Impact Of Oil Output Fall At Ageing Fields Seen As Acute

August 26, 2004

LONDON –Falling oil output from ageing fields, once insignificant compared with global production, has become large enough to impact world supply and may help explain the constant tightness in the oil market this year, according to analysts.

Oil production is now in decline in at least 18 major producing countries including the U.S., U.K. and OPEC members Indonesia and Venezuela, and total production from this group is falling by around 1 million barrels a day every year, according to the latest data.

The oil futures market can spike on a temporary outage of just a few hundred thousand barrels a day, so what is in effect a permanent outage of 1 million b/d may help explain some of the momentum behind the 53% rise in U.S. crude futures so far this year to near $50 a barrel, analysts who study depletion said.

“Depletion has become a serious issue for the oil market, and I believe it is contributing to market tightness,” said Chris Skrebowski, editor of the London-based Energy Institute’s Petroleum Review. Skrebowski has studied the issue using data from BP PLC’s (BP) widely-read Statistical Review of World Energy data.

“What it means is that before you meet a single barrel of demand growth you have to replace all the missing barrels,” he continued. “Depletion is really an extra demand. Countries where oil production is still expanding are being put under increasing pressure to make up growing depletion rates. It’s a huge drag on the system.”

And, as oil fields are ageing and their output declining even within countries where outright production is expanding, overall decline rates are estimated at closer to 3.5 million b/d.

Michael R. Smith, technical director of Energyfiles, an oil and gas information and forecasting service, estimates depletion from declining countries is running at even higher levels, at around 1.5 million b/d. Add in the declines at mature fields in expanding crude producers and an additional 5 million b/d is required to keep up with an average demand rise of 1.5 million b/d, he said.

“The 30 or so countries that can increase output will not only be required to satisfy demand growth of say 1.5 million b/d, but will also need to provide an additional approximately 1.5 million b/d each year to make up for the declining countries,” he added.

Depletion “A Foreign Concept” To Most

Global supply continues to grow overall despite the depletion, with flows in the second quarter of this year up 5% , or 4 million b/d, against a year ago, at 82.3 million b/d, according to the International Energy Agency.

But as supply peaks and declines in more countries over the coming years, fewer nations will be left to make up the shortfall. Smith estimates production from declining countries makes up around 38% of global supply.

But few analysts factor such depletion into their forecasts.

“Depletion is a foreign concept to most people’s thinking,” said Henry Groppe, founding partner at Houston-based oil and gas consultancy Groppe, Long and Littell.

He has analyzed oil supply trends for 30 years. “So much of the world’s oil production is carried out by governments or companies vying for government money who have an incentive to stress new production. It’s not in their interests to point out that some of this will be swallowed up by declining fields.”

“People often take future supply forecasts for new fields and simply add it on to current production,” Smith said. “But current production could have dropped by the time the new field comes on stream leaving an overestimated supply figure.”

Calculating depletion rates is fraught with difficulties as each oil field is different. The IEA, the energy watchdog for the industrialized world, warns against looking at the issue simplistically, or in isolation.

“Depletion is very important and needs to be factored into forecasts,” said Klaus Rehaag, editor of the agency’s monthly oil report. He said the agency factors depletion into its forecasts field-by-field where possible, and offsets it against estimates of new growth. “But depletion is only one dimension,” he added. “Depletion may contribute to higher oil prices, but that will open up other opportunities” for investment.

Many analysts compare events in today’s oil market with the oil shocks of the 1970s and early 1980s. Oil peaked at almost $80 a barrel in today’s money after the Iranian revolution and triggered so much investment in oil production in non-OPEC countries that the world was swamped with crude which eventually drove prices down to just $10 a barrel by 1998.

But Groppe says the situation is different now. “In the ensuing years since 1979 we’ve had the opportunity to find and produce all the cheap oil,” he said. “Now what’s left is much more expensive, and there’s simply not going to be a flood of cheap crude hitting the market again.”

“High prices will draw forth some incremental supply,” Skrebowski said, “but the problem is one of timing.”

He estimates around 8 million b/d of new oil is expected up to 2007, though depletion will weaken its impact. After that, there is a dearth of new projects. “Because of the lead time, even if projects are started now they won’t impact until 2010. In 2008-2009 I think volumes are going to fall below requirements.”

Groppe agrees: “In order to merely replace lost production from now on, the industry needs to develop around 3.5 million barrels of oil a day. All our research indicates this won’t be possible.”


Tags: Fossil Fuels, Industry, Oil