Santos Plans to Double its Production by 2025
Santos today outlined its plans to grow production to more than 100 MMboe by 2025, almost doubling current levels of production.
Speaking at the company’s Investor Day in Sydney, Santos Managing Director and CEO Kevin Gallagher said the successful delivery of the transform-build-grow strategy presented to the market in 2016 had now positioned the company for disciplined growth.
Gallagher said since the beginning of 2016, Santos’ strategy has delivered:
- A diversified portfolio of five long-life natural gas assets generating free cash flow at ~$40/bbl oil price.Australia’s lowest-cost onshore operations.
- A strong balance sheet to support growth.
- The reinstatement of shareholder dividends.
- The sale of non-core assets.
“Our strategy has been to establish a disciplined low-cost operating model that delivers strong cash flows through the oil price cycle,” Gallagher said.
“Subject to regulatory approvals, the recently announced acquisition of Quadrant Energy will further reduce our breakeven oil price and deliver operatorship of a high quality portfolio of low-cost, long-life conventional Western Australian natural gas assets.
“It would also give us a leading position in the highly prospective Bedout basin, including the recent significant oil discovery at Dorado.
“We are now positioned for disciplined growth leveraging existing infrastructure in all five of our assets in the portfolio and are targeting production of more than 100 MMboe by 2025.”
This disciplined growth portfolio includes:
- Barossa backfill to Darwin LNG – targeting FID by the end of 2019.
- PNG LNG expansion and proposed farm-in to P’nyang.
- Cooper basin, GLNG, and Eastern Queensland growth.
- Quadrant acquisition, including Dorado oil.
- Published in HABER
OPEC Highlights Threats to Oil Demand Before Meeting on Output
OPEC Highlights Threats to Oil Demand Before Meeting on Output
OPEC highlighted a range of risks brewing in the global economy that could hurt oil demand as ministers prepared for a meeting on production policy, marking a shift from last month’s outlook.
Trade tensions, monetary tightening by central banks and the financial problems of some emerging nations “constitute challenges to the current global economic growth trend,” the organization’s research department said in its monthly report. “It will be essential to monitor the uncertainty in currency and financial markets.”
OPEC, and allies led by Russia will meet in Algiers later this month to assess world markets, having agreed to boost production at their last meeting in June. Oil prices are trading near their highest in two months in London, at almost $80/bbl, as demand concerns arising from U.S.-China trade tensions are countered by supply losses from Iran to Venezuela.
OPEC’s report also forecasts small cutbacks to oil demand, trimming estimates for growth in 2019 by 20,000 bpd to 1.41 MMbpd. Yet it pointed to looming dangers that could further impede consumption, such as fragility in the Argentine and Turkish economies, currency depreciation in India and rising protectionism.
It’s a marked shift in tone from last month’s report, which noted that “healthy economic developments and increased industrial activity” would likely support demand for distillate fuels.
Although this month’s gathering in Algiers is a sub-committee review, rather than a full-scale official OPEC meeting, most major producers will attend. Supply data in the group’s report indicated there could be tensions when ministers get together.
Output slumped further in OPEC nation Iran, dropping by 150,000 bpd to 3.58 MMbpd in August. Saudi Arabia — the organization’s biggest producer — bolstered supplies again to 10.4 MMbpd, according to the report.
The two nations remain sharply divided over the details of the agreement reached in June. The Saudis, supported by other Gulf nations and Russia, said that OPEC had agreed to add about 1 MMbpd to world markets.
On the other hand, Iran, which is seeing its supply pressured by U.S. sanctions, contends that the boost agreed was much smaller, and has complained about increases by fellow members.
The output additions by the Saudis over the past few months, filling in the gap left by Iran, will almost certainly arise in the talks scheduled for Sept. 23 in the Algerian capital.
- Published in HABER