Wood Mackenzie: Only three O&G projects to be sanctioned in Africa in 2016

Only one third of Africa’s pre-sanction oil and gas projects are economical at less than $50 per barrel ($/bbl), and only three projects are expected to be sanctioned in 2016, Wood Mackenzie says.

The energy intelligence firm has said that greater collaboration with the service sector, increased focus on project optimisation, and developments that require minimal capital outlay are all crucial to new projects going ahead.

Wood Mackenzie also suggests that Africa’s host governments have a key role to play in ensuring that mandatory local content requirements are reasonable, and fiscal terms are competitive in order to attract investors and unlock new project sanctions.

 

“More stringent savings would be required to ensure projects get the green light.”

 

Wood Mackenzie said it undertook a comprehensive study examining the impact of cost deflation on the global upstream sector, concluding that while operators are seeking an average cost reduction of 20-30% on projects, only 10-15% of that can realistically be achieved from the supply chain and that even more stringent savings would be required to ensure projects get the green light. Wood Mackenzie says this trend is very much apparent in Sub-Sahara Africa – with only three projects expected to be sanctioned in 2016 in the current climate.

Obo Idornigie, Principal upstream Sub-Sahara Africa research analyst says: “We estimate that Pre-sanction projects account for $270 billion of investments in Sub-Sahara and only a third of the projects are economic at less than $50/bbl. On average, operators are looking to achieve a further 15% in cost reductions in order for the majority of pre-sanction deepwater projects to break even at the current oil price. To achieve this in Sub-Sahara Africa, we believe that E&P companies need to increase the focus on project optimisation across the board and adopt smarter ways of working with the service sector to bring costs down to the required levels, as currently Sub-Saharan deepwater projects account for 50% of those that are sub-economical.”

 

FPSO developments most likely to get approval

 

He added: “Our latest analysis of the sector shows that deepwater developments requiring minimal capital outlay – such as leased floating production storage, offloading (FPSOs) vessels and subsea tiebacks to existing infrastructure – will be the most likely to progress. Across the industry, standardisation is a crucial factor in reducing costs. As a result technically challenging projects in Sub-Sahara Africa involving new-build, bespoke facilities and ultra-deepwater cluster developments, which are mainly located in Nigeria and Angola will not go ahead in the current climate.”

Idornigie explains that, while project optimisation will account for additional cost improvements, achieving that will be challenging if local content provisions are not reviewed, as pushing strict requirements pushes up costs and could hamper operators’ ability to standardise specifications and optimise returns.

 

Quadruple costs per barrel

 

According to Wood Mackenzie, deepwater costs per barrel in the region have quadrupled in the last ten years. Idornigie says that operators in Sub-Sahara Africa need to work hard to reset the cost base in this current climate. “Practices such as spreading construction work across multiple shipyards, as set out in some local content agreements, have been one of the key factors driving up costs in the region,” he says.

“Host governments must be pragmatic in the current oil price environment in order to remain competitive in the global market – with pre-sanctioned projects accounting for billions of dollars of capital investment across Sub-Sahara Africa there’s a great deal at stake and additional measures such as fiscal incentives will be required to improve project returns for producers,”  Idornigie says.