Page 6: of Marine Technology Magazine (April 2014)

Offshore Energy

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of April 2014 Marine Technology Magazine

www.seadiscovery.com

Vol. 57 No. 3

ISSN 1559-7415

USPS# 023-276 118 East 25th Street,

New York, NY 10010 tel: (212) 477-6700; fax: (212) 254-6271

Marine Technology Reporter ISSN 1559-7415 is published monthly except for February, August, and

December by New Wave Media, 118 E. 25th St., New York, NY 10010-2915. Periodicals Postage at New York, NY and additional mailing offi ces.

POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Marine Technology Re- porter, 850 Montauk Hwy., #867, Bayport, NY 11705

Postmaster send notifi cation (Form 3579) regarding undeliverable magazines to Marine

Technology Reporter, 850 Montauk

Hwy., #867, Bayport, NY 11705

Publishers are not responsible for the safekeeping or return of editorial material. © 2014 New

Wave Media.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publishers.

Subscription:

To subscribe please visit www.seadiscovery.com/subscribe

Member

Editorial www.seadiscovery.com

NEW YORK 118 E. 25th St., New York, NY 10010

Tel: (212) 477-6700; Fax: (212) 254-6271

FLORIDA 215 NW 3rd St., Boynton Beach, FL 33435

Tel: (561) 732-4368; Fax: (561) 732-6984

PUBLISHER

John C. O’Malley [email protected]

Associate Publisher & Editor

Gregory R. Trauthwein [email protected]

Web Editor

Eric Haun [email protected]

Contributing Editors Capt. Edward Lundquist, USN (Ret.)

Claudio Paschoa

Production Manager

Irina Tabakina [email protected]

Production & Graphic Design

Nicole Ventimiglia [email protected]

Sales & Event Coordinator

Michelle Howard [email protected]

Manager, Public Relations

Mark O’Malley [email protected]

Manager, Information Technology Services

Vladimir Bibik [email protected]

CIRCULATION

Kathleen Hickey [email protected]

ADVERTISING

Vice President, Sales and Marketing

Rob Howard [email protected]

Tel: (561) 732-4368 Fax: (561) 732-6984

Advertising Sales Manager

Lucia M. Annunziata [email protected]

Tel: (212) 477-6700 Fax: (212) 254-6271

Mike Kozlowski [email protected]

Tel: (561) 733-2477 Fax: (561) 732-9670

Japan

Katsuhiro Ishii amskatsu@ dream.com

Tel: +81 3 5691 3335 Fax: + 81 3 5691 3336

Gregory R. Trauthwein

Associate Publisher & Editor

Email: [email protected]

W hile the Offshore Oil & Gas markets continue to push further from shore in ever-deeper waters, the need for proven technology to work more effi ciently in increasingly hostile and unfamiliar environments grows in tandem. And while growth in the energy sector continues to energize multiple markets, it is worthy to note that there are a few looming clouds on the horizon of this traditionally cyclical market.

Jim McCaul of IMA has been a close friend and colleague for nearly 20 years, as he has served as “Editorial Consultant” on MTR sister-publication Maritime Reporter &

Engineering News for decades. McCaul arguably has more insight and information on the

Floating Production System market than anyone I know, as he has studied it meticulously – and generated C-Suite level quarterly market reports on the topic – for the last 20 years.

As you know, these fl oating production system projects are multi-year, multi-billion dollar projects, and they can serve as a bellwether for the general overall health of the market.

Today there are 320 oil and gas fl oating production units in service, on order or avail- able for re-use in another fi eld, with FPSOs accounting for 65% of the existing systems and 74% of the systems on order. While the number of production fl oaters in service has increased 84% over the past 10 years, McCaul notes in his latest monthly report for MR that the order projection for the coming fi ve years is from 104 to 150 production fl oaters, which at face value seems strong but is signifi cantly lower than the fi ve-year forecast from last year of 124 to 190 units. Why the big drop?

First and foremost, there are increasingly evident strains on the deepwater supply chain, as costs for projects, people and equipment grow exponentially, in tandem with project complexity. Predictably, oil major capex budgets are starting to shrink, with ExxonMobil saying its capex spending for 2014 will be 6% less than last year, and Chevron cutting 2014 spending 5%. In addition, the rapid evolution of the U.S. shale oil and gas business is a growing factor, as oil companies are increasingly looking at faster, cheaper to develop projects on land as an alternative. For now offshore remains a strong growth market, but as you enter into long-range planning later in the year, pay heed to the clouds forming on the offshore horizon.

The Arctic

Energy Risk & Reward

Brazil

The Northern Frontier

OI 2014

Technology Wrap-Up

MARINE

TECHNOLOGY REPORTERApril 2014 www.seadiscovery.com

Subsea

Pipeline

Inspection

Via Underwater

Laser Scanning

Download our App iPhone & Android

April 2014 6 MTR

MTR #3 (1-17).indd 6 4/10/2014 11:53:55 AM

Marine Technology

Marine Technology Reporter is the world's largest audited subsea industry publication serving the offshore energy, subsea defense and scientific communities.