Business World

Hard-pressed N. American oil companies slash spending to cope with $30 per barrel crude

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NEW YORK — Occidental Petroleum Corp. on Tuesday became the latest to join a growing list of hard-pressed North American oil producers slashing spending and drilling after crude prices slumped to their lowest levels in more than three years.

Chevron Corp. became the first global oil major to say it was also looking to cut spending that could lead to lower nearterm oil production.

Global oil benchmarks plunged by nearly 25% on Monday, their biggest rout since the 1991 Gulf War, amid the eruption of a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia, sending another shockwave through an industry already nervous over the spread of coronaviru­s that has hit worldwide demand.

Major US companies have boosted production to a record near-13 million barrels per day (bpd), underminin­g efforts by OPEC nations to cut supply. Shale companies need prices at least in the low $40s to cover costs, and while US crude rebounded somewhat on Tuesday, it still closed just above $34 per barrel.

Occidental, with a $40-billion debt pile after it bought Anadarko last year, became the first oil producer to slash dividend, dropping it by 86% to 11 cents, and cut spending by about 32%. Other major shale companies have announced sudden spending cuts in the last two days, along with Canada’s Cenovus Energy, Inc., all of whom are revisiting their spending and production plans in light of OPEC’s decision to pump full bore beginning next month. “(Companies) will turn every stone and cancel every single nonrevenue-generating activity,” said Audun Martinsen at research firm Rystad Energy.

A number of energy finance sources said they expect numerous energy companies to be forced into restructur­ing agreements in coming months, as they will be unable to service debt with oil prices at these levels.

A source close to Chevron said that while it would not be easy to cut capital spending in an already tight budget, bosses would probably look to cut drilling rigs in the Permian basin in Texas, North America’s largest oilfield. Rystad predicted total industry spending on oil exploratio­n and production would be cut by $100 billion this year and another $150 billion in 2021 if oil prices remained around $30 a barrel.

To cut costs, the US shale industry would likely more than halve the number of wells it had originally planned to drill this year.

SHALE HIT

At the heart of the collapse in oil prices is the failure by the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies including Russia to continue their production curbs in place after this month. That has triggered a new price war with both Saudi Arabia and Russia betting they can supply the market at lower cost than US shale rivals.

Shale production has soared over the past eight years, pushing US output and exports to record highs, but that has come courtesy of strict limits on output which the Saudis rolled back after the collapse of OPEC talks on cuts last week.

Occidental, Marathon Oil Corp. and oil-sands company Cenovus Energy joined shale firms Diamondbac­k Energy, Inc. and Parsley Energy, Inc. to unveil spending cuts. EOG said it was evaluating its drilling activity and that it is in the process of finalizing specific plans.

Marathon and Cenovus also promised to cut spending by about 30% from a year earlier.

Analysts from Canadian bank RBC said they expected drilling activity cuts by Devon Energy Corp., Concho Resources and Matador Resources.

Concho declined to comment, while Devon and Matador did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The cost cutting will put more pressure on service companies like Halliburto­n, Schlumberg­er and smaller players like Packers Plus Energy Services that provide equipment as well as drilling and completion services to oil companies.

“If these oil prices persist, the only real discussion is whether or not to continue operations in North American land,” said Ian Bryant, chief executive of Packers Plus Energy.

“We had already given price concession­s to protect market share, so we’re running close to breakeven in North America before the oil price crash.” —

 ?? REUTERS ?? PUMP JACKS operate in front of a drilling rig in an oil field in Midland, Texas, US, Aug. 22, 2018.
REUTERS PUMP JACKS operate in front of a drilling rig in an oil field in Midland, Texas, US, Aug. 22, 2018.

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