Uncertainty looms for majors’ US Gulf investment

  • : Crude oil
  • 21/04/26

Oil majors are resuming projects in the deepwater US Gulf of Mexico that were delayed by last year's Covid-induced oil price collapse. But their energy transition strategies, alongside US president Joe Biden's climate policies, are creating longer-term uncertainty around the US Gulf as an investment destination.

Output in the region is due to rise in the short term as fields with start-ups delayed by 2020's record-breaking hurricane season ramp up, with some projects expected to produce first oil this year (see table). The Energy Information Administration (EIA) forecasts US Gulf output at 1.75mn b/d next year, up from 1.71mn b/d this year and 1.66mn b/d in 2020. In the longer term, OECD energy watchdog the IEA sees US deepwater production rising to 2.1mn b/d by 2026, just above the 2019 peak of around 2mn b/d.

The Biden administration has formally called off all federal oil and gas lease sales scheduled before the end of June, as it continues to work on a sweeping review of its fossil fuel programme. Federal ownership of the offshore leaves deepwater operators with no way around a moratorium. The Interior Department plans to release by early summer an interim report outlining its next steps, including possible changes to offshore leasing. "If conditions in the US become so onerous that it really disincentivizes investment, we have got other places where we can take those dollars," Chevron chief executive Michael Wirth says.

For some majors, future investment in the US Gulf depends more on how the region fits into their exploration strategy and low-cost, low-carbon strategies than on Biden's policies. They face the uphill struggle of replacing depleting oil reserves required to pay for the energy transition while juggling a value-over-volume focus.

Chevron is progressing US Gulf projects that it says fit into its "higher returns, lower carbon" strategy, maintaining that the area holds some of the world's lowest carbon-intensity assets. It expects development costs at the approved St Malo, Mad Dog 2 and Anchor projects of $14-17/bl, excluding a $2/bl technology development cost for Anchor. And BP has focused its US Gulf strategy on tie-backs to existing infrastructure, which are cheaper and quicker than most stand-alone projects. Its Puma West prospect find this month could tie back to the Mad Dog 2 platform, depending on commercial viability, but if it spurs a major new investment it could complicate a transition strategy that assumes a 40pc cut in BP's oil output by 2030.

The US Gulf makes up 55pc of Shell's US oil and gas production, but reservoir challenges at its 175,000 b/d of oil equivalent deepwater Appomattox development contributed to post-tax impairments in the fourth quarter. The project started in May 2019 with a breakeven price of $55/bl. "We need to make judgments on the value of that asset over the next 10-20 years," chief financial officer Jessica Uhl says. "We have had some disappointments in the last 12 months."

Gulf widow

For other firms, increasing competition from different regions has reduced the US Gulf's long-term appeal. Total is unlikely to have an aggressive exploration strategy in the area beyond Ballymore and North Platte, for which it expects a final investment decision (FID) this year or beyond, chief executive Patrick Pouyanne says. The smaller size of the US Gulf's reserves and discoveries compared with Brazil or Suriname requires Total to work harder on technical costs to break even, he says.

This has been behind ExxonMobil's shift towards higher-return investment offshore Guyana and Suriname and away from the US Gulf, where its net acreage fell to 300,000 acres (1,215km²) at the end of 2020 from 1.2mn acres five years earlier. Short-term start-ups and FIDs in the region look likely to go ahead. But its long-term appeal depends on Biden's policies, and how competition with deepwater assets elsewhere plays into firms' energy transition investment strategies.

Highest bidders in Gulf of Mexico Nov 2020 lease sale*
CompanyTotal high bidsSum of high bids $mn
Shell Offshore†2127.9
EnVen Energy Ventures137.7
BP Exploration & Production†1017.1
Chevron USA†1017.1
Repsol E&P USA 96.4
Murphy Exploration & Production Company85.3
Equinor Gulf of Mexico722.2
Anadarko US Offshore 46.5
LLOG Exploration Offshore41.4
Renaissance Offshore 40.5
*Based on total number of high bids †Shell, BP, and Chevron bids secured 19, 10 and 8 blocks, respectively
Upcoming projects in US Gulf of Mexico
ProjectPartnersDetailPlateau '000 boe/d
Thunder Horse South expansion phase 2BP (75pc), ExxonMobil (25pc)First oil 202150
ManuelBP (50pc), Shell (50pc)First oil 202115
St Malo Waterflood developmentChevron* (51pc), MP Gulf of Mexico (25pc), Equinor (21.5pc), ExxonMobil (1.25pc), Eni (1.25pc)First oil 2021na
PowernapShell (100pc)First oil 2021-2235
Mad Dog 2BP (60.5pc), BHP Billiton (23.9pc), Chevron (15.6pc)First oil 2022120
VitoShell (63pc), Equinor (36.9pc)First oil 2022100
HerschelPhase 1 BP (100pc), phase 2 BP (50pc), Shell (50pc)First oil 202225
AnchorChevron (62.86pc), Total (37.14pc)First oil 2024na
WhaleShell (60pc), Chevron (40pc)FID 2H 2021100
BallymoreChevron (60pc), Total (40pc)FID 2022na
North PlatteTotal (60pc), Equinor (40pc)FID 2021 or later75†
*in St Malo field †'000 b/d

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24/04/26

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q

Lyondell Houston refinery to run at 95pc in 2Q

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US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus


24/04/26
24/04/26

US M&A deals dip after record 1Q: Enverus

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Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q


24/04/26
24/04/26

Start-ups to help Total keep output stable in 2Q

London, 26 April (Argus) — TotalEnergies said it expects its oil and gas production to hold broadly steady in the second quarter as planned maintenance is partially offset by rising output from new projects in Brazil and Denmark. The company expects to average 2.4mn-2.45mn b/d of oil equivalent (boe/d) in April-June, compared with 2.46mn boe/d in the previous three months and 2.47mn boe/d in the second quarter of 2023. Production is being supported by the restart of gas output from the redeveloped Tyra hub in Denmark late last month and the start of the 180,000 b/d second development phase of the Mero oil field on the Libra block in Brazil's Santos Basin at the beginning of the year. TotalEnergies first-quarter output was flat compared with the previous three months but 2pc lower than a year earlier as a result of Canadian oil sands divestments. The company reported a robust set of first-quarter results today, broadly in line with analysts' expectations. Profit for the first three months of 2024 was $5.7bn, compared to $5.6bn in the same period last year. Adjusted profit — which takes into account inventory valuation effects and special items — came in at $5.1bn, down by 22pc on the year but slightly ahead of the consensus of analysts' estimates of $5bn. Adjusted operating profit from the firm's Exploration & Production business was down by 4pc year-on-year at $2.55bn, driven in part by lower natural gas prices. The Canadian oil sands asset sales weighed on the segment's production but this was partly compensated by start-ups. As well as Mero 2, the Akpo West oil project in Nigeria started production during the first quarter. TotalEnergies' Integrated LNG segment saw a 41pc year-on-year decline in its adjusted operating profit to $1.22bn in January-March. The company said this reflects lower LNG prices and sales. But while its LNG sales for the quarter fell by 3pc in year-on-year terms, its LNG production was greater by 6pc. TotalEnergies achieved an average $78.9/bl for its liquids sales in the first quarter, an improvement on $73.4/bl a year earlier. But the average price achieved for its gas sales was 43pc lower on the year at $5.11/mn Btu. In the downstream, the company's Refining & Chemicals segment's first-quarter adjusted operating profit was $962mn in January-March, down by 41pc on the year but 52pc higher than the preceding quarter. TotalEnergies attributes the quarter-on-quarter rise to higher refining margins and a rise in refinery throughput . For the second quarter, it expects refinery utilisation rates to be above 85pc, compared with 79pc in the first quarter, boosted by the restart of 219,000 b/d Donges refinery in France. Total's Integrated Power segment continued to improve, registering a quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year increased of 16pc and 65pc respectively in its adjusted operating profit to €611mn. Net power production increased 14pc year-on-year to 9.6 TWh, while the company's portfolio of installed power generation capacity grew 54pc to 19.5GW. Total's cash flow from operations, excluding working capital, was down by 15pc on a year earlier at $8.2bn in the first quarter. The company has decided to raise its dividend for 2024 by 7pc to €0.79/share and plans a $2bn programme of share buybacks for the second quarter. By Jon Mainwaring Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

India's crude output steady, throughput rises in March


24/04/26
24/04/26

India's crude output steady, throughput rises in March

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US reimposes Venezuela oil sanctions


24/04/25
24/04/25

US reimposes Venezuela oil sanctions

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