The energy transition represents $14 trillion worth of uncertainty for upstream oil and gas, according to a new report by Wood Mackenzie.
Oil and gas is a risky business. Over the years, those risks have been tempered by a single tenet—that demand would continue to rise indefinitely. As the energy transition gathers momentum, that belief has all but evaporated, the report noted.
Oil demand may continue to grow for another decade or more, the report said. On the other hand, if the world acts decisively to limit global warming to 2°C by 2050—the AET-2 scenario—oil demand and prices would fall rapidly later this decade. Gas demand and price, however, would be more resilient.
While this range of outcomes has major implications for the oil and gas industry, in either scenario there is still a large amount of upstream value. Using its global Lens asset-by-asset modelling, WoodMac estimates the range of pre-tax future valuations for upstream is $14 trillion—from $9-23 trillion. On a post-tax basis, operators’ share of this economic rent ranges from $3 trillion to $9 trillion.
“The industry now finds itself having to supply oil and gas to a world in which future demand – and price – are highly uncertain. The range of possible outcomes is dizzying. But the world will still need oil and gas supply for decades to come, and the scale of the industry will remain enormous,” said Fraser McKay, vice-president, WoodMac.
Global upstream asset valuation sensitivity
Delivery and discipline are paramount in all aspects of the upstream value chain as the macro environment for oil and gas gets tougher. Performance against budgets and timelines has improved dramatically since the last downturn. The industry needs to remain relentless in its push to improve efficiency, drive down costs, and deliver projects flawlessly, the report said. Oil and gas companies need to send a strong signal to stakeholders that they can be reliable stewards of capital, it continued.
“Only exceptional, low-cost projects will work in all demand scenarios. Inevitably, the cost of capital and the cost of doing business in oil and gas will increase,” said Angus Rodger, Wood Mackenzie research director.
Oil and gas companies must improve their environment, social, and governance (ESG) credentials, and the bond of trust with stakeholders must improve, WoodMac noted. For the biggest players, new energies will play an increasing role, but it is not an option for many industry participants. They will need to cut Scope 1 and 2 emissions to reduce their exposure to increasingly expensive debt.
Investment will shift to gas, ending oil’s long supremacy. “The industry will have to figure out the conundrum of weaker economics if the giant gas projects the world needs are to happen. The returns on developing a barrel of oil are currently higher, with oil-production and cash-flow profiles delivering more value upfront. Gas prices are lower than oil prices on an energy-equivalent basis; that relationship will have to invert as it does in our AET-2 scenario to make this happen,” said Rodger.
As the oil and gas sector matures, business models must adapt to maximize value, McKay said.
“Consolidation to bolster margins will gather momentum. Specialists will carve out niches. Applying the right technology and retaining the right people will determine their success. Just a few more years of firm oil prices would strengthen balance sheets, making transition strategies easier to execute,” McKay concluded.