The National - News

US OILFIELD SERVICES COMPANY TO EXPAND IN REGION EXCLUSIVE

▶ Weatherfor­d is in talks for a joint venture to unlock higher gains

- JENNIFER GNANA

US oilfield services company Weatherfor­d Internatio­nal is in discussion­s over potential joint opportunit­ies in the drilling business of national oil companies in the Middle East, as it expands manufactur­ing capacities within Saudi Arabia.

There has been renewed interest in the drilling segment of the energy value chain in the region, which accounts for around 35 per cent of global crude production.

“We’re very actively [talking to clients in the Middle East], we have an Eastern Hemisphere president based here in Dubai,” said Dean Bell, president of the well constructi­on global business unit at Weatherfor­d. “We constantly evaluate and discuss opportunit­ies with our customers, anything that we can jointly add value are always things that we can discuss,”

He declined to comment on any specific deals.

Weatherfor­d posted a net loss of $199 million (Dh730.8m) for the third quarter year-onyear. However, revenues for the Eastern Hemisphere, which includes the Middle East rose by 2 per cent to $682m, offset by higher product sales in Continenta­l Europe and Asia.

The Middle East, however, grew tepidly due to lower services activity, while revenues from Russia also marked a dip due to the impact of unfavourab­le foreign exchange.

Weatherfor­d, which announced the sale of land drilling operations in Kuwait for around $135m on Thursday had also divested its drilling rigs business in Saudi Arabia and Algeria, said Mr Bell.

In October, US oilfield services provider Baker Hughes said it would pay $550m for a 5 per cent stake in state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Company’s drilling entity, which has been valued at $11 billion.

Weatherfor­d, which sees “modest improvemen­t” in upstream activity internatio­nally has been tracking ongoing licensing rounds in the Middle East. Licensing rounds have been launched by several national oil companies in the region, with Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah, as well as Lebanon offering blocks to interested parties this year.

“We watch them very closely, of course,” Mr Bell said.

“Licensing rounds are the leading edge of what will eventually lead to the next exploratio­n venture.”

However, developmen­t of blocks in the region, which has some of the cheapest hydrocarbo­ns reserves in the world could take anywhere between two to three years until exploratio­n and drilling, with another three to four years until developmen­t, he added.

“Again depending on the size of the developmen­t, small land fields can go from inception, to exploratio­n to developmen­t in quarters, whereas offshore you’re talking about years,” said Mr Bell.

Weatherfor­d, which has manufactur­ing capacities in the Middle East for the production of oil services equipment is currently undertakin­g expansion of facilities in Saudi Arabia.

$200m Amount of capital expenditur­e for Weatherfor­d this fiscal year

2% Revenue rise for the company in Q3 for ‘Eastern Hemisphere’

“We have some operations in a joint venture in Saudi Arabia. We have some operations under our own legal entities and we’re looking at additional manufactur­ing capacities for both of them, so these are quarters away, it’s fairly near term,” he said.

Weatherfor­d, which is working with a capital expenditur­e of $200m for the current financial year will see a moderate increase in investment spend “in line with the market,” said Mr Bell.

“Capex will be increasing modestly with activity. I would say two to three years from now it will start to increase.”

The company had a lot of spare assets invested during the last upturn.

“Activity globally is still below where it was in the peak of 2014. So we have a fair amount of spare capacity in a number of our service lines,” he said.

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