Average Second Quarter production Rates (mboe/d)*
Major | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | |
Exxon Mobil | 2,393 | 2,668 | 2,701 | 2,468 | |
Royal Dutch Shell | 3,126 | 3,178 | 3,253 | 3,526 | |
Chevron | 2,540 | 2,630 | 2,669 | 2,421 | |
Total S.A. | 2,353 | 2,323 | 2,290 | 2,506 | |
BP | 3,830 | 3,804 | 4,018 | 4,112 | |
ConocoPhillips | 1,750 | 1,910 | 2,130 | 1,540 | |
Totals | 15,992 | 16,513 | 17,061 | 16,573 | |
Year-over-year change | -3.16% | -3.21% | +2.94% |
The highlights are as follows.
- Profits were robust (as expected) due to high oil prices.
- Production rates fell (not quite as expected) despite record capital expenditures.
- All but two saw production decreases from the same quarter last year despite the fact that oil prices doubled in the same period.
- The average year-over-year production drop was over 3% in each of the last two second quarters.
On an oil-equivalent basis, production decreased 7% from last year. Excluding impacts related to the Venezuela expropriation, the Nigeria labor strike and lower entitlement volumes, production was down 2%.Also downplayed is the effect of asset sales; the reality is that most of such sales are mature fields that already in decline and are no longer material to the company. It seems that while global reserves have edged upwards, our ability to get them out of the ground under free-market conditions is quickly deteriorating, even with oil at record prices. Expropriation of reserves by state-governments is likely why oil prices have increased so rapidly: free-markets are losing control of production to countries like Venezuela, Russia and China. This is very bad for free-market pricing. So far at least, demand destruction has not appeared to offset the bullish market forces including resource nationalization, geopolitical instability and exponential production declines. The entire independent oil & gas industry tells the same story. I'm not predicting $300/bbl oil yet, but I wouldn't fault anyone for holding on to crude oil futures in light of this data.
There is one more recurring theme. Nearly all the refinery and gasoline distribution divisions were the least profitable and in some cases lost money. Exxon Mobil now plans to exit the gasoline distribution market citing very weakening margins. This is bad news for gas prices which have yet to increase by the same percentage as crude oil.
*mboe/d = Thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day. Natural gas volumes are converted to an oil-equivalent basis at a ratio of about 6 mcf:1 boe.
2 comments:
Not sure I would draw a straight line cause and effect between two years of quarterly decline and the ability to get them out of the ground. By the way are the year over year declines in all quarters or only Q2?
They are only for Q2. Looking at the full year data from 2005-2007 the declines actually look slightly worse. That said, I would expect to see an increase for the same period next year as capital makes its way from the drillbit to the pipeline.
But let me put it another way--if someone said after hurricane Katrina in 2005 that oil independents' production would be down in 2007 without a significant drop in oil prices, I would've thought them to be crazy.
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