Total says oil output is near its peak
by Carola Hoyos
The world will never be able to produce more than 89 mm bpd of oil, the head of Europe's third-largest energy group
has warned, citing high costs in areas such as Canada and political restrictions in countries such as Iran and
Iraq.
Christophe de Margerie, chief executive of Total, the French oil and gas company, said he had revised his forecast
for 2015 oil production downward by at least 4 mm bpd because of the current economic crisis and the collapse in oil
prices. He noted that national oil companies, which control the vast majority of the world's oil, and independent
producers, which play a key role in finding new sources, were "substantially limited in their ability to fund
investments in the current [financial] environment".
Oil prices have fallen from a record $ 147 a barrel in July to about $ 35 a barrel today, with the world consuming 84
mm barrels of oil a day. This year is expected to be the first when oil consumption fails to rise.
Mr de Margerie warned that the glut of oil caused by the dramatic reduction in demand would be short-lived and that,
in spite of the economic crisis, in the long term demand would remain constrained by supply. Three years ago, the
International Energy Agency expected consumption and production to hit 130 mm bpd by 2025. It has since dropped its
forecast to a little more than 100 mm bpd by 2030.
Delays and cancellations in projects to extract oil from Alberta's tar sands and Venezuela's Orinoco belt -- both
expensive and environmentally difficult operations in which Total is active -- will cut 1.5 mm bpd of supply that
would have come on stream had oil prices remained strong. The rest of the revisions from Total's mid-2008 estimates
came from the more pessimistic view of the political situation in Iran and Iraq, which hold the world's second and
third-largest oil reserves.
Meanwhile, Mr de Margerie now expects a faster decline in production at older fields, such as those in the North Sea.
At lower price levels, companies will find it harder to justify the greater cost of keeping such fields pumping.
Total's chief executive has long been an outspoken advocate of maintaining investment, rather than repeating the
mistakes of previous cycles by cutting costs so much that the industry is unable to meet global demand when economies
recover.
But he is also in the midst of trying to renegotiate contracts in Canada and is considering further investments in
Venezuela.
