Global oil companies are re-evaluating the way that they deal with service companies in a bid to reduce costs, according to news agency, Retuters.
Energy companies have sharply cut spending plans after a decade of double-digit growth, saving cash for dividends as stagnating oil prices and cost increase on mega projects worldwide have squeezed margins and angered shareholders.
Some now ask service firms to come into projects at the start, ditch some tailor-made designs in favour of standardised solutions and stay with projects longer to reduce the number of contractors involved, moves that reduce costs but favour bigger, integrated firms.
Oil service shares have suffered over the past year, with European firms hit the most. Analysts at UBS estimate they trade at 14 percent discount to their 5-year average with a further downside risk as investors adjust to a lower growth scenario.
“It is evident that the problem is not the services making supernormal returns but rather, given the persistence of execution issues, that something in the contracting model needs to change,” UBS said.
“Now is the time of integration, with one service company doing everything with the client from planning the well to building it,” Torjer Halle, the chairman of Schlumberger’s Norwegian unit said. “Size matters and (integration) will happen in the industry.”
A big extra cost has been that oil companies have built up redundant competencies with costly control systems since BP’s 2010 Macondo accident in the Gulf of Mexico, especially for expensive engineering.
“Over many years people have become very inward thinking and believe the processes they have built up are the Holy Grail,” said
Ashley Heppenstall, the CEO of Swedish oil firm Lundin Petroleum.
Rising oil prices had also masked the sector’s eroding competitiveness and energy firms grudgingly swallowed cost blowouts or delays without revising their contracting models.
“We have seen what …. we refer to as ‘gold-plating’, specifications beyond what is really required,” Kristian Siem, the chairman of Britain-based Subsea 7 said.
“There is a lot of ‘it is nice to have’ but not ‘need to have’. If you eliminate that, that is where the big cost is.”
Norway’s Statoil, last year’s most successful offshore explorer, has already taken a leap in cutting costs.
It told Aker Solutions to reduce engineering costs by up to 30 percent, potentially $900 million, in the initial phase of its Johan Sverdrup oilfield, a North Sea giant with up to 2.9 billion barrels of oil.
To get that kind of saving, Aker Solutions has to get involved earlier than in past projects, combine work with another field and reuse design elements from past projects – instead of starting from scratch, Chief Financial Officer Leif Borge said.
Statoil has already experimented with some standardisation on smaller, marginal fields but has not done anything on the scale of Sverdrup, which could cost $20 billion in its initial phase.
“Tailor-made projects needs to be replaced by copy-paste because there’s substantial opportunity to just repeat solutions, not necessarily go into mass production, but to replicate solutions that have been used before to reduce costs,” Jan Arve Haugan, the CEO of Norway’s Kvaerner said.
The new business model means energy firms will work with fewer suppliers, reducing the number of costly and time consuming tenders, and awarding bigger contracts.
They could also reduce overlapping engineering competencies and delegate more responsibility to service firms.
Just this week Schlumberger, one of the biggest players in the sector, said it was taking business away from rivals and that its first quarter was better than it projected.
“Shifting supplier for every project, you will never get efficient processes,” Aker’s Borge said. “This gives us a stronger position but it also puts your head on the block…. because there’s a risk that you invest in a relationship but can’t secure the business.”
Another risk is that the increased use of standardisation could push firms to develop simpler, less complex fields and leave more complex finds dormant.
“If we are not able to lower the cost development, decision makers will move away from the North Sea once the ongoing projects are done,” Kvaerner’s Haugan said.
The International Energy Agency sees oil prices down at $102 per barrel next year from the current $107 as several producers ramp up output, a big change for energy companies that have commissioned projects assuming higher prices.
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