This comes from
a guest post over at The Oil Drum:
The combined crude oil production of the five main international oil
companies (Exxon, BP, Shell, Chevron and Total) hit an historic high in
2004. Since then, it has fallen by 25.8%, despite large increases in
investments.
Total crude oil produced by the majors was 10.760 million barrels per
day in 2004. In 2012, it reached only 7.981 million bpd. It has
decreased by 2.779 million bpd in 8 years, as I have been able to
calculate from figures that appear in the twelve latest annual reports
of those five companies.
The majors are all facing a decline in their crude oil production, which began in each case before 2007.
This comes despite extremely large growth in their investments, allowed
by the significant increase in crude oil prices experienced since the
late 2000s. Total, for example, has seen its production fall by almost
20% since 2007, although the French giant now has at least 40% more
extraction wells.
Since 2004, the total oil production by the majors has only increased
once, between 2008 and 2009, and by just 0.13 MB/D, despite the
unprecedented level of sales and purchases of oil assets experienced in
recent years. So-called production sharing contracts, which allocate a
larger share of production to the host country when the price per barrel
rises, do not appear to explain the lowering of production by the majors, far from it.
The production share of the five majors in worldwide production dropped
from 13.39% in 2004 to 9.98% in 2011. It diminished further in 2012.
Worldwide crude oil production rose by 4% between 2004 and 2011. It has hardly increased at all since 2006, however: since then it has been on an undulating plateau, within a small margin of less than 1.25%.
So, the question is: if worldwide crude oil production increased by 4%, but production by the top five oil majors decreased by 25%, who made up the difference?
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