Digitalization could Save Upstream Market $100b, Report Finds

-By Gideon Osaka

Rystad Energy estimated that as much as $100 billion can be eliminated from exploration and production upstream budgets through automation and digitalization initiatives in the 2020s.

Service companies are reinventing themselves to help operators unlock these savings. In 2018, $1 trillion was spent on operation expenses, opex, wells, facilities and subsea capital expenditure, capex across more than 3,000 companies in the upstream market, according to Rystad. There are varying degrees of potential savings within offshore, shale and conventional onshore activity budgets, but in total, around 10 percent of this spend can be erased through more efficient and productive operations thanks to automation and digitalization. Audun Martinsen, Head of Oilfield Services Research, said: “Many key industry players are setting optimistic goals, but the realization of these initiatives largely depend on how freely data is shared amongst companies and how commercial strategies are deployed to drive this development. Because of this, it could be years before we see full adoption.


Audun Martinsen

“However, based on our analysis of 2018 capital spend and operational budgets, we believe savings could easily reach $100 billion.” The amount of savings has the potential to be significant and several operators expect automation and digitalization to reduce drilling costs by 10 per cent to 20 percent, and facility and subsea costs by 10 percent to 30 percent, according to the analyst. However, not all field developments or drilling operations have the same capacity to reduce costs. Adoption across the entire value chain of suppliers from national oil companies to majors to smaller exploration and production companies are expected to vary, so the realistic efficiencies and synergies will be closer to 10 percent by the end of the next decade. “In addition to cost savings, digitalization initiatives can also increase productivity by increasing uptime, optimizing reservoir depletion strategies, improving the health, safety, and environment of workers, and minimizing greenhouse emissions, all of which have significant value creation,” Martinsen added. The oil market downturn has given upstream operators and service providers a strong incentive to adapt and become more efficient or be forced to close shop. A race among suppliers is currently underway as companies roll-out new digital products; the last three months alone have seen major releases by Schlumberger, Baker Hughes, and TechnipFMC. One of the largest digitalization initiatives to date launched last month, the result of a collaboration by Schlumberger, Chevron, and Microsoft. This project aims to visualize, interpret and ultimately obtain meaningful insights from multiple data sources across exploration, development, and production and midstream sectors. Another driver of digitalization is that data storage and processing have become significantly cheaper, and the increased connectivity through the so-called “Internet of Things” has allowed more data to be efficiently digested. Nonetheless, the digital systems of an offshore platform can have around 5,000 to 15,000 sensors, and connecting this myriad of data points is not a straight forward process. Given the complexity of digitalization efforts, it is likely that investments will be primarily aimed at new greenfield projects, while aging producing assets will not be a priority, the analyst concluded.

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