.
That’s
a 14% decline in liquid oil reserves in just two years. So, not
only are conventional oil discoveries falling the lowest since 1947,
companies are now forced to downgrade their total liquid oil reserves
due to lower oil prices.
This
can be seen more clearly in the EIA chart below:
The “net
proved reserves change” is
shown as the black line in the chart. It takes the difference
between the additions-revisions, (BLUE)
and the production (BROWN).
These 68 public companies have been producing between 8-9 billion
barrels of oil per year.
Because
of the downward revisions in 2015 and 2016, net oil reserves have
fallen approximately 16 billion barrels, or nearly two years worth of
these 68 companies total liquid oil production. If these oil
companies don’t suffer anymore reserve downgrades, they have
approximately 12 years worth of oil reserves remaining.
But…
what happens if the oil price continues to decline as the global
economy starts to really contract from the massive amount of debt
over-hanging the system? Thus, the oil industry could likely
cut more reserves, which means… the 12 years worth of reserves will
fall below 10, or even lower. My intuition tells me that global
liquid oil reserves will fall even lower due to the next two charts
in the following section.
The Coming Energy Debt Wall & Surging Finance Cost In The Energy Industry
Over
the next several years, the amount of debt that comes due in the U.S.
oil industry literally skyrockets higher. In my article, THE
GREAT U.S. ENERGY DEBT WALL: It’s Going To Get Very Ugly….,
I posted the following chart:
The
amount of debt (as outstanding bonds) that comes due in the U.S.
energy industry jumps from $27 billion in 2016 to $110 billion in
2018. Furthermore, this continues higher to $260 billion in
2022.
The reason the amount of debt has increased so much in the U.S. oil
and gas industry is due to the HIGH COST of producing Shale oil and
gas. While many companies are bragging that they can produce
oil in the new Permian Region for $30-$40 a barrel, they forget to
include the massive amount of debt they now have on their balance
sheets.
This
is quite hilarious because a lot of this debt was added when the
price of oil was over $100 from 2011 to mid 2014. So, these
companies actually believe they can be sustainable at $30 or $40 a
barrel? This is pure nonsense. Again… most energy
analysts are just looking at how a company could producing a barrel
of oil that year, without regard of all other external costs and
debts.
Moreover,
in order to acquire all this debt, to give the ILLUSION that shale
oil and gas production a commercially viable enterprise, these energy
companies have to pay its bond (debt) holders dearly. How
much? I will show that in a minute, however, this is called
their DEBT FINANCING. Some of us may be familiar with this
concept when we have maxed out our credit cards and are paying a
minimum interest payment just to keep the bankers happy. And
happy they are as they are making a monthly income on money that we
created out of thin air… LOL.
According
to the EIA and these 68 public energy companies, they are now
spending 75% of their operating cash flow to service their debt
compared to 25% just a few years ago:
We
must remember, debt financing does not mean PAYING DOWN DEBT, it just
means the companies are now spending 75% of their operating cash flow
(as of Q3 2016) just to pay the interest on the debt. I would
imagine as the oil price increased in the fourth quarter of 2016 and
first quarter of 2017, this 75% debt servicing ratio has declined a
bit. However, people who believe the Fed will raise interest
rates, do not realize that this would totally destroy the economic
and financial system that NEEDS SUPER-LOW INTEREST RATES just to
service the massive amount of debt they have on the balance sheets.
As
an example of rising debt service, here is a table showing
Continental Resources Interest expense:
Continental
Resources is one of the larger energy players in the Bakken oil shale
field in North Dakota. Before tapping into that supposed
“high-quality” Bakken shale oil, Continental Resources was only
paying $13 million a year to finance is debt, which was only $165
million. However, we can plainly see that producing this shale
oil came at a big cost. As
of December 2016, Continental Resources paid $321 million that year
to finance its debt…. which ballooned to $6.5 billion
.
In relative terms, that is a huge credit card interest payment.
The
folks that are receiving a nice 4.8% interest payment (again… just
a simple average) for providing Continental Resources with funds to
produce this oil at a very small profit or loss… are planning on
receiving back their initial investment. However….. THERE
LIES THE RUB.
With
that ENERGY DEBT WALL to reach $260 billion by 2022, I highly doubt
many of these energy companies will be able to repay that majority of
that debt. Thus, interest rates CANNOT RISE, and will likely
continue to fall or the entire financial system would collapse.
Lastly….
the global oil and gas industry is now cannibalizing itself just to
stay alive. It has added a massive amount of debt to produce
very low-quality Shale Oil-Gas and Oil Sands just to keep the world
economies from collapsing
The falling oil price, due to a consumer unable to afford higher
energy costs, is gutting the liquid oil reserves of many of the
publicly trading energy companies.
At
some point… the massive amount of debt will take down this system,
and with it, the global oil industry. This will have an
extremely negative impact on the values of most STOCKS, BONDS &
REAL ESTATE. If you have well balanced portfolio in these three
asset classes, then you are in serious financial trouble in the
future.
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