The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Oil and gas supply chain revenues could grow £200billion in extra income – OGA

Oil and gas: OGA publishes strategy to boost turnover for next 20 years

- BY MARK LAMMEY

The Oil and Gas Authority (OGA) yesterday published its strategy to help the UK supply chain boost its turnover by more than £200billion over the next 20 years.

The OGA said that while it does not directly regulate the service sector, a strong supply chain is vital for making sure the UK continenta­l shelf’s remaining resources are exploited.

The regulator vowed to work with industry and government to develop the supply chain at a time when it is struggling amid a dearth of new projects.

In its supply chain strategy, which sets out a “shared vision” for the segment, the OGA said a collective approach could grow exports, reduce imports and anchor expertise in the UK.

To achieve its aims, the OGA said there had to be a balance between risk and reward for operators and suppliers.

It also prioritise­d increasing the UK supply chain’s share of the domestic market to 65% from 50% over the next two decades, while raising its internatio­nal profile.

Bill Cattanach, head of supply chain, OGA, said: “If the service sector builds on its global competitiv­eness and attracts the necessary investment, OGA analysis shows additional turnover of well over £200billion can be generated over the next 20 years by doubling the UK service sector’s share of the global market and increasing its share of the domestic market.”

The OGA, which became an independen­t government company with powers to impose sanctions earlier this month, released three other strategies yesterday in a busy week for the regulator.

Today it is hosting MER UK in Practice at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre. The event is aimed at explaining how the OGA intends to regulate, influence and promote the UK continenta­l shelf to maximise economic recovery.

The three additional strategies focused on exploratio­n, asset stewardshi­p and informatio­n management.

The OGA said there was an urgent need for exploratio­n of both mature and frontier plays to be revitalise­d. It said about 50 exploratio­n and appraisal (E&A) wells would be needed each year to replace the projected decline in reserves.

Only 13 exploratio­n and 13 appraisal wells were drilled in the UK last year.

The organisati­on admitted the task would be “considerab­le” in the face of low crude prices, but said the UKCS was still an “attractive exploratio­n destinatio­n” thanks to comparativ­ely low finding costs and larger discovered volumes.

It said the success of UK exploratio­n required evaluation­s of risk and uncertaint­y to be carried out to help companies come up with optimal drilling and investment strategies.

The exploratio­n strategy’s authors said the acquisitio­n of high-quality well and seismic data would play a key role.

They said: “The companies which have been the most successful explorers in recent years have invested most aggressive­ly in modern seismic surveys.

“Such geophysica­l activity needs to be stimulated as a first step towards prospect generation, reducing subsurface uncertaint­y and polarising risk, which should ultimately lead to more high-quality, drillable exploratio­n opportunit­ies.”

“Our analysis shows additional turnover can be generated”

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 ??  ?? LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: The Oil and Gas Authority says turnover can be boosted by hundreds of billions of pounds
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: The Oil and Gas Authority says turnover can be boosted by hundreds of billions of pounds
 ??  ?? Bill Cattanach
Bill Cattanach

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