Abstract

PTTEP to Buy Murphy Oil’s Malaysian Business for $2.1 Billion Matt Zborowski, Technology Editor Thailand’s PTT Exploration and Production (PTTEP) is doubling down on Malaysian oil and gas in an effort to broaden its reach in its native South-east Asia. PTTEP has agreed to acquire Murphy Oil’s Malaysian business for $2.1 billion in an all-cash deal. PTTEP also announced that it was awarded two Malaysian exploration blocks in the Malaysia 2018 bid round. The assets to be purchased produced 48,000 BOE/D net to Murphy last year, of which 62% were liquids, and consisted of proved reserves of 468 Bcf of natural gas and 51 million bbl of liquids. The deal includes five petroleum exploration and production projects—Sabah K, SK309 and SK311, Sabah H, SK314A, and SK405B—in the shallow and deep waters off the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah. Global Oilfield Services Market Won’t Recover Until 2025 Trent Jacobs, JPT Digital Editor It has been a tough few years for the world’s oilfield service sector and, according to a new report, the best of times are on hold for a few more. This is according to Rystad Energy, which says the sector is on pace to capture $920 billion in revenue by 2025. The Norwegian market research firm has highlighted the figure as the high-water mark reached in 2014, a year that ended with crude prices falling by more than 40%. “This will be the longest slump faced by the oilfield service industry since the 1980s, with about $2.3 trillion in revenues lost along the way,” said Audun Martinsen, Rystad Energy’s head of oilfield service research. Martinsen continued by noting: “On the bright side, in only 3 years’ time, activity levels will be higher than they were in 2014, although the cost cuts achieved in the sector means spending levels will only be 80% of what was seen in that peak year.” ExxonMobil, Chevron Target Nearly 2 Million BOE/D in Permian Production Matt Zborowski, Technology Editor ExxonMobil and Chevron revealed plans that would result in combined production from the US majors of nearly 2 million BOE/D from the Permian Basin of West Texas and southeastern New Mexico by the mid-2020s. ExxonMobil revised upward its Permian production outlook by almost 80% to reach 1 million BOE/D by as early as 2024. The operator said its resource base in the basin totals 10 billion BOE. Chevron expects its output from the basin to rise to 600,000 BOE/D by year-end 2020 before hitting 900,000 BOE/D by yearend 2023. The company said it has added some 7 billion BOE in Permian resources over the last 2 years. Shale Pioneer: Hard Ceiling On Production Growth Coming Trent Jacobs, JPT Digital Editor The central debate today in the US shale business is how long productivity growth will continue. According to one of the most influential voices in the sector, the answer is not much longer. “I am not particularly optimistic that, over the next 5 years, the industry is going to be able to show the year-over-year improvements in well recoveries that we’ve seen over the past 10 years,” said Mark Papa, chief executive officer of private-equity-backed shale producer Centennial Development Resources. Papa said the two biggest factors at play are frac hits, or parent-child well interference, and a shrinking inventory of high-quality drilling locations. Shale CEO on Parent-Child Challenge, Well Declines: We Know Matt Zborowski, Technology Editor Much has been made recently about the disparities in production between parent and child wells in US shale basins. The increased attention on the issue is part of broader concern among investors about the ability of operators to maintain high levels of output over the next few years. However, Doug Suttles, Encana president and chief executive officer, assures that shale executives are acutely aware of the parent-child challenge. His company has been “very public about this for 5 years now,” he said before an audience largely consisting of the investor community at CERAWeek by IHS Markit this week in Houston. He ultimately doesn’t think it’s “a big threat” to the shale sector. ExxonMobil Makes Huge Gas Discovery Offshore Cyprus ExxonMobil has made what it says is the world’s third-largest natural gas discovery in 2 years off the coast of Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Based on preliminary interpretation of the well data, the discovery could represent an in-place natural gas resource of up to 8 Tcf. The Glaucus-1 well, located in Eastern Mediterranean Block 10, encountered a gas-bearing reservoir of approximately 436 ft. The well was safely drilled to a depth of 13,780 ft in 6,769 ft of water. Industry consultants Wood Mackenzie told Reuters news agency that it estimated recoverable resources of Exxon’s field to be 4.55 Tcf. That compares with its 6.4 Tcf estimate for Calypso, found by Italy’s ENI and France’s Total last year.

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