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Is it Smart for Argentina to Subsidize the Shale
Oil Price at $67?
By Nick
Cunningham
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 13, 2016
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Argentina shale oil drilling |
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$67 Oil Has All The Majors Converging Here
Argentina offers one of the few places on earth where oil companies are
not suffering from the full force of the collapse in prices.
Argentina regulates oil prices, a policy originally intended to insulate
the public from the whims of the market, protecting people from triple-digit
crude prices. But with the crash in prices since mid-2014, the effect of the
regulation has reversed: motorists are now effectively subsidizing the oil
industry.
Prices for light oil are
set at $67 per barrel and natural gas prices fixed at $7.50 per million
Btu (MMBtu). That means consumers are not reaping the benefits of cheap
fuel. The higher prices they pay offer a huge lifeline for the oil industry.
From the consumer's standpoint, that may not sound like a great
deal. But it may help Argentina's shale industry keep their momentum going.
Argentina holds some of the largest shale potential outside of the United
States. According to the
EIA,
Argentina has over 800 trillion cubic feet of unproved technically
recoverable shale gas reserves (more than the 622 tcf located in the U.S.)
and 27 billion barrels of shale oil, which is less than only the U.S.,
Russia, and China.
The bulk of Argentina's shale reserves are
located in the Vaca Muerta, a vast shale basin in central Argentina. The
Vaca Muerta has attracted companies from around the world, including
ExxonMobil, Chevron, Royal Dutch Shell and Gazprom.
Drilling
activity has continued to grow, but high costs and infrastructure
constraints have prevented production levels from rocketing skywards as they
did in places like Texas or North Dakota.
But regulated oil prices
could also prevent Argentina from suffering the effects of the bust that are
now clearly visible across the well-known shale areas of the United States.
"This is so important, strategically," said the outgoing CEO of
state-owned YPF, Miguel Galuccio, referring to regulated prices, according
to the WSJ.
Last week, Galuccio
announced
that production from the Vaca Muerta continued to inch upwards, having
reached 50,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d), up from 44,000 boe/d
last year.
But Argentina faces profitability challenges even with
regulated oil prices. Galuccio said that the profit from YPF's shale oil and
gas production was "marginal." YPF announced spending reductions as well as
the decision to reduce its rig count. The company spent only $4 billion in
2015, down from the original $6 billion it had planned on spending. YPF will
trim another 25 percent from its budget for 2016.
Galuccio argued,
though, that the economics will improve as drilling scales up, techniques
are refined, and operators learn more about the basin. He said that YPF has
already reduced costs from the average shale well from $16 million to $13
million a piece. He expects that costs will decline to $10 million per well
in 2016.
Regulated oil prices can buy YPF – and other companies,
including YPF's joint venture partner, Chevron – some space to continue to
drill and bring costs down. "We are doing this to sustain activity and
employment," said Argentina's labor minister, Jorge Triaca, referring to
artificially high prices.
"You've got to incentivize people to do
exploration and development, especially when prices are low," said Ali
Moshiri, the top Chevron official in Latin America said. "If Argentina
carries on with these incentives, it will encourage others to come to the
country."
Meanwhile, a corporate makeover is also underway.
Argentina's new President Mauricio Macri pushed YPF's CEO Miguel Galuccio
out the door last week. The FT
reported that Argentina's new energy minister, Juan José Aranguren, was
not fond of Galuccio. In particular, he was critical of ballooning debt
levels that took place under Galuccio's management. Galuccio will be
succeeded by a former JP Morgan executive.
But Galuccio is also
credited with turning YPF's fortunes around. Since taking the helm in 2012
after the government of former President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner
nationalized YPF, he improved the company's operations and achieved
production increases.
President Macri and the new YPF CEO hope to
keep the momentum going. Whether or not having the Argentinian public
subsidize oil prices is smart policy, it offers the shale industry a rare
bright spot for the energy industry.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/67-Oil-Has-All-The-Majors-Converging-Here.html
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