World’s recoverable oil resources take a hit, Rystad says

The world’s remaining recoverable oil resources are now seen as 9 per cent slimmer but the commercial volumes can align with the global climate goals and keep global warming below 1.8˚C, energy intelligence firm Rystad Energy has said.

 

Every year and following the publication of the BP Statistical Review, Rystad Energy releases its own assessment to provide an independent comparison of how the world’s energy landscape changed last year.

 

Rystad’s 2021 review deals a major blow for the size of the world’s remaining recoverable oil resources – but it also shows that oil production and consumption can align with climate goals.

 

Rystad Energy now estimates total recoverable oil resources at 1,725 billion barrels, a significant reduction from the last year’s estimate of 1,903 billion barrels. Out of this total, which shows Rystad’s estimate of how much oil is technically recoverable in the future, about 1,300 billion barrels are sufficiently profitable to be produced before the year 2100 at a Brent real oil price of $50 per barrel.

 

Rystad Energy’s Head of Analysis, Per Magnus Nysveen, said: “In this scenario, global production of oil and natural gas liquids will fall below 50 million barrels per day by 2050. Exploring, developing, processing and consuming this amount of commercially extractable oil will lead to gross greenhouse gas emissions of less than 450 gigatonnes of CO­­2 from now until 2100. This is compliant with IPCC’s carbon budget for global warming limited to 1.8˚C by 2100”.

 

US and China take the largest hit by the revision

This year’s review of global recoverable oil resources is based on resources modelled at well level rather than field level. This more detailed approach has removed 178 billion barrels from the expected accounts as the confidence level for decline rates has increased with the amount of new information gathered.

 

Rystad’s updated report also includes revisions for proved reserves. Here, Rystad Energy applies a consistent set of conservative probabilities as opposed to official reporting by authorities which is deemed less consistent. Among other findings, Rystad sees significant differences among OPEC members on the longevity of proved reserves, ranging from well below ten years for some members to almost 20 years for Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

 

In terms of absolute volumes removed from non-OPEC producers, remaining recoverable resources in the US are now reduced to 214 billion barrels, losing 30 billion barrels from last year’s estimate.

 

China suffers the second-largest loss with its remaining recoverable resources now limited to 50 billion barrels, a downwards revision of 26 billion barrels.

 

Mexico’s recoverable resources are third on the loss list, downgraded by 12 billion barrels to 26 billion barrels. Most of this year’s revisions are driven by lower upside potential from shale oil drilling due to complex geology and the need for extensive exploration campaigns and improved fracking technologies.

 

The remaining recoverable resources of OPEC countries are reduced by 53 billion barrels to 741 billion barrels. Iran and Saudi Arabia have the largest revisions, losing 11 billion barrels each, with Saudi recoverable oil volumes now calculated at 288 billion barrels and Iranian volumes at 101 billion barrels. Iraq follows in third place, seeing its recoverable resources shrink by 8 billion barrels to 110 billion barrels.

 

Who sits on the largest resources?

In this revision, Saudi Arabia keeps the throne as the producer with the largest volumes of recoverable oil resources (288 billion barrels). The US follows second (214 billion barrels), Russia third (149 billion barrels) and Canada fourth (138 billion barrels).

 

In Central and South America, Brazil remains first in recoverable resources, sitting on 83 billion barrels (down 2 billion barrels from last year’s update).

 

In Europe, with 19 billion barrels (down by one billion barrels in this update), Norway remains ahead of the UK, whose volumes have shrunk by two billion barrels to ten billion. In Africa, resource leader Nigeria lost six billion barrels and its recoverable resources are now estimated at 20 billion barrels.

 

Unlike most countries in the analysis, Australia’s estimated recoverable oil resources are now seen higher by two billion barrels at 23 billion barrels.

 

Source: Offshore Energy Today