Sunday, 28 February 2016

Oil Depression: Nigeria oil rig reduces by 57%- Avuru


Seplat Petroleum Managing Director, Dr. Austine Avuru 
By Oluwagbenga Bankole
As a result of the downturn in oil prices,the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Seplat Petroleum, Dr. Austine Avuru has said that 57 percent of the land rig in Nigeria today are not working.

Avuru stated this while delivering a paper titled 'Oil Price: Challenges and Opportunities' at the 13th edition of Aret Adams Lecture held in Lagos recently. 

"In 2013 we were operating 7 rigs in Seplat, we dropped our last rig in November 2015, we don't have any rig working for us today. So you can figure out all the service companies working on 7 rigs. These days, there is hardly anything to approve. Service companies are in real trouble,” Avuru said.

Explaining how and why some indigenous oil companies operating in Nigeria ‎will close shop by the end of 2017, Avuru said market forces will determine crude oil price and will shut out companies that can't survive and keep those that can produce what the world needs.

As a result of the impeding closure of some operating companies, the Seplat boss said Nigerian banks are jittery than the oil companies because of the exposure they had to upstream activities.

‎In his words; "Remember that in the past especially in the 90s when total global oil demand was 75 million ‎barrels. Once we had a million barrel glut for producing 75 million barrels per day and there was a drop in oil prices, OPEC will withdraw one and the half million barrels and stabilise the price. 

"So when this current situation occurred, ‎people expected OPEC to do the same but OPEC led by the Saudi reasoned that why should they lose their market share because they produce 30 million barrels today and world demand is 95 million barrels a day. When world demand was 75 million barrels a day, OPEC was producing 30 million barrels a day.

"So with 20 percent increase in world demand, OPEC has not increased its own share of production. So the thinking was, why would OPEC reduce production to shore up prices, taking it to the same level where people ordinarily who should not ‎compete with OPEC to come into the market. 

"OPEC decided to allow the glut to continue while world demand is 95 million barrels per day. But there will be an equilibrium price at which production will be equal to or less than 95 million barrel  a day. Clearly it is not $30 per barrel, it may not be $100, it may be $60 or $70.

"When we get to that equilibrium price, the market will shut out those who cannot survive and keep those who can produce what the world needs. That is the equation which really in my view was the right thing to do except that some of us would have been dead as companies by the time that equation balances. 

"I think that the simple equation is that by the end of 2017, the market will determine that equilibrium price which will be in my personal opinion between $60 -$70."

‎Avuru added that the situation is even more scary in the United Stated of America noting that their banks are also exposed to debts as result of the shale activities.

"Even in the US where you think everybody should be jubilating they too are also jittery. There is some $226 billion of debt that is threatening to go bad probably had already gone bad from the shale business.

"So if you are a banker today and you are heavily expose to the upstream business anywhere around the world, you will be jittering, you will be facing lots of impediment," he said.

Challenges ‎with Indigenous Coy

The Seplat boss said the biggest challenge for indigenous companies in Nigeria during this oil price regime is that they are heavily leverage.

"The biggest problem with the independent is that we are heavily leverage. We borrow to buy an assets, we borrow to work the assets, we deploy critical Capex to rap-up production so that we can repay our debts. 

"With the drop in crude oil price, we can't grow production because you don't have the free cash flow to deploy further Capex. 

"We need more production during this price regime to earn the revenue to service our debts. Our biggest problem is not about firing staff or raising Capex but the discussion we need to have with our bankers.

"Most of us are now cash negative. We need more cash to do investment, to produce oil and meet obligations but we don't have cash," he said.

IOCs workings
Unlike the ‎indigenous companies in Nigeria, Dr. Avuru said International Oil Companies have cash reserves but only need to fire some of their work force and declare low dividend to shareholders.

‎"What they (Majors) need to do is cut Capex, fire some staff, re-balance their books, and explain to their shareholders why they are reducing marginally the dividend pay out otherwise they are usually ok. 

"They have cash reserves rather than being in debt. So they are the opposite of independent. They are the first to cut Capex, the first to fire staff, and apologies to shareholders with 20 percent reduction in dividend."

On the opportunities available during this period, Avuru said both as country and indigenous operators; "we need to champion the shift from oil and gas being a primary revenue earner to oil and gas being a source of energy to secure our domestic energy security. That shift must now happen."


 The service companie‎s are the worst hit.. Each of these rigs will ordinarily employ 210 people but all of these staff are sitting at home, no salary.  

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