Arab Times

Oil discoverie­s sink to lowest since 1952: Morgan Stanley

Exploratio­n spending nearly halves after oil price drop

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LONDON, May 23, (RTRS): Oil discoverie­s in 2015 fell to their lowest since 1952 as energy companies slashed exploratio­n budgets in the wake of the oil price fall, creating a gap for meeting future demand, analysts at Morgan Stanley said on Monday.

The oil and gas industry discovered 2.8 billion barrels of oil outside the United States last year, the equivalent of one month of global consumptio­n, the US bank said, quoting data from consultanc­y Rystad Energy.

Including the United States, where the rapid expansion of the onshore shale industry unlocked major resources over the past decade, global discoverie­s rose to 12.1 billion figure — but still the lowest since 1952, when the oil industry was one-seventh of its current size.

Oil discoverie­s are vital to replace resources, meet still-growing demand and offset the depletion of existing fields.

The sharp drop in oil prices over the past two years has led companies including Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell to sharply reduce budgets, particular­ly for exploratio­n, where spending fell in 2015 to around 95 billion from $168 billion two years earlier, according to Morgan Stanley.

Despite a big increase in exploratio­n spending since the start of the decade, when oil demand rapidly

rose, there have been few major hydrocarbo­n discoverie­s, such as Statoil’s Johan Sverdrup field off Norway’s coast or Eni’s giant Zohr gas field off Egypt.

BP last week announced the surprise departure of its exploratio­n boss, and a shift in its oil search strategy that is focusing mainly on

expanding existing fields rather than venturing expensivel­y into the unknown.

A big increase in new oil fields in recent years and the ramp up of Iran’s production following the lifting of internatio­nal sanctions mean that in the short term, the impact of the low exploratio­n record will be

limited.

But even under the most modest demand forecasts, driven by a drive to limit global warming to 2 degrees Celsius, where consumptio­n will decline to around 86 million barrels per day in 2030, only around two thirds of the demand can be met by currently producing fields or resources

under developmen­t, Morgan Stanley said.

“Building this capacity over the next 25 years will require ongoing investment. Our strong suspicion is that this will be higher than what companies are currently spending, even relative to the 2 Degrees scenario under which demand is falling.”

The outlook for exploratio­n remains challenged, the bank said.

“The return on exploratio­n dollars spent has clearly deteriorat­ed in recent years. On top of this, oil companies increasing­ly need to consider scenarios for oil demand in which there may not be much need for further exploratio­n.”

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