oil industry

OPEC meets with US shale executives as oil prices skyrocket

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

OPEC meets with US shale executives as oil prices skyrocket

OIL. A drilling rig on a lease owned by Oasis Petroleum operates in the Permian Basin oil and natural gas production area near Wink, Texas, August 22, 2018.

Nick Oxford/Reuters

OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo says they discussed how shale producers were focused on delivering profits to shareholders instead of pouring more cash into new drilling

HOUSTON, USA – Officials from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) met US shale oil company executives on the sidelines of the CERAWeek conference in Houston on Monday, March 7, as energy prices soared over supply concerns.

It was at least the fourth time since 2017 that US shale oil producers and OPEC officials have held such meetings to discuss energy concerns.

EQT Corporation chief executive officer Toby Rice, Hess Corporation CEO John Hess, and Chesapeake Energy CEO Domenic Dell’Osso, among others, attended a dinner with OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo at a restaurant adjacent to the CERAWeek conference site.

Oil rose to a 14-year high of $139 a barrel on Monday amid concerns about supplies as the United States and European governments weighed banning imports from Russia, the world’s second largest oil exporter. Earlier, Barkindo said at CERAWeek that OPEC production could not offset a ban on Russian oil.

Barkindo said after the dinner that attendees discussed how shale producers were focused on delivering profits to shareholders instead of pouring more cash into new drilling.

“This massive underinvestment requires us to revisit that,” Barkindo said. “This is up to the companies themselves and their boards…but there’s this general realization that something needs to be done” to address the new circumstances, he said.

The dinner, billed as the North American Independents Forum, included Equatorial Guinea’s Energy Minister Gabriel Obiang Lima, OPEC Research Director Ayed Al-Qahtani, and the CEOs of Hunt Energy and Vincent Energy.

A Hess spokesperson who accompanied its CEO declined to comment.

“There is no capacity in the world that could replace 7 million barrels per day,” Barkindo earlier told reporters at the conference. “We have no control over current events, geopolitics, and this is dictating the pace of the market.”

Russia has been an integral part of the OPEC+ alliance that halted a COVID-19 pandemic-driven crash in oil prices through a 2020 agreement to cut 10 million barrels per day (bpd) from the group’s production.

As demand recovered, the alliance has begun returning 400,000 bpd per month to its output. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has led to a new oil shock. Some oil buyers have rejected Russian cargoes and producers with operations in the country, including BP, Shell, and Exxon Mobil, have withdrawn from Russia.

Monday’s dinner reprises meetings at the annual energy conference that began in 2017 following a two-year price war that left both sides hurting. Meetings initially were intended to help OPEC understand shale economics and financing but have expanded the topics, officials have said.

Barkindo, whose tenure as OPEC secretary general ends this summer, was presented with a bottle of “Genuine Barnett Shale” oil as a memento of his US meetings. Barnett, an area in north Texas, is the shale field that launched the US energy revolution. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!