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Big Oil braces for biggest challenge yet

- NIK MARTIN

Plummeting oil prices amid the coronaviru­s pandemic sparked the biggest oil industry crisis in a century. Already facing pressure to commit to the energy transition, can these goliaths adapt in time? In April, the price of oil turned negative for the first time in history, just after the coronaviru­s pandemic hit. As lockdowns were ordered across the world, demand for black gold plummeted, prompting producers to literally pay buyers to take the commodity off their hands.

The price collapse was exacerbate­d by the Saudi-Russian price war which blew up around the same time, after Moscow refused to moderate oil production to keep prices at a reasonable level. Overproduc­tion, particular­ly by US shale producers, amplified the effects of the worst oil crisis in decades. In the first nine months of this year, Shell, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP and Total made a total loss of $36.4 billion, compared with last year’s $50 billion in profit. As investors took flight, the oil majors were forced to slash costs.

Investment slashed, jobs cut Exxon, once the world’s largest publicly traded oil and gas company, said in the summer that capital expenditur­e would shrink by 20%, and just last week, announced it would cut 15% of its workforce‚ shedding some 50,000 jobs. Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell, BP and others have made similar moves, with most slashing investor dividends for the first time in years. “The next few years are going to be very difficult,” Helal Miah, investment research analyst at The Share Centre, told DW. “But the oil majors have done it before. During the financial crisis, these companies were very good at slashing costs.”

Dozens of smaller firms, however, will struggle to survive. The New York Times reported that more than 50 North American oil and gas companies had already sought bankruptcy protection this year. Many of them took huge risks and even bigger loans to try to compete with the majors. This fall, the second wave of the pandemic has forced renewed lockdowns across Europe and will likely prompt a more robust response from US President-elect Joe Biden, who has vowed to create a pandemic task force as soon as he takes office in January. Those measures could cause a further shakeout. “The longer the pandemic goes on, the more we’ll see the smaller and mid-cap sized oil companies go under, or be taken over by the larger ones,” Miah added. Conoco Phillips last month bought the independen­t exploratio­n firm Concho Resources, days after Chevron completed the takeover of rival Noble Energy.

Peak demand or bottom of cycle?

Some analysts believe global oil demand may have already peaked, while others believe that if oil prices haven’t already, they are close to bottoming out. Seven months on from the unpreceden­ted negative oil price shock, West Texas Intermedia­te (WTI) crude, one of the benchmarks for calculatin­g oil prices, stood at $38.15 on Monday. The price is still 67% lower than its 2014 peak of $114 a barrel, but closer to the $50 that most large oil companies need to break even. Exxon needs prices of around $75, according to analysts. All the same, the oil majors are not expected to reach their pre-COVID profitabil­ity levels until at least the end of 2022. Already facing pressure to lead the energy transition and help the world wean itself off its fossil fuel addiction, oil giants have vowed to exploit the crisis to speed up investment­s in renewable energies.

“Prior to COVID this [energy transition] was a gradual trend,” Peter Hitchens, oil analyst at the London-based Progressiv­e Research, told DW. “The question is will COVID accelerate this trend?”

European firms like France’s Total, the UK’s BP and the Anglo-Dutch giant Shell have already begun to prioritize renewable energy, and plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050. BP and Shell have announced major offshore wind projects this year.

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