1 / 19

Purpose

New & Old World of Offshore Energy Stockholm, European Offshore Wind Conference September 2009 Nial McCollam Managing Director Senergy Alternative Energy. Purpose. Review key factors in 40 years of offshore oil & gas Discuss potential relevance for OSW Explore potential “synergies”

bazyli
Download Presentation

Purpose

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New & Old World of Offshore EnergyStockholm, European Offshore Wind ConferenceSeptember 2009Nial McCollamManaging DirectorSenergy Alternative Energy

  2. Purpose • Review key factors in 40 years of offshore oil & gas • Discuss potential relevance for OSW • Explore potential “synergies” • Highlight where two industries may be just plain different

  3. 40 Years of Offshore Oil & Gas 1960’s 1970’s 1980’s 1990’s 2000’s • Focus on “time to first oil • Bespoke designs • Escalating costs • High oil prices masked escalating costs • Oil price crash late 80’s • Huge shake-out • Piper Alpha tragedy • Major reshaping of the industry • Initiatives such as CRINE • Evolution of contracting strategies & structures • Service sector felt squeezed • Arguably this phase extended N.Sea viability • Increased focus on life cycle cost • Shallow water • Harnessing Gulf of Mexico experience • Moving North… • Deeper water, bigger waves, longer distances • Under-estimated costs • Projects 1-2 yrs over-run • High crude price saved a number of projects

  4. Price volatility has been a key feature 70% swing

  5. Grand Prix level of acceleration: £0 to £13Bn p.a. annual investment in ~ 6 yrs OSW investment by 2020+ if UK targets to be met £ Billion per annum OSW investment by 2015-2020 if UK targets to be met Current level of OSW investment Source: UKCS analysis - Professor Kemp, University of Aberdeen

  6. Investor returns and government “cut” rose just as quickly What’s the reciprocal “tax investment” required to enable multi-giga-watt expansion? Source: Professor Kemp, University of Aberdeen

  7. However, production costs have risen steadily – influenced by several factors • Increasing water depths • Supply chain supply-demand fluctuations e.g. drill rigs • Smaller discoveries / reservoirs • Supply chain cost escalation: commodity and people costs Source: UK government (DECC) statistics

  8. Already we see four key differences between O&G and OSW • O&G project pay-back almost instantaneous once “first oil” is achieved • OSW has long project pay back periods • Government aligned & incentivised by huge tax raising opportunity • Governments must invest to achieve low carbon objectives • The product (oil) subject to significant price volatility • Will “green power” price be stable or volatile? • Experience curve gave access to previously uneconomic resources – but costs rose over time • OSW seeks to achieve long term cost-of-energy reductions

  9. Despite differences – much to be gained from Oil & Gas hard won lessons 40 Years of Experience Over 100,000 full time professional eng’rs & technicians More than 4 million years of aggregated experience • Our research explored four areas of this experience : INFRASTRUCTURE TECHNOLOGY ECONOMICS COMMERCIAL

  10. 1) Technical & Technological • Seismic data acquisition and processing • Subsea engineering and technology • Directional drilling; horizontal wells • Floating production & storage • Deeper water – structures, installation etc • Monitor While Drilling (MWD) and rotary steering • High Press High Temp (HPTP) developments All the above under-pinned by…. • IT and Computational power • Materials science • Decades dealing with harsh offshore environment

  11. 2) Commercial and contractual • Partnering a critical building block for North Sea O&G developments • Close partnerships have worked well (but not in all cases) • Fragmented supply chain – but gives flexibility & adaptability • Increased recognition (project) owners were best placed to manage risk • LOGIC (1) CRINE(2) initiative stimulated supply chain collaboration • Drove competitiveness - by reshaping contracting strategies & approach • Alignment contracts increasingly used • 'Promote' licenses stimulated development (but tension between Oil & Service Cos) SUPPLY CHAIN EFFI- IENCY Source: (1) LOGIC = Leading Oil and Gas Industry Competitiveness (2) CRINE = Cost reduction initiative for the new era

  12. 3) Economics and Investment £ • Oil price volatility massive influence • Increasing sensitivity as fields became smaller • Tax changes had large impact • “Boom and bust” nature due to oil price swings • Divestments by major oil cos a significant feature • Open the door to smaller (lighter footed) independents

  13. 4) Infrastructure & logistics • Infrastructure available to wide range of developers/operators • FPSOs and Hub platforms provided flexibility • “Pipeline access code” major positive step • But developing “the code” took too long • Infrastructure not held too tightly by dominant “players”

  14. O&G industry “interviewees” see a number of barriers to their increased involvement in OSW • Reliance on government represents too high a risk • Too busy on oil & gas opportunities to pursue OSW • Economics of OSW not attractive enough vs O&G opportunities • Sector will be dominated by power cos: O&G cos focus on O&G • Doubts over feasibility of OSW technology at full commercial scale Decreasing Consensus Amongst Respondents Source: Senergy industry survey and analysis

  15. Individual’s from OSW industry perceive similar challenges – but some difference in views Shared View • Reliance on government represents too high a risk • Bureaucracy and inefficiency of related planning processes • Lack of T&D infrastructure and/or clear policies to provide such • O&M of many 1000s of offshore assets will be too challenging • Construction risks in North Sea weather window to high • Technical or technological issues not yet fully addressed Source: Senergy industry survey and analysis

  16. Key barriers to harnessing synergies between OSW and O&G • Oil cos and power cos will find it inherently difficult to partner one another • Oil and gas technical solutions and equipment seen as too expensive • Perceived differences in attitudes or approach to HSE • Oil and gas resources (people) perceived as too expensive • Cultural & commercial approach of O&G vs Power Sector is too different ?

  17. Conclusions • Not just about technological and operational experience • Commercial and contractual developments perhaps most significant • Economics & investment different but key factors inherently similar • Infrastructure very different but again some pertinent experience • Collaborative leadership critical – particularly when time’s are toughest • Finally, our research suggests some distance between the 2 industries but individuals are eager to cooperate • It’s imperative we harness the 4+ million years of experience

  18. Senergy Overview • Senergy is an established energy service co: £75m turnover and more than 400 engineers • Working extensively across oil&gas and renewables • Delivering technical, engineering and commercial services to complex & challenging energy projects: • Conducting 100s of offshore surveys & geotech studies p.a. • Engineering & advisory > 50% of UK’s wind projects to date • Staff with centuries of accumulated offshore experience • Senergy’s committed to a diverse energy future • We believe OSW is an essential new frontier • We’re working hard to help our clients develop the full potential of this sustainable resource

More Related