These sectors have growing investor bases; and CNOOC makes a significant ultra shallow discovery. 
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Wednesday, 12 June, 2024 / Edition 11

Hope you enjoyed your weekend. Mine was spent in a Houston bridge tournament, where I had a lot of fun competing against players ages 10 to 80 years old.

 

Now, time to get to the past week’s top upstream news.

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Shangyou Nie

 

Editor, Well Read

Key Energy Investment Findings and Predictions for 2024

Solar money

alphaspirit.it/Shutterstock.com

The International Energy Agency published its “World Energy Investment 2024” report on 6 June. The report states that total energy investment in 2024 will reach $3 trillion, with 2/3 in new energy and 1/3 in fossil fuels.

 

About the report:

  • The IEA has published these annual investment reports since 2015. Each includes a review of the previous year and estimates for the current year.

  • The IEA uses six categories to analyze industry investment: fossil fuels and five others under “clean energy” (renewable power, grids and storage, energy efficiency and end-use, nuclear and other clean power, and low-emissions fuels).

Key findings from 2020-2024:

  • Total energy investment will grow from $2.1 trillion to $3.1 trillion, with an average annual growth rate of 11.4 percent.

  • Clean energy investments will grow from $1.2 trillion to $2 trillion, with an average annual growth rate of 15.2 percent.

  • In 2024, China will invest $862 billion in energy, by far the highest in the world. North America ($623 billion), and Europe ($563 billion) are the next closest.

  • Only 15 percent of clean energy investments have gone to the “Emerging Market and Developing Economies” (except for China) from 2019–2024.

  • Overall, 2/3 of energy investments have come from the private sector; 1/3 has come from government and state-owned enterprises.

Fossil fuel findings:

  • Fossil fuel investment growth has averaged 8.4 percent per year from 2020–2024.

  • Global oil and gas upstream investment will reach $570 billion this year, up 7 percent over 2023.

  • Upstream spend growth from 2017-2024 has come mainly from NOCs from the Middle East and Asia. Majors, other NOCs, and independents have decreased their spend.

  • Coal investment continues to rise and is estimated to reach $165 billion in 2024, with an average annual growth rate of 6.3 percent since 2020.

  • More than 50 GW of new coal-fired power plants were approved in 2023, the highest amount since 2015. Almost all of them are in China.

New energy investment findings:

  • China will be the largest clean energy spender with $675 billion.

  • Europe ($370 billion) and the USA ($315 billion) will be the second and third.

  • Clean energy investment from oil and gas companies reached $30 billion in 2023, accounting for 4 percent of the industry’s capital spending.

  • NOCs spent only $1.5 billion on clean energy in 2023.

  • Solar energy is the fastest growing group, reaching $500 billion in 2024.

  • Investments in grids and storage have also grown quickly to $450 billion in 2024, led by the USA ($100 billion) and China ($90 billion).

Dive deeper: For more details, read the full 2024 report and previous versions here.

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CNOOC Makes Breakthrough Ultra-Shallow Gas Discovery

CNOOC building

Testing/Shutterstock.com

Chinese national oil company CNOOC recently announced it has found an ultra-shallow gas field Lingshui 36-1 in an ultra-deepwater block. The field is located in 1,500m of water.

 

What’s new

  • According to CNOOC, the reservoir is in the Ledong Formation of Quaternary with an average burial depth of 210m.

  • The discovery well flowed more than 10 million cubic meters (or 353 million cubic feet) of gas in testing.

  • Lingshui 36-1 discovery is located in the western South China Sea, SE of Hainan Island.

  • According to Xu Changgui, CNOOC’s deputy exploration manager, developing the shallow gas field will present “world-class” engineering and technical challenges.

CNOOC growth:

  • Domestic E&P has been especially encouraged under President Xi as a key to help secure Chinese energy supply. Budgets for Chinese domestic E&P have increased significantly in the past five years.

  • CNOOC has an annual E&P budget of $18 billion in 2024, bigger than that of Chevron ($16 billion) for the same year.

  • For comparison, Chevron produces about 3.4 million BOE/day, while CNOOC produces about 1.9 million BOE/day.

  • CNOOC’s reserve replacement ratio reached 180 percent in 2023, with a five-year average RRR at 161 percent from 2019–2023.

What to watch:

  • CNOOC will now eagerly welcome innovative technical solutions to produce the shallow gas discovery.

  • Similar ultra-shallow reservoirs might exist in offshore areas around the world.

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