"Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure Outlook 2013" is the latest report from GlobalData, the industry analysis specialist, which analyzes the global oil and gas industry. The report contains a detailed analysis of the current and future capital expenditure of the various types of oil and gas companies - national oil companies, and integrated and independent oil and gas companies. It also provides a detailed analysis and information on the capital expenditure across the entire oil and gas value chain globally. Detailed information on oil and gas capital expenditure across various regions - North America, South and Central America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa - is also provided. The report also covers the planned oil and gas projects in upstream, refining, pipeline, Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) and petrochemicals. The report has been prepared using data and information sourced from company reports, primary and secondary research and in-house analysis by GlobalData's team of industry experts.
Scope
The report provides in-depth analysis and insights into the oil and gas sector's capital expenditure outlook for 2013. Its scope includes -
Key findings and analysis of capital expenditure trend in the oil and gas sector.
Historic and forecast capital expenditure information from 2008 to 2013.
Information and analysis of capital expenditure across all oil and gas segments - upstream, midstream and downstream.
Detailed information on the break-up of capital expenditure by region - North America, Asia-Pacific, South and Central America, the Middle East and Africa, and Europe.
Information on capital expenditure by company type - national oil companies, integrated and independent companies.
Information on major planned oil and gas projects in the upstream, refining, pipeline, LNG and petrochemicals sectors.
Reasons to buy
This report will enhance your decision-making capabilities. It will allow you to -
Gain an understanding of the global oil and gas sector's spending trends in 2013.
Keep abreast of information and in-depth analysis on the global oil and gas market capital expenditure outlook in 2013.
Formulate strategies based on analysis of competitors' capital expenditure plans.
Devise strategies to safeguard interests based on insights on the spending of NOCs and IOCs and their anticipated impact on the global oil and gas industry.
Table of Contents
TOC
1 Table of Contents
1 Table of Contents 5
1.1 List of Tables 6
1.2 List of Figures 7
2 Introduction 8
2.1 Overview 8
2.2 GlobalData Report Guidance 8
3 Global Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure to Increase to US$1.2 Trillion in 2013 9
3.1 Global Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure is Expected to Increase by 15.9% in 2013 when Compared to 2012 9
3.2 National Oil Companies are expected to Account for more than half of the Global Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure in 2013 11
3.3 Global Onshore E&P Capex will Continue to be Higher than Global Offshore E&P Capex in 2013 14
3.4 E&P will Continue to Account for the Majority of the M&A and Asset Transaction Activity in the Oil and Gas Industry for 2013 16
4 Capital Expenditure by Oil and Gas Sector 19
4.1 The Global E&P Sector Capex is Expected to Witness a Year-over-Year Growth of 18.7% in 2013 19
4.2 Global Midstream and Downstream Capex is Expected to Witness a Year-over-Year Growth of 9.5% in 2013 20
5 Capital Expenditure by Region 21
5.1 North American Capex is Expected to Witness a Year-over-Year Growth of 16.7% in 2013 21
5.2 The E&P Segment is Expected to Account for 55.5% in Total Oil and Gas Capex in Asia-Pacific for 2013 22
5.3 Oil and Gas Capex of the Middle East and Africa will Witness a Year-over-Year Increase of US$37.0 Billion in 2013 23
5.4 The Oil and Gas Capex of Europe is Expected to Increase by US$19.1 Billion from 2012 to 2013 24
5.5 The Oil and Gas Capex of South and Central America is Expected to Witness a Year-over-Year Growth of 15.0% in 2013 25
6 Oil and Gas Companies - Capital Expenditure 26
6.1 National Oil Companies 28
6.2 Integrated Companies 30
6.3 Independent Oil Companies 32
7 Major Planned Oil and Gas Projects in 2012 34
7.1 Kashagan and Fort Hills are Among the Major, Planned Upstream Projects 34
7.1.1 Kashagan is a Large, Complex and Capital Intensive Oil Production Project in Caspian Sea 34
7.1.2 Fort Hills is a Major Oil Sands Project in Athabasca, Canada 35
7.1.3 Egina Field is Expected to Start Production in 2018 36
7.1.4 St. Malo Field is a Major Planned Conventional Oil and Gas Production Field in Central Gulf of Mexico 36
7.1.5 Sapinhoa is Major Pre-salt Planned Production Field in Santos Basin, Offshore Brazil 37
7.2 Nhon Hoi Refinery in Vietnam is One of the Largest Capital-Intensive Planned Refineries in the World 37
7.3 Alaska Gas Pipeline Project (Main Line) is One of the Largest Capital-intensive Planned Transmission Pipeline Projects in the World 39
7.4 Australia is Poised to Substantially Increase its LNG Liquefaction Capacity through Several Capital-intensive Projects 40
7.5 Petrochemical Projects 42
7.5.1 China and India hold Majority of the Planned Polypropylene Projects globally 42
7.5.2 Polyethylene Projects 43
8 Factors Influencing Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure in 2013 44
8.1 Consistently High Global Crude Oil Prices will Drive the Capex of Oil Companies in 2013 44
8.2 Increasing Global Oil and Gas Demand is Driving the Capex of Oil and Gas Companies in 2013 45
8.3 Increasing Upstream Activities of IOCs, NOCs and Independent E&P Companies will Drive 2013 Capex of Oil and Gas Industry 46
8.4 Increasing Offshore E&P Activities will Fuel the Global Oil and Gas Capex in 2013 46
9 Appendix 47
9.1 Market Definition 47
9.2 Abbreviations 47
9.3 Sources 48
9.4 Methodology 48
9.4.1 Coverage 48
9.4.2 Secondary Research 49
9.4.3 Primary Research 49
9.5 Contact Us 49
9.6 Disclaimer 49
List of Tables
1.1 List of Tables
Table 1: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure (US$bn), 2008-2013 10
Table 2: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure by Region (US$bn), 2008-2013 10
Table 3: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure by Company Type and Growth Rate (US$bn, %), 2013 11
Table 4: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capex by Company Type (US$bn), 2008-2013 13
Table 5: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Offshore and Onshore E&P Capex (US$bn), 2008-2013 14
Table 6: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Onshore and Offshore E&P Capex (US$bn), 2013 15
Table 7: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Number of Deals by Segment, Q1 2011-Q3 2012 17
Table 8: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Deal Value by Segment (US$MM), Q1 2011-Q3 2012 17
Table 9: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Select Major Deals in terms of Value (US$MM), Q1 2011-Q3 2012 18
Table 10: Global E&P Industry, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 19
Table 11: Global Midstream and Downstream Industry, Capital Expenditure (US$bn,%), 2008-2013 20
Table 12: Oil and Gas Industry, North America, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 21
Table 13: Oil and Gas Industry, Asia-Pacific, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 22
Table 14: Oil and Gas Industry, The Middle East and Africa, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 23
Table 15: Oil and Gas Industry, Europe, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 24
Table 16: Oil and Gas Industry, South and Central America, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 25
Table 17: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure by Company Type (US$bn), 2008-2013 26
Table 18: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select National Oil Companies (US$MM), 2008-2013 29
Table 19: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select Integrated Oil Companies (US$MM), 2008-2013 30
Table 20: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select Independent Oil Companies (US$MM), 2008-2013 32
Table 21: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Major Planned Refining Projects in terms of Capex (US$MM), 2012 38
Table 22: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Major Planned Transmission Pipeline Projects in terms of Capex (US$MM), 2012 39
Table 23: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Major Planned LNG Liquefaction Projects in terms of Capex (US$MM), 2012 40
Table 24: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Major Planned LNG Regasification Projects in terms of Capex (US$MM), 2012 41
Table 25: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Planned Polypropylene Projects, 2013 Startup 42
Table 26: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Planned Polyethylene Projects, 2013 Startup 43
List of Figures
1.2 List of Figures
Figure 1: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure (US$bn), 2008-2013 9
Figure 2: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure by Region (US$bn), 2008-2013 10
Figure 3: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure by Company Type (US$bn), 2013 11
Figure 4: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capital Expenditure by Company Type and Growth Rate (US$bn, %), 2013 12
Figure 5: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Capex by Company Type (US$bn), 2008-2013 13
Figure 6: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Offshore and Onshore E&P Capex by Region (US$bn), 2008-2013 14
Figure 7: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Number of Deals and Deal Value by Segment (US$MM), Q1 2011-Q3 2012 16
Figure 8: Global E&P Industry, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 19
Figure 9: Global Midstream and Downstream Industry, Capital Expenditure (US$bn,%), 2008-2013 20
Figure 10: Oil and Gas Industry, North America, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 21
Figure 11: Oil and Gas Industry, Asia-Pacific, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 22
Figure 12: Oil and Gas Industry, The Middle East and Africa, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 23
Figure 13: Oil and Gas Industry, Europe, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 24
Figure 14: Oil and Gas Industry, South and Central America, Capital Expenditure (US$bn, %), 2008-2013 25
Figure 15: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure by Company Type (US$bn), 2008-2013 26
Figure 16: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Planned Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure by Select Companies (US$MM), 2013 27
Figure 17: Petrobras, Planned Investments by Segment (%), 2012-2016 28
Figure 18: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select National Oil Companies (US$MM), 2008-2013 29
Figure 19: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select Integrated Oil Companies, (US$MM), 2008-2013 30
Figure 20: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Total Capital Expenditure of Select Independent Oil Companies (US$MM), 2008-2013 32
Figure 21: Oil and Gas Industry, Kazakhstan, Location of Kashagan Field, 2012 34
Figure 22: Oil Sands Industry, Canada, Location of Fort Hills Project and Voyageur Upgrader, 2012 35
Figure 23: Oil and Gas Industry, West Africa, Location of Egina Field, 2011 36
Figure 24: Oil and Gas Industry, Gulf of Mexico, Location of the St. Malo Field, 2012 36
Figure 25: Oil and Gas Industry, Global, Average Crude Oil Prices of WTI, Brent and OPEC (US$), January to November 2012 44
Figure 26: Oil and Natural Gas Industry, Global, Projected Liquids* and Natural Gas Demand (mmtoe), 2010-2030 45
Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure Outlook 2013 published by GlobalData in January 7, 2013. This report consists of Pages: 49 and the price starts from US $ 3995.
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Press Release
Oil & Gas Capital Expenditure Outlook 2013
January 22nd, 2013
Global Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure is Expected to Increase to US$1,201 Billion in 2013
The global oil and gas capital expenditure (capex) is expected to increase from US$1,036 billion in 2012 to US$1,201 billion in 2013, registering a growth of 15.9%. The global oil and gas capex first passed the US$ trillion mark in 2012 and will continue to witness incremental growth in 2013.
There are several reasons for the continued increase of the global capex. Global crude oil prices have consistently hovered above US$80 (West Texas Intermediate price) in 2012, encouraging oil and gas companies to aggressively invest in capital intensive Exploration and Production (E&P) projects in difficult environments such as deep and ultra-deep offshore regions. Without the favorable global crude oil price scenario, these projects would have been economically unfeasible. Additionally, the high demand for crude oil and natural gas is also encouraging oil and gas companies to develop unconventional oil and gas deposits such as oil sands, tight oil, shale gas, oil shale and Coal Bed Methane (CBM).
The figure below shows global oil and gas capex for the 2008-2013 period.
National Oil Companies are Expected to Account for More than Half of the Total Global Oil and Gas Capital Expenditure in 2013
NOCs are expected to account for 50.9% of the total global oil and gas capex in 2013. NOCs are followed by Integrated Oil Companies (IOCs) with a share of 33.2% and independent oil companies with share of 15.9%.
In terms of the year-over-year increase in capex, independent oil companies dominate, with an estimated 19.6% growth. These will be followed by NOCs, with an estimated year-over-year capex growth of 17.8%, and integrated companies, with an estimated capex growth of 11.6%.
The figure below shows the estimated capex by the three major oil and gas company types for 2013.
Strong financial stability, state support and access to investments will boost the investment confidence of the NOCs, which are expected to continue investing heavily in oil and gas projects worldwide. Strong capex growth expected from risk-averse independent oil companies which would indicate strong market confidence and a positive outlook.
Global E&P Sector Capex is Expected to Witness a Year-over-year Growth of 18.7% in 2013
The global E&P sector capex is expected to witness a year-over-year growth of 18.7% in 2013. The capex is expected to grow from US$716.3 billion in 2012 to US$850.5 billion in 2013. The E&P capex growth will be driven by increasing exploration and development efforts by oil and gas companies in deep and ultra-deep offshore areas. Besides this, a strong demand outlook for oil and gas is also expected to boost upstream capex in 2013.
The figure below presents the trend in the global E&P sectors capital expenditure for 2008-2013.
The global E&P capex, which slumped to a negative growth of 14.9% in 2009 due to the economic recession, has been witnessing positive growth since 2010. During the period 2010 to 2013, the E&P capex increased at an Average Annual Growth Rate (AAGR) of approximately 15.4%.
Offshore E&P Capex in Middle East and Africa will surpass the Regional Onshore E&P Capex in 2013
Oil and gas capex of the Middle East and Africa is estimated to increase from US$229.6 billion in 2012 to US$266.6 billion in 2013, registering an annual increase of 16.1%. Out of the total oil and gas capex for the Middle East and Africa in 2013, the E&P segment is expected to account for approximately 72.4% of the total at US$193.1 billion. Out of the E&P capex, the offshore capex will be US$106.3 billion, while the onshore capex will be US$86.8 billion.
The figure below gives the percentages of the estimated onshore and offshore E&P capex in the Middle East and Africa in 2013.
Petrobras Plans a Capex of US$47.3 Billion in 2013
Petrobras has announced a capex plan of US$47.3 billion for 2013, which is one of the highest among NOCs. The capex of Petrobras will decrease from US$50.6 billion in 2012 to US$47.3 billion in 2013, a decline of -6.5%. In total, the company plans to invest approximately US$236.5 billion during the period 2012 to 2016 under its 2012-2016 Business Plan. E&P would account for majority of this investment.
The figure below shows Petrobras planned investment by segment during the period 2012-2016.
In its 2012-2016 business plan, Petrobras has allocated around 60% of its planned investments for E&P, where it plans to invest around US$141.8 billion. Petrobras has allocated the vast majority of those funds, US$131.6 billion, to Brazil, of which US$25.4 billion is for exploration, US$89.9 billion is for production and US$16.3 billion is for infrastructure development. Petrobras is focusing its efforts on exploration in the post-salt layers and production in the pre-salt areas in offshore Brazil. The company has allocated around US$17.5 billion for exploration in the post-salt layer and around US$43.7 billion for production in the pre-salt layer. Besides this, the company also aims to invest US$30.2 billion in production in the post-salt areas.