GlobeNewswire

2025-01-16 21:00

A delayed energy transition could make or break the upstream sector

                                                                                PRESS RELEASE

A delayed energy transition could make or break the upstream sector

Prices would rise, capital discipline evolve and spending increase by 30% for the upstream sector to meet demand in a delayed energy transition scenario

LONDON/HOUSTON/SINGAPORE, 16 January 2025 – As the risk of a delayed energy transition scenario increases, so does the possibility of a much greater pull on future oil & gas supply. But meeting this demand would require a significant increase in upstream investment, resulting in higher hydrocarbon prices and significant shifts in corporate strategy, according to the latest Horizons report from Wood Mackenzie.

According to the report “Taking the strain: how upstream could meet the demands of a delayed energy transition”, a variety of external pressures have weakened government and corporate resolve to spend the estimated US$3.5 trillion required to restructure energy systems to limit both hydrocarbon demand and global warming.

Wood Mackenzie’s latest Horizons report focuses on the additional resources and spend required if the upstream sector was to meet higher-for-longer oil and gas demand, and the resultant consequences.

Under this scenario the world would require 5% more oil and gas supply and 30% higher annual upstream capital investment. Liquids demand would average 6 million b/d (6%) higher than Wood Mackenzie’s base case to 2050, and gas demand would average 15 bcfd (3%) higher than the base case.

“Meeting rising demand in the near term in either the delayed scenario or the base case poses little challenge to the sector; plenty of supply is available,” said Fraser McKay, head of upstream analysis for Wood Mackenzie.

“However, stronger-for-longer demand growth is a much stiffer ask. A five-year transition delay would require incremental volumes equivalent to a new US Permian basin for oil and a Haynesville Shale or Australia for gas,” said Angus Rodger, head of upstream analysis for Asia-Pacific and the Middle-East.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                  PRESS RELEASE

A delayed energy transition could make or break the upstream sector

Prices would rise, capital discipline evolve and spending increase by 30% for the upstream sector to meet demand in a delayed energy transition scenario

LONDON/HOUSTON/SINGAPORE, 16 January 2025 – As the risk of a delayed energy transition scenario increases, so does the possibility of a much greater pull on future oil & gas supply. But meeting this demand would require a significant increase in upstream investment, resulting in higher hydrocarbon prices and significant shifts in corporate strategy, according to the latest Horizons report from Wood Mackenzie.

According to the report “Taking the strain: how upstream could meet the demands of a delayed energy transition”, a variety of external pressures have weakened government and corporate resolve to spend the estimated US$3.5 trillion required to restructure energy systems to limit both hydrocarbon demand and global warming.

Wood Mackenzie’s latest Horizons report focuses on the additional resources and spend required if the upstream sector was to meet higher-for-longer oil and gas demand, and the resultant consequences.

Under this scenario the world would require 5% more oil and gas supply and 30% higher annual upstream capital investment. Liquids demand would average 6 million b/d (6%) higher than Wood Mackenzie’s base case to 2050, and gas demand would average 15 bcfd (3%) higher than the base case.

“Meeting rising demand in the near term in either the delayed scenario or the base case poses little challenge to the sector; plenty of supply is available,” said Fraser McKay, head of upstream analysis for Wood Mackenzie.

“However, stronger-for-longer demand growth is a much stiffer ask. A five-year transition delay would require incremental volumes equivalent to a new US Permian basin for oil and a Haynesville Shale or Australia for gas,” said Angus Rodger, head of upstream analysis for Asia-Pacific and the Middle-East.

Source: Wood Mackenzie Energy Market Service – Global Energy Transition Outlook

Increased upstream investment needed

While we believe the global oil and gas sector could meet this demand through existing resources and future exploration, significant investment would be required to achieve it.

Wood Mackenzie estimates that upstream spending would have to rise by 30%, resulting in US$659 billion of annual development spend versus US$507 billion in the base case, and US$17 trillion versus US$13 trillion in total to 2050 (all in 2024 terms).

“We have calculated the sector’s cost elasticity by integrating our field-by-field annual supply models with our global supply-chain analysis,” said McKay. “This includes an assumption for continued operational efficiency improvements, which the industry could very well outperform, mitigating some of the inflationary impact.”

But increasing spend won’t be easy, even if the signs of increased demand are present. More activity would put significant pressure on the supply chain – parts of which are already running near capacity – and project costs would inflate.

“The industry’s current strict capital discipline edict would also have to change or, at least, what defines discipline would have to evolve,” said Rodger.

“Corporate planning prices would increase if the outlook for the market improved, with increased confidence in demand longevity. In that environment, higher development unit costs and breakevens would likely be tolerable,” said McKay.

Price escalation

With the higher cost of supply, so too would come higher prices for both oil and gas. Wood Mackenzie’s Oil Supply Model forecasts a Brent price rising to over US$100/bbl during the 2030s in a delayed transition scenario. It falls towards US$90/bbl by 2050, averaging around US$20/bbl higher than our base case over the period (all in 2024 terms).

Read the entire report here.

ENDS

Editors Notes:

Definition of scenarios:
Base case - Wood Mackenzie’s base case is an assessment of the most likely outcome, corresponding to 2.5 ˚C warming by 2050, incorporating the evolution of current policies and technology advancement.
Delayed transition scenario - Assumes a five-year delay to global decarbonisation efforts due to ongoing geopolitical barriers, reduced policy support for new technologies and cost headwinds.

For further information please contact Wood Mackenzie’s media relations team:

Mark Thomton
+1 630 881 6885
Mark.thomton@woodmac.com

Hla Myat Mon
+65 8533 8860  
hla.myatmon@woodmac.com 

The Big Partnership (UK PR agency)
woodmac@bigpartnership.co.uk

You have received this news release from Wood Mackenzie because of the details we hold about you. If the information we have is incorrect you can either provide your updated preferences by contacting our media relations team. If you do not wish to receive this type of email in the future, please reply with 'unsubscribe' in the subject header.  

About Wood Mackenzie

Wood Mackenzie is the global insight business for renewables, energy and natural resources. Driven by data. Powered by people. In the middle of an energy revolution, businesses and governments need reliable and actionable insight to lead the transition to a sustainable future. That’s why we cover the entire supply chain with unparalleled breadth and depth, backed by over 50 years’ experience in natural resources. Today, our team of over 2,000 experts operate across 30 global locations, inspiring customers’ decisions through real-time analytics, consultancy, events and thought leadership. Together, we deliver the insight they need to separate risk from opportunity and make bold decisions when it matters most. For more information, visit woodmac.com.

Source: Wood Mackenzie Energy Market Service – Global Energy Transition Outlook

Increased upstream investment needed

While we believe the global oil and gas sector could meet this demand through existing resources and future exploration, significant investment would be required to achieve it.

Wood Mackenzie estimates that upstream spending would have to rise by 30%, resulting in US$659 billion of annual development spend versus US$507 billion in the base case, and US$17 trillion versus US$13 trillion in total to 2050 (all in 2024 terms).

“We have calculated the sector’s cost elasticity by integrating our field-by-field annual supply models with our global supply-chain analysis,” said McKay. “This includes an assumption for continued operational efficiency improvements, which the industry could very well outperform, mitigating some of the inflationary impact.”

But increasing spend won’t be easy, even if the signs of increased demand are present. More activity would put significant pressure on the supply chain – parts of which are already running near capacity – and project costs would inflate.

“The industry’s current strict capital discipline edict would also have to change or, at least, what defines discipline would have to evolve,” said Rodger.

“Corporate planning prices would increase if the outlook for the market improved, with increased confidence in demand longevity. In that environment, higher development unit costs and breakevens would likely be tolerable,” said McKay.

Price escalation

With the higher cost of supply, so too would come higher prices for both oil and gas. Wood Mackenzie’s Oil Supply Model forecasts a Brent price rising to over US$100/bbl during the 2030s in a delayed transition scenario. It falls towards US$90/bbl by 2050, averaging around US$20/bbl higher than our base case over the period (all in 2024 terms).


Read the entire report here.

ENDS

Editors Notes:

Definition of scenarios:
Base case - Wood Mackenzie’s base case is an assessment of the most likely outcome, corresponding to 2.5 ˚C warming by 2050, incorporating the evolution of current policies and technology advancement.
Delayed transition scenario - Assumes a five-year delay to global decarbonisation efforts due to ongoing geopolitical barriers, reduced policy support for new technologies and cost headwinds.

For further information please contact Wood Mackenzie’s media relations team:

Mark Thomton
+1 630 881 6885
Mark.thomton@woodmac.com

Hla Myat Mon
+65 8533 8860  
hla.myatmon@woodmac.com 

The Big Partnership (UK PR agency)
woodmac@bigpartnership.co.uk

You have received this news release from Wood Mackenzie because of the details we hold about you. If the information we have is incorrect you can either provide your updated preferences by contacting our media relations team. If you do not wish to receive this type of email in the future, please reply with 'unsubscribe' in the subject header.  

About Wood Mackenzie

Wood Mackenzie is the global insight business for renewables, energy and natural resources. Driven by data. Powered by people. In the middle of an energy revolution, businesses and governments need reliable and actionable insight to lead the transition to a sustainable future. That’s why we cover the entire supply chain with unparalleled breadth and depth, backed by over 50 years’ experience in natural resources. Today, our team of over 2,000 experts operate across 30 global locations, inspiring customers’ decisions through real-time analytics, consultancy, events and thought leadership. Together, we deliver the insight they need to separate risk from opportunity and make bold decisions when it matters most. For more information, visit woodmac.com.


Primary Logo

source: Wood Mackenzie

【香港好去處】2025去邊最好玩?etnet為你提供全港最齊盛事活動,所有資訊盡在掌握!► 即睇

人氣文章
最近7天
沒有相關資料。
1
美股收盤 | 減息推升市場樂觀情緒,美股三大指數連續兩日破頂
2
定期存款 | 大行連環加息,中銀東亞新推4個月存期,最高2.6厘
3
銀行股 | 環球央行勢將跟隨美國減息,高息銀行股要揀邊隻?
4
美股收盤 | 納指再創歷史新高,道指回落273點
5
專訪 | 李根興︰街舖面臨被替代風險,香港成內地品牌賺錢天堂,料舖位價格呈L型反彈(有片)
6
專訪 | 林本利:兩「燃料」續推動港股,買銀債外高息之選還有…(有片)
7
專訪 | 李根興自認冇料到,當年驚人言論屬春風得意語無倫次,對基金表現問心無愧(有片)
8
施政前瞻 | 施政報告懶人包,政界倡派消費券、地建會籲放寬百元印花稅至600萬樓
9
David Webb批評包浩斯買樓作員工宿舍卻不派息,敦促即使撻訂也要停止交易
10
定期存款 | 一周定存合集,大行連環出招推4個月2.6厘,一年期定存長息最高2.75厘
11
大國博弈 | 習近平特朗普周五通話,美方稱或延長兩國貿易休戰期
12
定期存款 | 迎戰銀債,銀行紛加港元定存息,花旗3個月及PAObank6個月加至2.8厘
13
小米 | 傳小米本月25日發布17手機,設計今曝光
14
習特通話 | 通話務實積極富建設性,習近平:樂見TikTok問題合規解決,特朗普:期待下月APEC會面
15
定期存款 | 一周定存合集,美國減息無阻港銀加定存息吸金,PAObank一個月高達20厘
16
施政報告2025文字直播(為你送上懶人包)
17
iPhone17 | FOCUS | 危機四起蘋果突圍,「超薄+滿配」雙向出擊
18
施政報告 | 許正宇:放寬「新資本投資者入境計劃」是希望投資者靈活分配資產
19
蘋概股|傳蘋果要求供應商提高iPhone 17產能,OpenAI與果鏈企業合作打造新設備,相關概念股抽升可以點揀?
20
港股 | 蕭猷華:恒指下一站27464點
21
美股 | 鮑威爾「鷹派降息」25基點,道指升260點,納指受壓
22
樺加沙 | 政府料改發三號波後市面基本復常(不斷更新)
23
神州經脈 | 傳中央擬引導銀行貸款助地方還債,小紅書被約談警告
24
預製菜 | FOCUS | 羅永浩「背刺」西貝,三巨頭齊競逐透明化
25
美股 | 減息推升市場樂觀情緒,四巫日美股仍創新高
26
美股收盤 | 美股反彈終止三連跌,道指升近300點
27
港股 | 蕭猷華:港匯轉強勢,恒指續看俏
28
始祖鳥|FOCUS | 成也營銷敗也營銷,煙花散後何處歸「鳥」
29
施政前瞻 | 消息指政府擬重推公屋租置計劃,無意實行購房通及調高100元印花稅物業門檻
30
全球第二大銅礦停產,銅價創逾一年高,銅礦股齊急升可追入?
專業版
HV2
精裝版
SV2
串流版
IQ 登入
強化版
TQ
強化版
MQ

獨家優惠【etnet x 環球海產】 用戶專享全場95折,特價貨品更可折上折,立即選購五星級酒店御用海鮮!

樂本健 x etnet健康網購 | 購物滿額即送免費禮品

etnet榮獲2024-2025年度「數碼無障礙網頁嘉許計劃」三項金獎

大國博弈

貨幣攻略

關稅戰

說說心理話

Watch Trends 2025

北上食買玩

Wonder in Art

理財秘笈

流感高峰期

山今養生智慧

輕鬆護老