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Message

WSJ: Big Oil Gushes Cash Because It Doesn’t Know Where to Invest
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:19 pm
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:19 pm
quote:
Oil-and-gas companies are still trying to figure out where to invest for the energy transition. The resulting hiatus makes for great shareholder returns, but not a long-term strategy.
The hot topics at CERAWeek by S&P Global, an annual industry gathering in Houston, are the impact on global energy markets of the Ukraine war and new opportunities from the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act. In a bad sign for the European Union, many executives find the U.S. initiative more appealing, even after Europe sketched the outlines of a rival policy.
One buzzword at this year’s conference is the need for an “orderly” energy transition. Chevron Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth warned that moving away from fossil fuels before renewable alternatives are ready to take over will lead to higher prices: “You have to be very careful about switching off system A too early.” OPEC Secretary-General Haitham al-Ghais also pointed out the risks of underinvesting in hydrocarbons.
While these are fossil-fuel producers talking their books, the argument carries more weight after last year’s gas-price spike. However, it also means spending money on new oil and gas production, which big listed energy groups have been reluctant to do. Pressure to hand cash back to shareholders means the industry is neither investing enough to meet current fossil-fuel demand trends, nor cutting enough to meet net-zero targets.
quote:
The problem is that energy companies are getting conflicting messages from all sides. Demand for fossil fuels isn’t falling and politicians in countries including the U.S. are pressuring them to drill more. At the same time, windfall taxes are discouraging spending on new projects in parts of Europe: TotalEnergies will cut its investments in British North Sea oil and gas projects this year because of new U.K. levies, for example. The long-term demand outlook is also murky as countries pledge to cut their carbon emissions.
Oil-and-gas producers could funnel more profits from fossil fuels into renewable energy to hedge their bets. That would please policy makers: To hit net-zero targets, investment in renewables will need to be about nine times that in fossil fuels by 2030, up from just one-and-a-half times today according to CGEP.
But it isn’t yet clear which technologies will come out on top in the energy transition. Excitement about clean hydrogen is high, especially as tax credits in the U.S. climate bill mean it can be produced more competitively. Returns on many renewables projects look disappointing, though. BP recently said it is targeting returns on investment of up to 8% for renewables like solar and wind, compared with up to 20% for fossil-fuel projects.
Energy companies would ideally like more time to figure out which way to jump with new technologies, and reap handsome oil-and-gas profits in the meantime. But governments that want to reduce their reliance on imported fossil fuels and cut emissions are pushing in the opposite direction, including with hard cash. Today’s outsize shareholder returns may soon have to give way to a new era of investment.
LINK
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:27 pm to MyRockstarComplex
I would suggest a split between finding more oil and developing renewable energy. Do both.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:50 pm to ragincajun03
Well yeah sometimes sitting on money isn’t always good. Maybe get some more assets.
But I guess if you are president you can make it so oil companies can’t reinvest, then say Ha! I told you they were hoarding money and price gauging look at those profits!
And people eat it up not knowing they only have that high of profits because they aren’t going out and spending the money due to the war against Oil.
But I guess if you are president you can make it so oil companies can’t reinvest, then say Ha! I told you they were hoarding money and price gauging look at those profits!
And people eat it up not knowing they only have that high of profits because they aren’t going out and spending the money due to the war against Oil.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:53 pm to ragincajun03
They need to invest in cybersecurity in a big way and in a short amount of time.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 1:56 pm to ragincajun03
Politicians promised the moon and they can't deliver it and they're too cowardly to openly say it so they're just doubling down hoping for a miracle I guess.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:05 pm to Cycledude
quote:
I would suggest a split between finding more oil and developing renewable energy. Do both.
Then they risk losing out to the ones that go all in for oil now, if renewables fizzle, or losing out to the ones that go all in on renewables if oil is basically outlawed.
Damned if they do or don't at this point.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:09 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
Big Oil Gushes Cash Because It Doesn’t Know Where to Invest
quote:
However, it also means spending money on new oil and gas production, which big listed energy groups have been reluctant to do
I think I figured it out
Hire me big oil
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:18 pm to ragincajun03
Pre the 2014 oil price crash, Big Oil invested in high tech R&D like single wall carbon nanotubes. A friend made the first ever electric wire, 11 ga, as a result, from single wall carbon nanotubes. When their funding went away, he lost his job.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:18 pm to Fearless Liter
quote:
...if oil is basically outlawed.
Never will happen. Impossible.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:19 pm to Cycledude
quote:
developing renewable energy
Big Oil ads about this is for PR only.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 2:23 pm to ragincajun03
WSJ gets worse and worse on reporting. Oil company stockholders were demanding increasing value of stock and buy down on debt. So profits were used to buy down debt an stock buybacks to increase share prices.
The price collapses of 2014 and 2020 caused a lot of debt to be incurred due acquisitions of failed oil companies which were overleveraged.
If you think that say Exxon actually puts up all the money for development of an oilfield, you would be wrong. First, it brings in partners to share the risk, then it floats and SEC security to investment banks to raise capital for the field development.
The price collapses of 2014 and 2020 caused a lot of debt to be incurred due acquisitions of failed oil companies which were overleveraged.
If you think that say Exxon actually puts up all the money for development of an oilfield, you would be wrong. First, it brings in partners to share the risk, then it floats and SEC security to investment banks to raise capital for the field development.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 3:39 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
However, it also means spending money on new oil and gas production, which big listed energy groups have been reluctant to do. Pressure to hand cash back to shareholders means the industry is neither investing enough to meet current fossil-fuel demand trends, nor cutting enough to meet net-zero targets.
This paragraph makes you think a bit.
Posted on 3/11/23 at 3:59 pm to ragincajun03
Slowly pivot to nuclear. The only clean energy capable of baseload that can operate without massive subsidies
Posted on 3/11/23 at 5:41 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
One buzzword at this year’s conference is the need for an “orderly” energy transition. Chevron Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth warned that moving away from fossil fuels before renewable alternatives are ready to take over will lead to higher prices: “You have to be very careful about switching off system A too early.”
I mean everything the Dims do is about draining the taxpayer down to nothing and you still have stupid motherfrickers voting for them, including half of this board
Posted on 3/11/23 at 5:44 pm to dgnx6
quote:
Well yeah sometimes sitting on money isn’t always good. Maybe get some more assets.
But I guess if you are president you can make it so oil companies can’t reinvest, then say Ha! I told you they were hoarding money and price gauging look at those profits!
And people eat it up not knowing they only have that high of profits because they aren’t going out and spending the money due to the war against Oil.
There's a lot of fricking dumbass Dims that don't understand that
Posted on 3/11/23 at 5:44 pm to ragincajun03
WSJ journalists speculating how/where O&G majors should invest is equivalent to my 2 year old suggesting how i should structure my retirement.
This post was edited on 3/11/23 at 5:46 pm
Posted on 3/11/23 at 5:48 pm to CitizenK
quote:
WSJ gets worse and worse on reporting. Oil company stockholders were demanding increasing value of stock and buy down on debt. So profits were used to buy down debt a stock buybacks to increase share prices. The price collapses of 2014 and 2020 caused a lot of debt to be incurred due acquisitions of failed oil companies which were overleveraged. If you think that say Exxon actually puts up all the money for development of an oilfield, you would be wrong. First, it brings in partners to share the risk, then it floats and SEC security to investment banks to raise capital for the field development.
Not sure why this is getting downvoted
Posted on 3/11/23 at 7:55 pm to LSUminati
quote:
Not sure why this is getting downvoted
I'm used to that happening on here due so many with a Jethro Bodine education experience
Posted on 3/11/23 at 7:59 pm to ragincajun03
The regulatory environment creates uncertainty in their prospective investment.
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