Yahoo – AFP,
August 3, 2017
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| Oil majors are no longer getting burned by low oil prices (AFP Photo/Robyn BECK) |
Paris (AFP)
- The prospect of crude remaining near the current $50 level is no longer a
doomsday scenario for the world's oil majors whose latest earnings
announcements show that cost-cutting lets them turn a profit even at these
price levels.
BP,
Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell and Total have all published results in recent days,
showing they pocketed $23 billion in net profit in the first half fo the year.
Either they
increased their earnings or at least returned to profit compared with the same
period last year.
With the
exception of ExxonMobil they all benefitted from an increase in output from the
same period last year, but more importantly they all profited from a rebound in
crude prices as OPEC members and Russia agreed to limit production.
The price
of the international benchmark Brent crude averaged $51.7 per barrel in the
first half of this year, up considerably from $39.8 during the same period last
year.
While the
profits are still less than half of what the firms turned in during the same
period three years ago when Brent was trading at over $100 per barrel, they
show that the major firms can survive profitably if crude prices stay at
current levels, a scenario many now foresee.
"It is
a tough environment and it could remain that way for some time," said BP's
chief executive Bob Dudley earlier this week.
"But
we are building a business that is resilient to these changing
conditions," he said.
After crude
prices began their descent in 2014 the oil majors reacted quickly: cutting
costs, selling off assets judged non-strategic and focusing on the projects
they considered the most profitable.
"Big
Oils are showing strong ability to adapt to lower oil prices through cost
cutting," said analysts at US investment bank Goldman Sachs in a recent
report.
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Even if the
oil majors have adapted to low prices for the moment, developing new
resources
affordably could pose a challenge say analysts (AFP Photo/SPENCER PLATT)
|
By one
measure, free cash flow -- or the amount of funds a firm has left over after
investments needed to maintain or expand their assets -- they may even be better
off.
Goldman
Sachs analysts said European oil majors had a higher cash flow in the first
half of this year than in the first half of 2014, when crude prices were more
than double of what they are today.
Lower,
forever
"Recent
results are good news and average production costs have fallen by 40 percent
since 2014," said David Elmes, and energy specialist and professor at
Warwick Business School.
"The
important part of recent results is how firms are back to generating enough
cash to cover such costs" like investment and high dividend payments that
have kept many long-term investors on board, he told AFP.
While cheap
oil was initially viewed as a phase that would soon pass relatively quickly as
global demand continued to climb upwards, a shift has occurred and many now see
lower prices as here to stay for a while.
Shell's
chief Ben van Beurden said the firm is now working with a "lower forever
mindset".
He said
that Shell still believes there is a better than 50-50 chance that crude prices
will trend higher in the coming years, but wasn't going to base its business
decisions on that.
"We do
not want to have the mindset that higher oil prices are around the corner to
help us out," he said.
For the
moment, the oil majors have shelved costly projects like extracting crude from
Canadian tar sands or tapping certain Arctic fields.
However in
the future they will have to face replacing their reserves at a profitable
cost, something which may prove difficult in the medium term.
"The
amount of affordable oil and gas big oil can access is limited," said
Elmes. "Much is in the control of national oil companies keen and able to
develop it themselves."
And when it
comes to exploiting shale reserves in the United States, Elmes said that the
smaller companies have shown themselves to be able to better control costs.


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