12 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News • MAY 2014
NEWS - OFFSHORE UPDATE
A
n EPC contract for a pro-
duction unit can easily ex-
ceed $1 billion – and $3
billion for an FPSO has re-
cently been breached. Overall, this is a
$20 to $30 billion annual market. But,
as described below, the sector is hitting
some headwinds that could impact fu-
ture business opportunities.
Backlog of Planned Floater Projects
243 fl oating production projects are
in various stages of planning as of be-
ginning May. Of these, 57% involve
an FPSO, 16% another type oil/gas
production fl oater, 23% liquefaction or
regasifi cation fl oater and 5% storage/
offl oading fl oater.
Brazil, Africa and SE Asia are the
major locations of fl oating production
projects in the visible planning stage.
We are tracking 50 projects in Brazil,
49 in Africa and 46 projects in SEA –
60% of the visible planned fl oating pro-
duction projects worldwide.
Around 25% of the projects are at an
advanced stage of development. They
typically have either entered the FEED
phase, pre-qualifi cation of fl oater con-
tractors has been initiated or bidding/
negotiation is in progress. Award
of the production fl oater contract in
these projects is likely within the next
2-3 years. The remaining 75% of the
planned projects are in an early stage
of development. Contract awards are
more likely in the 3+ year time frame.
Future Business Drivers
The large number of projects at the
ready-to-go stage is clearly a positive
indicator for future fl oating production
equipment orders. However, timing of
the decision to proceed to contracting
will be infl uenced by future underlying
market conditions. Fundamentals driv-
ing future orders in the fl oating produc-
tion market remain generally positive.
World oil and gas demand continues to
grow, crude pricing remains in the $100
to $110 range and deepwater drillers
are operating at high utilization. But the
sector is hitting competition from shale/
tight oil and gas supply, energy compa-
nies have been cutting capital spending
budgets and deepwater drillers are not
quite as bullish as in recent past.
Growing Demand for Oil and Gas
On the positive side, global oil de-
mand has grown at an average rate of
1.4% annually over the past 20 years.
With the exception of two years dur-
ing the global fi nancial meltdown, oil
demand has increased year over year
during this period. Growth in oil de-
mand is widely expected to continue
over the foreseeable future. The IEA,
for example, sees world oil demand in
2035 growing to 101 mb/d, an increase
of 11% over today. Global natural gas
demand is also growing. Gas consump-
tion doubled between 1980 and 2010
and has grown another 13% since.
Over the past decade global natural gas
consumption declined in only one year
– 2009 as a result of the fi nancial crisis.
The EIA sees world gas consump-
tion growing at an annual rate of 1.7%
through 2040. ExxonMobil projects a
65% increase in natural gas demand by
between 2010 and 2040.
Unconventional Oil & Gas Supply
But unconventional oil and gas re-
sources are changing the supply land-
scape. Use of horizontal drilling and
hydraulic fracturing to exploit oil and
gas resources locked in shale, siltstone
and mudstone, as well as production of
oil from oil sands, has opened huge new
sources of energy supply.
Nowhere is the development of un-
conventional oil resources more rap-
idly advancing than in North America.
Between 2011/2014 the production
of oil in the US and Canada increased
39%, primarily the result of incremen-
tal production of shale/tight oil in the
US and oil sands resources in Canada.
As a result, production of oil in the US
and Canada now accounts for 27.6%
of non-OPEC oil production – up from
22% in 2011.
Development of shale/tight oil re-
sources outside the US has been much
slower due to land rights issues, access
to drill equipment, environmental op-
position to fracking, etc. But the shale/
tight oil revolution will undoubtedly
spread beyond the US. Opportunities
are too big to ignore. The EIA estimates
that shale/tight oil resources worldwide
total 345 billion barrels – and account
for 10 percent of global oil reserves.
The equally spectacular revolution in
shale/tight gas production is changing
global gas supply and is threatening the
dominance of major players in the LNG
sector. And like shale/tight oil, the
shale/tight gas revolution is centered in
North America.
Production of shale/tight gas in the
US is projected to grow 52% over the
next decade. According to the EIA,
shale and tight gas is expected to pro-
vide 71% of US natural gas production
in 2024, up from 61% today. In 2024
the US is expected to be producing 22.5
TCF of natural gas from shale and tight
rock formations – the equivalent of
more than three times the current natu-
ral gas production of Qatar.
A substantial, though yet unclear, por-
tion of future U.S. gas production will
be exported as LNG. BP expects that
the U.S. “will become a net LNG ex-
porter from 2016, reaching a total net
LNG export volume of 11.2 Bcf/d by
2035.” ExxonMobil sees North Ameri-
ca shifting “from a net importer to a net
exporter of natural gas by 2020 as pro-
duction outpaces demand.”
Like oil, development of shale/tight
Floating Production
System Orders Outlook
BY JIM MCCAUL, IMA
Planned Projects
Type of Production
System Required
(As of May 1, 2014)
Type of No. of
Required Projects
FPSO 138
Other FPS 38
FLNG 31
FSRU 24
FSO 12
Total 2243
Annual Growth in Global Oil Demand
Over Past Two Decades
(% change year over year)
Source: IEA
Projected Growth
Global Natural
Gas Demand
(Quadrillion Btu)
Source: ExxonMobil
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