Minggu, 24 April 2011

New Market Research Report: Qatar Oil & Gas Report Q2 2011

PRLog (Press Release) – Apr 24, 2011 – The latest Qatar Oil & Gas Report from BMI forecasts that the country will account for 3.35% of Middle Eastern (ME) regional oil demand by 2015, while providing 6.85% of supply. Middle East regional oil use rose to an estimated 7.40mn barrels per day (b/d) in 2010. It should average 7.70mn b/d in 2011 and then climb to around 8.70mn b/d by 2015. Regional oil production was 22.83mn b/d in 2001 and averaged an estimated 24.90mn b/d in 2010. After an estimated 25.21mn b/d in 2011, it is set to rise to 27.24mn b/d by 2015. Oil exports are growing steadily, because demand growth is lagging the pace of supply expansion. In 2001, the region was exporting an average of 17.85mn b/d. This eased to an estimated 17.50mn b/d in 2010 and is forecast to reach 18.54mn b/d by 2015. Iraq has the greatest export growth potential, followed by Qatar.

In terms of natural gas, the region consumed an estimated 392bn cubic metres (bcm) in 2010, with demand of 482bcm targeted for 2015, representing 23.0% growth. Production of an estimated 467bcm in 2010 should reach 612bcm in 2015 (+31.0%), which implies net exports rising to 130bcm by the end of the period. Qatar in 2010 consumed an estimated 6.25% of the region's gas, with its market share forecast at 8.30% by 20 helicop ter technology 15. It contributed an estimated 28.91% to 2010 regional gas production and, by 2015, will account for 28.61% of supply.

The 2010 full-year outturn was US$77.45/bbl for OPEC crude, which delivered an average for North Sea Brent of US$80.34/bbl and for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) of US$79.61/bbl. The BMI price target of US$77 was reached thanks to the early onset of particularly cold weather, which drove up demand for and the price of heating oil during the closing weeks of the year.

We set our 2011 supply, demand and price forecasts in early January, targeting global oil demand growth of 1.53% and supply growth of 1.91%. With OECD inventories at the top of their five-year average range, we set a price forecast of US$80/bbl average for the OPEC basket in 2011. The unprecedented wave of popular uprisings in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) that followed the removal of Tunisian President Ben Ali on January 14 has obviously fundamentally altered our outlook, particularly since the unrest spread to Libya in mid-February.

Taking into account the risk premium that has been added to crude prices in response to actual and perceived threats to supply, we have now raised our benchmark OPEC basket price forecast from US$80 to US$90/bbl for 2011 and from US$85 to US$95/bbl for 2012. Based on our expectations for differentials, this gives a forecast for Brent at US$94/bbl in 2011 and US$99/bbl in 2012. We have kept our long-term price assumption of US$90/bbl (OPEC basket) in place for the time being while we wait to see what path events in the MEN trash bins A region take. We have also retained our existing supply and demand forecasts until the scheduled quarterly revision at the start of April.

Qatar's real GDP rose by an estimated 15.9% in 2010, with average annual growth of 10.0% forecast for 2010-2015. We expect oil demand to rise from an estimated 218,000b/d in 2010 to 291,000b/d in 2015. State-owned Qatar Petroleum (QP) negotiates exploration and production (E&P) agreements, shares in upstream projects, and has 50% of oil and 40% of gas production. It has signed agreements with many of the leading international oil companies (IOCs), particularly for gas development and export projects. Our estimates assume 1.71mn b/d of 2011 oil and liquids production, rising to 1.87mn b/d by the end of the forecast period. Gas production should reach 175.0bcm by 2015, up from an estimated 135.0bcm in 2010. Consumption is expected to rise from an estimated 24.5bcm to 40.0bcm by the end of the forecast period, allowing for exports of 135.0bcm.

Between 2010 and 2020, we are forecasting an increase in Qatari oil and gas liquids production of 25.6%, with volumes rising steadily to 2.06mn b/d by the end of the 10-year forecast period. Oil consumption between 2010 and 2020 is set to increase by 79.1%, with growth slowing to an assumed 6.0% per annum towards the end of the period and the country using 390,000b/d by 2020. Gas production is expected to rise from an estimated 135bcm to 194bcm by the end of the period. With 2010-2020 demand growth of 125%, this provides an export capability rising from an estimated 111bcm to 139bcm. Details of BMI's 10-year forecasts can be found in the appendix to this report.

Qa rc helicopter market place tar now shares second Kenmore Bisque 15 inchi place with Israel behind only the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in BMI's composite Business Environment (BE) ratings table, which combines upstream and downstream scores. The country holds outright first place, two points ahead of the UAE, in BMI's updated upstream Business Environment ratings. We see little risk over the short term of Qatar having its position challenged, thanks largely to the country's extraordinary gas wealth. The country's score benefits from a sound country risk profile, healthy output growth prospects, high reserves-to-production ratios (RPR) and an attractive licensing regime. Qatar is now ranked equal sixth with Bahrain in BMI's updated downstream Business Environment ratings, with a few high scores and longer-term progress up the rankings a strong possibility. It suffers from low scores for refining capacity, oil demand, retail site intensity, population, nominal GDP and private company involvement in the downstream segment. Generally, healthy country risk factors bolster the overall score.

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