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Third OPEC International Seminar

OPEC in a New Energy Era: Challenges and Opportunities

12-13 September 2006,,

Oil Production Capacity Expansion

HE Dr Chakib KHELIL, Minister of Energy and Mines, Outline

I. Prospects for Oil Demand & Supply

II. OPEC Upstream Capacity Expansion Plans

III. NOC/IOC Co-operation

IV. Concluding Remarks

1 I. Oil Demand & Supply World Demand Million toe

Source: OPEC 2 I. Oil Demand & Supply Conventional & Non-Conventional Oil Resource

Conventional oil: Non-Conventional Oil: ~6-8 Trillion barrels of oil in place ~7 Trillion barrels of oil in place

Remaining Recoverable Produced TarTar SandsSands OilOil ShalesShales && BitumenBitumen 38%38% 39%39% ExtraExtra Target HeavyHeavy OilOil 23%23%

Challenge : Challenge : Improved recovery technologies Cost-effective extraction technologies needed needed

Source: IEA World Energy Outlook 2004 3 I. Oil Demand & Supply Proved Reserves vs. Non-OPEC Supply Growth

Proved (Oil) Reserves Non-OPEC Supply Growth

Billion barrels Year on Year Changes (mb/d)

1200

900

2,000

600 1,500

1,000

OPEC 500

300 0 FSU Non-OPEC Ex FSU -500 FSU

Non-OPEC -1,000 0 -1,500 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Est Est

Source: BP 4 I. Oil Demand & Supply Increase in Demand Met by OPEC

1,000 b/d

2500 2300

1900 2000 1500 1400 1500 1100 1100 1000 800 800 500 400 500 300

0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 -500 -500 -1000

-1500 -1400 -1600 -2000

NB: Figures include crude oil, condensates and NGL’s

Source: IEA 5 II. OPEC Upstream Capacity Expansion Plans Erosion in OPEC Spare Capacity : How long ?

85 20%

80 18% Global Production Capacity 16% 75 14% 70 12% 65 10% 60 Total World Oil Output

Millions bpd 8% 55 6% 50 1985: Spare Capapcity of around 4% 10 million bpd 45 2%

40 0%

4 74 78 976 80 84 90 96 00 002 1970 1972 19 1 19 19 1982 19 1986 1988 19 1992 199 19 1998 20 2 2004

Source: IMF & BP 6 II. OPEC Upstream Capacity Expansion Plans E & P Expenditure

World 120 Capacity 240 110 World 220 100 Demand 200 90 180 80 160 70 140 60 E&P Expenditure 120 Oil Price $/bbl Oil Rate MMbd 50 100 40 Oil Price $/B 80 30 60

20 E&P Expenditures $ Billion 40 10 20 0 0 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005

Source: IHS, BP, IEA, OPEC & Salomon Smith Barney. 7 II. OPEC Upstream Capacity Expansion Plans OPEC Crude Capacity Expansion Plans

Mb/d 40 OPEC Crude Oil Capacity Forcast Est. Demand for OPEC Crude

35

30

25

20 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

Source : OPEC 8 II. OPEC Upstream Capacity Expansion Plans 500Cumulative OPEC investment requirements vs. Demand estimations

400 Higher Growth DAU Lower Growth 300

200 $ 80 - 130 billion

$(2004) billion $ 230 - 470 billion 100

$ 150 - 290 billion 0 2004 2010 2015 2020

Call on OPEC Oil (*) : Lower Growth 34 37 41 DAU 35 40 46 Higher Growth 36 42 49

(*) Including NGL’s Source : OPEC 9 III. Producers - Consumers Dialogue : The Challenges

• High prices contribute to record cash flows for E&P companies but intensify

for opportunities;

• High service costs and declining size of discoveries are increasing risk capital

exposure and putting pressure on returns;

• New efforts are required to overcome the challenges in today environment :

They may force energy companies (IOCs, NOCs and Independents) to Join

efforts to capitalize on competitive advantages ( expertise, operating

experience and technology).

10 III. Producers - Consumers Dialogue : OPEC efforts

1 – International Energy Forum (IEF) with Secretariat in Riyadh;

2 - Joint Oil Data Initiative (JODI);

3 – OPEC Bilateral dialogues ( IEA; EU; ; India; …);

4 - OPEC Seminar.

11 IV. Concluding remarks:

- The resource base is sufficient to meet expected world oil demand growth,

However,

- Medium-term supply outlook presents real energy policy challenges,

Hence,

ƒ Without reserve additions, Non-OPEC countries will face increasing challenges to expand conventional oil production,

ƒ OPEC will face the challenge of timely expanding its production capacity in order to both meet demand growth and to contribute to oil market stability.

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