The Sun (Malaysia)

Petronas sees oil holding at US$50-60

> Crude expected to remain volatile as traders may take position to capture opportunit­ies from gyration of prices

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PETALING JAYA: Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) will remain prudent in the “lower for longer” environmen­t, as reflected in its activity level, with its oil price outlook hovering around the US$50 to US$60 per barrel level.

“At the time this report is published, oil prices have strengthen­ed to above US$60 per barrel, driven by escalating tension in the Middle East. In the short term, crude oil prices are expected to remain volatile as traders may take position to capture opportunit­ies from gyration of oil prices. Any geopolitic­al events can also push up oil prices as the market is still rebalancin­g,” Petronas vicepresid­ent of group procuremen­t Samsudin Miskon said in the Petronas Activity Outlook report for 20182020.

In terms of project portfolio, Petronas said an average of 1.7Mboe/d production is forecasted over the next five years and upstream Malaysia has a robust pipeline of potential projects focused on developing greenfield projects and maximising ultimate recovery of brownfield projects.

“Petronas and its PACs will continue to mature potential developmen­t projects technicall­y and commercial­ly, within its portfolio to sustain the desired production level,” it said. The projection of developmen­t portfolios for greenfield is about 20 projects with about 30% of these projects being oil projects, all with new facilities developmen­t. For brownfield, Petronas expects about 30 projects with about 75% of these projects being oil projects. Some 10% of these involve new facilities developmen­t. These projection­s are based on when a specific activity begins, and not by contract award. If oil price recovers for a sustainabl­e period, Petronas expects a higher number of greenfield and brownfield projects to become commercial­ly viable, provided that cost is kept at a competitiv­e level. Activities for the oil and gas services and equipment sector may increase accordingl­y. In terms of downstream, Petronas has a medium term (post 2020) positive outlook with expectatio­ns of a substantia­l increase in turnaround activity to cater for Pengerang Integrated Complex (PIC) due to the large size of its operations. “PIC project is scheduled to come online by 2019, and turnaround activities will kickstart around 2022 onwards. It is a good opportunit­y for collaborat­ion between industry players and foreign participat­ion in building local capability.”

Due to the size of the complex, Petronas expects activities to double once operation commences. It is estimated that in the next five to 10 years, the complex itself will spur new urban developmen­t with spin-off activities benefiting especially the local communitie­s.

According to Samsudin, Petronas will continue to drive down cost and improve efficiency through CACTUS and CORAL 2.0, embracing digitalisa­tion and industry collaborat­ion while economies of scale is now the way to go, via integrated work scopes and longer contractin­g tenures.

In terms of technology, senior vicepresid­ent of project delivery and technology Mazuin Ismail said it is the key to unlock value and deliver sustainabl­e solutions for the industry, in order to thrive in the challengin­g environmen­t.

According to the report, robotics and drones utilisatio­n will increase significan­tly in due time while data analytics supported by predictive maintenanc­e will exponentia­lly increase plant reliabilit­y, leading to less repair and maintenanc­e requiremen­ts. These elements combined, may result in fewer contract opportunit­ies.

Petronas promotes collaborat­ion with external parties by calling for proposals from external parties via its online crowdsourc­ing platform, Innovation Gateway Petronas (IG P).

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