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Australia Oil and Gas Report Q3 2009

Published By: Business Monitor International
June 2009
R302-6477
Online Download   $495.00
Description

The latest Australia Oil & Gas Report from BMI forecasts that the country will account for 3.26% ofAsia Pacific regional oil demand by 2013, while providing 6.00% of supply. Asia Pacific regional oil useof 21.40mn barrels per day (b/d) in 2001 reached an estimated 25.87mn b/d in 2008. It should average25.79mn b/d in 2009, then rise to around 29.12mn b/d by 2013. Regional oil production was just under8.41mn b/d in 2001, and averaged an estimated 8.41mn b/d in 2008. It is set to increase to 8.74mn b/d by2013.

In terms of natural gas, in 2008 the region consumed an estimated 440bn cubic metres (bcm) and demandof 551bcm is targeted for 2013. Production of an estimated 364bcm in 2008 should reach 484bcm in2013, but implies net imports easing from an estimated 76bcm per annum in 2008 to 67bcm in 2013. Thisis in spite of many Asian gas producers being major exporters. Australia’s share of gas consumption in2008 was an estimated 5.86%, while its share of production is put at 13.06%. By 2013 its share of gasconsumption is forecast to be 5.36%, with the country accounting for 13.44% of supply.

In terms of the OPEC basket of crudes, the average price in Q109 was an estimated US$45.78 per barrel(bbl), down 13% from the US$52.51/bbl recorded during the previous three months. During the secondquarter, there has been little change to our view of oil market developments. BMI is forecasting anaverage OPEC basket price of US$51.30/bbl, with the March gains being retained in April, before furtherrecovery to a possible US$57.00 is seen by June. For 2009, we are still assuming an average OPEC basketprice of US$52.00/bbl (-45% year-on-year). The BMI full year forecast implies Brent crude at US$53.73,WTI averaging US$54.90/bbl and Urals at US$52.66 for 2009.

For the whole of 2009, the BMI assumption for gasoline is an average US$56.89/bbl, with the pricepeaking at a forecast monthly average of US$64.75 in December 2009. The overall y-o-y fall in 2009gasoline prices is put at 44.1%. For gasoil in 2009, the BMI forecast is for an average price ofUS$69.35/bbl, assuming a monthly high of US$94.48/bbl in December. The full-year outturn represents a42.8% fall from the 2008 level. The monthly average jet fuel price is forecast to range from US$53.75 inFebruary to US$96.76/bbl in December, proving an annual level of US$71.78/bbl. This compares withUS$124.95/bbl in 2008.

Australian real GDP is forecast by BMI to fall 1.4% for 2009, compared with growth of 1.9% in 2008.We are assuming growth of 1.2% in 2010 and 3.0% in 2011, followed by 3.4% in 2012 and 3.1% in 2013.There is no state oil industry, but a group of domestic and leading international companies is investingheavily in gas production and exports to help slow the rate of decline in Australia’s oil output. We areassuming oil and gas liquids production peaking at 580,000b/d in 2010, falling to 525,000b/d by 2013.Consumption is forecast to increase by less than 1.0% per annum to 2013, implying demand of948,000b/d by the end of the forecast period. The import requirement would therefore be approximately423,000b/d by 2013.

Between 2008 and 2018, we are forecasting a decrease in Australian oil production of 26.0%, with crudevolumes peaking in 2010 at 580,000b/d, before falling steadily to 395,000b/d by the end of the period. Oilconsumption between 2008 and 2018 is set to increase by 4.50%, with growth slowing to an assumed0.5% per annum towards the end of the period and the country using 972,000b/d by 2018. Gas productionis expected to rise rapidly, from an estimated 48bcm in 2008 to a possible 92bcm by 2018 (+93.7%).With demand growth of 29.6%, this provides export potential rising from an estimated 21.7bcm to58.6bcm, all in the form of LNG. Details of the BMI 10-year forecasts can be found in the appendix tothis report, which provides global, regional and country-specific projections.

Australia still leads BMI’s updated Upstream Business Environment rating, with its balance of strong gasproduction/export potential, world class regulatory structure and solid risk environment proving to be awinning combination. However, the gap between it and second-placed Vietnam flatters Australia as it isdue largely to the poorer country risk environment in Vietnam. Indeed, given the greater potential formore rapid growth in Vietnam, the gap should narrow over the medium term, although it is unlikely toclose until the country’s Country Risk environment improves. The country is further down the leaguetable in BMI’s Downstream Business Environment rating, reflecting its status as a mature, deregulatedand competitive energy market with limited growth potential. It now shares fifth place with South Koreaout of the 14 states, ahead of Indonesia, and could slip further down the rankings as Country Riskimproves elsewhere in the region.
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Australia Political SWOT
Australia Economic SWOT Analysis
Australia Business Environment SWOT
Australia Energy Market Overview
Regional Energy Market Overview
Oil Supply And Demand
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Consumption (000b/d)
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Production (000b/d)
Oil: Downstream
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Refining Capacity (000b/d)
Gas Supply And Demand
Table: Asia Pacific Gas Consumption (bcm)
Table: Asia Pacific Gas Production (bcm)
Liquefied Natural Gas
Table: Asia Pacific LNG Exports/(Imports) (bcm)
Business Environment Ranking
Asia Pacific Region
Composite Scores
Table: Regional Upstream Business Environment Rating
Table: Regional Downstream Business Environment Rating
Upstream Scores
Downstream Scores
Australia Upstream Rating - Overview
Australia Upstream Rating - Potential Returns
Australia Upstream Rating - Risks To Potential Returns
Australia Downstream Rating - Overview
Australia Downstream Rating - Potential Returns
Australia Downstream Rating - Risks To Potential Returns
Business Environment
Legal Framework
Infrastructure
Labour Force
Foreign Investment Policy
FDI Regime
Foreign Trade Regime
Tax Regime
Security Risk
Industry Forecast Scenario
Oil And Gas Reserves
Oil Supply And Demand
Gas Supply And Demand
LNG
Refining And Oil Products Trade
Revenues/Import Costs
Table: Australia Oil & Gas - Historical Data & Forecasts
Other Energy
Table: Australia Other Energy - Historical Data & Forecasts
Key Risks To BMI’s Forecast Scenario
Long-Term Energy Outlook
Macroeconomic Outlook
Table: Australia - Economic Activity
Competitive Landscape
Executive Summary
Table: Key Players - Australia Oil & Gas Sector
Overview/State Role
Table: Key Upstream Players
Table: Key Downstream Players
Company Monitor
Woodside Petroleum
Santos
BHP Billiton
Chevron - Summary
ConocoPhillips - Summary
Shell - Summary
ExxonMobil - Summary
CNOOC - Summary
BP - Summary
BG Group - Summary
Roc Oil - Summary
Inpex - Summary
Sinopec - Summary
Apache - Summary
PTTEP - Summary
Murphy - Summary
Arrow Energy - Summary
Pure Energy - Summary
Total - Summary
Hess - Summary
Others - Summary
Glossary of Terms
Oil & Gas Ratings: Revised Methodology
Introduction
Ratings Overview
Table: BMI Oil & Gas Business Environment Ratings: Structure
Indicators
Table: BMI Oil & Gas Business Environment Upstream Ratings: Methodology
Table: BMI Oil & Gas Business Environment Downstream Ratings: Methodology
Oil & Gas Outlook: Long-Term Forecasts
Regional Oil Demand
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Consumption (000b/d)
Regional Oil Supply
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Production (000b/d)
Regional Refining Capacity
Table: Asia Pacific Oil Refining Capacity (000b/d)
Regional Gas Demand
Table: Asia Pacific Gas Consumption (bcm)
Regional Gas Supply
Table: Asia Pacific Gas Production (bcm)
Australia Country Overview
Methodology & Risks To Forecasts
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Energy Industry
Cross Checks
Sources
Order Form
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PUBLICATION:   Australia Oil and Gas Report Q3 2009
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  Online Download$495.00   
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