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OGJ’s Forecast & Review 2012 Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

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Page 1: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

OGJ’s Forecast & Review 2012

Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas JournalNatural Gas & Energy Association of OklahomaMarch 8, 2012

Page 2: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

OGJ Forecasts

Forecast & Review Jan. 9, 2012, issue of Oil & Gas Journal

▪ Marilyn Radler, Senior Editor-Economics▪ Alan Petzet, Chief Exploration Editor

Midyear Forecast July 2, 2012, issue of Oil & Gas Journal

MARCH 21 FORECAST & REVIEW WEBCAST ARCHIVED AT www.ogj.com

Page 3: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Crude prices since Aug. ‘11 ($/bbl)

Source: OPEC Monthly Oil Report, January 2012

Unique factors in 2011: Libya; Saudi + IEA didn’t compensate; Cushing bottleneck

Page 4: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

OPEC spare production capacity (MMbd)

Page 5: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

OECD oil inventories (days’ supply)

Page 6: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Crude prices and…

…Dollar value:

…Equity value:

Source: OPEC Monthly Oil Report, January 2012

Page 7: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Global oil demand (MMbd)

90.3 +1.5%

Source: IEA

Feb OMR:89.9 +0.9%

Page 8: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Changing demand forecasts*

Dec. 2011 Jan. 2012 Feb. 2012IEA 90.3

+1.5%90.0

+1.1%89.9

+0.9%EIA 89.5

+1.6%89.4

+1.4%89.3

+1.5%OPEC 88.9

+1.2%88.9

+1.2%88.8

+1.1%

*Million b/d and change from adjusted base.

Page 9: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Refining capacity additions,2011-15 (MMbd)*

*From existing projectsSource: OPEC World Oil Outlook, 2011

Total capacity additions: 6.8 MMbd

Page 10: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Additional cumulative crude runs vs. required (MMbd)

*From existing projectsSource: OPEC World Oil Outlook, 2011

Page 11: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US E. Coast, European refinery closures 2011-12

COMPANY REFINERY CAPACITY (Mbd)

STATUS

ConocoPhillips Trainer, Penn. 185 Closed

LyondellBasell Berre L’Etang, France

104 Closed

Tamoil Cremona, Italy 90 Closed

OMV Arpechim, Romania

70 Closed

Sunoco Marcus Hook, Penn.

175 Closed

Petroplus Reichstett, France 82 Closed

Petroplus Cressier, France 68 Closing

Petroplus Antwerp, Belgium 115 Closing

Petroplus Petit Couronne, France

146 Closing

Sunoco Philadelphia, Penn.

330 For saleSource: Centre for Global Energy Studies, Weekly Outlook, Jan. 16, 2012

Page 12: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Japanese refining changes

By early 2011, JX Group, Idemitsu, and Showa Shell had made or announced cuts totaling 600,000 b/d

Others (TonenGeneral, Cosmo Oil) expected to cut 200,000 b/d

Cuts might reach 1 million b/d by 2015

(Source: OPEC)

Page 13: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Hovensa closure

Hovensa, joint venture of Hess and PDVSA, on Jan. 18 announced closure of 350,000 b/d refinery in St. Croix, Virgin Islands.

Page 14: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Global oil supply (MMbd)90.1 +1.9%

Source: IEA; OGJ forecast for OPEC crude in 2012

Page 15: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Non-OPEC supply (MMbd)*

*Supply increasing in regions broken out

53.7 +1.9%

Source: IEA

Feb OMR:53.6 +1.7%

Page 16: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Global biofuels projection (MMbd)

Source: IEAUS 16 billion gal in 2016 vs. 22.25 billion gal mandate

1.9

2.2

1.8

Page 17: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

The call on OPEC crude (MMbd)Demand 90.

389.9 in Feb. OMR

Less non-OPEC supply 53.7

Less OPEC NGL 6.4 Avg. 2011: 5.8 (IEA)

Equals zero stock-change call on OPEC

30.2

29.8 updated

Less stock withdrawal (OGJ)

0.2 Avg. 1011: 0.6 (OGJ)

Equals call on OPEC crude 30.0

29.6 updated

Average OPEC crude production in 2011: 30 MMbd (Feb. IEA).Quota: In Dec. 2011, OPEC agreed to hold production at 30 MMbd.OPEC crude in January: 30.9 MMbd (Feb. IEA)Lower demand projection implies lower need from stocks if OPEC produces 30 MMbd.

Iran?

Page 18: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Middle East Pipelines (EIA)

Petroline (Saudi East-West): 5 MMbd (50% used)Abqaiq-Yanbu NGL line (parallel to Petroline): 290 MbdIraq-Ceyhan pipeline (but Strategic Pipeline in Iraq closed)IPSA (Iraq-Saudi Arabia): 1.65 MMbd (deactivated)Tapline (through Lebanon): 500 Mbd (deactivated)Abu Dhabi-Fujairah: 1.5 MMbd (const.)

Page 19: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Iranian embargo scenarios (MMbd)

SCENARIO LIKELI-HOOD

LOSS IN

IRANIAN

EXPORTS

SAUDI OIL

OUTPUT

GLOBAL SPARE

CAPACITY

PRICES

No exports loss; oil moves east

Medium 0 9.5 2.9 Status quo

China, India don’t increase intake of Iranian crude

Fairly high

1.4 10.9 1.5 >$130

China, India fill SPR but don’t displace other crude

High 0.5-1.4

10.2-10.9

1.5-2.4 >$125

Iranian exports cease

Low 2.3 11.5 0.6 >$150

Source: Barclays Capital Commodities Research, Jan. 13, 2012

Page 20: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

OPEC cap. changes 2010-16(MMbd)

Algeria -0.03

Angola +0.36

Ecuador -0.04

Iran -0.89

Iraq +1.87

Kuwait +0.10

Libya +.12

Nigeria +0.24

Qatar -0.05

Saudi Arabia

-0.18

UAE +0.71

Venezuela +0.14

Total OPEC

+2.33

2010: 35.74

2016: 38.07Source: IEA Oil Market Report, December 2011

Page 21: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US oil product demand (MMbd)

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

19.2 +1.2%

Feb. EIA: 2012 – 18.9 (+0.2%)

Page 22: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US transport fuels (MMbd)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

2008 2009 2010 2011E 2012F

Gasoline

Distillate

Renew'bl

Source: OGJ; EIA for 2008-10Note: Gasoline values include ethanol.

8.95; +1%

3.88 +1%

.96 +1.1%

Page 23: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US refining operations

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

2008

2009

2010

2011

E

2012

F

Tot. input

Op. cap.

MMbd

Page 24: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US liquids supply (MMbd)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

2008 2009 2010 2011E 2012F

Renewable

NGL

US c&c

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

8.95 +2.6%

Page 25: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US oil imports, (exports) (MMbd)

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

Net product exports:60 Mbd in 2011;520 Mbd in 2012

11.35 -0.7%

Page 26: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US total gas consumption (tcf)

22

22.5

23

23.5

24

24.5

25

2008 2009 2010 2011E 2012F

Consumption

24.7; +1.5%

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

Page 27: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US gas imports, (exports) (tcf)

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

2008 2009 2010 2011E 2012F

LNG

Mexico

Canada

Exports

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

3.4-1.3%

EIA says US will become net exporter of LNG in 2016, net pipeline exporter in 2025, overall net gas exporter in 2021.

Page 28: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US marketed gas production (tcf)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

2008 2009 2010 2011E 2012F

Other

Gulf OCS

Louisiana

Texas

Source: EIA for 2008-10.

25 +5.5%

Page 29: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US shale plays

May 2009 May 2011

Page 30: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

WTI crude vs. Henry Hub gas

WTI ($/bbl) HH gas ($/MMbtu)

EIA February projection for 2012 average: $100/bbl

EIA February projection for 2012 average: $3.35/MMbtu

Oil ($/bbl) to gas ($/MMbtu) ratio: 30:1

Page 31: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

The shift to oil drilling (rig count)

Source: Deutsche Bank Commodities Weekly, Dec. 2, 2011

Page 32: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Baker Hughes rig count

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012F

Rigs

2,0101,871

Page 33: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

US well completions summary

2011E 2012F

Exploratory wells

2,231 2,312

Field wells 43,960 45,888

Total wells 46,177 48,200 (+4.4%)

Total footage 315 million 336 million (+6.7%)

• Shale, other tight formations stimulate drilling.• Shift from dry gas to wet gas and oil.• Gulf of Mexico recovering slowly.• Footage growing due to long laterals onshore and ultradeep drilling offshore.

Page 34: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

IEA’s US tight oil projection (Mbd)

2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

Williston

270 400 580 730 800 840 880

Barnett

20 20 30 40 50 50 50

E. Ford 30 100 140 200 260 340 390

Mon-terrey

10 10 10 20 30 40 50

Niobrara

30 40 60 70 90 100 120

Utica 0 0 0 0 10 50 90

Other 20 50 50 80 80 110 120

Total 380 620 870 1,140 1,320 1,530 1,700

NGL, condensate production to grow by 600 Mbd to 2.7 MMbd over period.

Source: Update of IEA Midterm Outlook, December 2011 OMR.

Page 35: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Prices: gas vs. coal ($/MMbtu)

DB says bigger factor in coal-to-gas switching by power generators will be Cross-State air Pollution Rule beginning 2012 if not blocked by courts.

Source: Deutsche Bank Commodities Weekly, Dec. 2, 2011Note: CAPP = Central Appalachian coal

Page 36: Bob Tippee, Editor, Oil & Gas Journal Natural Gas & Energy Association of Oklahoma March 8, 2012

Key points

Main oil price factors: demand, IranAll oil demand growth is outside

OECDRefining capacity following demand

growth, inclined toward surplusUS refining compartmentalizingUnconventional plays reshaping US

supplyUS gas needs new marketsUS energy politics needs repair