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The OPEC published its World Oil Outlook 2015 (WOO) in late December, which struck a much more pessimistic note on the state of oil markets than in the past. On the one hand, OPEC does not see oilprices returning to triple-digit territory within the next 25 years, a strikingly bearish conclusion.
Russia’s central bank recently warned about the growing financial risks to the Russian economy from Saudi Arabia encroaching upon its traditional export market for crude oil. Russia sends 70 percent of its oil to Europe, but Saudi Arabia has been making inroads in the European market amid the oilprice downturn.
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 oilprices, a policy originally intended to insulate the public from the whims of the market, protecting people from triple-digit crude prices.
The collapse of oilprices has ground shale drilling to a halt, but the one region where drilling is still active, and even increasing, is in West Texas. Discussing his company’s plans for the region, Concho’s CEO Tim Leach said that the Permian has some of “the hottest zip codes in the industry.” As Bloomberg noted in an Aug.
October has been billed as a pivotal month in which indebted shale companies would see their credit lines cut, precipitating a faster consolidation in the industry that would sow the seeds of a rebound. The ratings agency cut its forecasted oilprice for 2016 to just $48 per barrel. by Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com.
One casualty of the oilprice downturn could be the megaproject. For years, as conventional oil reserves depleted and became increasingly hard to find, oil companies ventured into far-flung locales to find new sources of production. The collapse of oilprices, however, could kill off the megaproject.
Oil and gas companies have had a tough time over the past year trying to weather the storm of falling oilprices. But the political and financial winds are moving in the wrong direction for the industry, raising more “above ground” problems at a time that they can ill-afford it. For example, there is at least $34.2
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