Oil exploration up in the air as prices plunge

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Tanzania is not an oil producing country but the country has some exploratory activities, with the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) announcing in October last year that it was embarking on a Sh2 billion oil exploration project in Eyasi Wembere basin.

London/Dar. A fall in global oil prices, occasioned by a drop in demand as countries employ lockdowns to prevent the spread of coronavirus, could be good news to motorists in non-oil producing countries like Tanzania. However, the coronavirus pandemic is forcing energy majors to tighten their belts on exploration, even if finding new deposits remain essential to their existence.

Tanzania is not an oil producing country but the country has some exploratory activities, with the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) announcing in October last year that it was embarking on a Sh2 billion oil exploration project in Eyasi Wembere basin.

The exploration involves drilling of three oil wells with 300 metres depth each in Eyasi Wembere basin. The wells are drilled at Kining’inila Village in Igunga District and at Meatu in Simiyu region and Iramba in Singida region.

Last month, Tanzania and Uganda signed an agreement allowing for the construction of a 1,445 km (898 miles) crude oil pipeline.

The $3.5billion project will connect Uganda’s oil fields to Tanzania’s port of Tanga.

Analysts say while the oil sector – which has been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, was increasingly diversifying into greener energies such as electricity and wind power, its core business remains oil and gas.

“Questions abound over whether it is still profitable to look for oil given subdued demand growth prospects and a low-price environment,” Stephen Brennock, analyst at oil brokers PVM, told AFP.

“The answer seems not, judging by the recent spate of massive hydrocarbon asset writedowns.

“Set against this backdrop, I don’t expect a rebound in drilling in the medium-term.

“Instead, oil majors will be forced to beef up their green energy portfolios in order to survive,” Brennock said.

Compared to pre-virus plans, the energy sector has slashed exploration projects in UK North Sea waters by 70 percent and by 30 percent off the coast of Norway, according to research group Westwood.

US oil giant ExxonMobil has cut its total exploration plans by 30 percent, or an investment reduction of $10 billion (8.4 billion euros).

European rivals ENI, BP and Equinor have carried out similar moves, which have in turn hurt subcontractors including French oil services group CGG, which expects revenue to slump 40 percent this year.

In the United States, more than 30 oil exploration and production companies have this year filed for bankruptcy, according to Texan law firm Haynes & Boone.

If oil prices remain stuck around the current $40 per barrel level, a further 150 such companies could be lost by 2022, estimates research group Rystad Energy.

“Drilling programmes will be hampered in the near-term, in particular in US shale areas but also elsewhere, because of immediate cost-cutting measures,” said JBC Energy analyst Raphaela Hein.

“In the past, we have seen that massive capital expenditure cuts to majors’ budgets did not really impact their future production.

“As such, we think that they will continue to look for new fields -- maybe to a slightly lesser extent... and keep production within their long-term plans.

“Of course this will contribute to ensuring their survival,” she added.

Hein however said that Arctic projects appeared to be “economically unviable”.

This despite the vast area forecast to have 13 percent of the world’s oil reserves and 30 percent of its undiscovered natural gas.

In July, Russia’s Gazprom Neft and Anglo-Dutch giant Shell announced a partnership to explore in the Arctic.

While oil prices rebounded strongly after briefly turning negative in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, the world’s main oil contracts Brent North Sea and West Texas Intermediate have failed to build on those gains -- and last week fell heavily to under $40.

“Markets right now do not believe there is a future for oil,” said SEB analyst Bjarne Schieldrop.

“For how long we’ll have reduced drilling depends on the oil price,” he added.

Even so, the administration of US President Donald Trump in August approved oil and gas drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, angering environmentalists in the process.

While the oil price crisis is making the realisation of such projects unlikely, “political will may still trump” that, said Hein of JBC energy.