First Break August 2023 - Near Surface Geo & Mining

Page 29

HIGHLIGHTS

INDUSTRY NEWS

28

TGS deploys LiDAR buoy offshore Norway

29

Chevron plans Australia characterisation project

32

PGS reprocesses data offshore Indonesia

Oil demand will drop after 2026 says IEA report The International Energy Agency (IEA) forecasts that demand for oil as transport fuel will decline after 2026, but overall consumption is expected to be supported by strong petrochemicals demand. Growth in the world’s demand for oil is set to slow ‘almost to a halt’ in the coming years, with high prices and security of supply concerns hastening the shift towards cleaner energy technologies, according to the IEA’s Oil 2023 Medium-Term Market Report. Based on current government policies and market trends, global oil demand will rise by 6% between 2022 and 2028 to reach 105.7 million barrels per day (mb/d), supported by robust demand from the petrochemical and aviation sectors, says the agency. However, annual demand growth is expected to shrink from 2.4 mb/d this year to 0.4 mb/d in 2028. In particular, the use of oil for transport fuels is set to decline after 2026 as the expansion of electric vehicles, the growth of biofuels and improving fuel economy reduce consumption. ‘The shift to a clean energy economy is picking up pace, with a peak in global oil demand in sight before the end of this decade as electric vehicles, energy efficiency and other technologies advance,’ said IEA executive director Fatih Birol. ‘Oil producers need to pay careful attention to the gathering pace of change and calibrate their investment decisions to ensure an orderly transition.’ Global oil markets are still slowly recalibrating after three turbulent years

caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and then by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, added the IEA. Global oil markets could tighten significantly in the coming months, as production cuts by the OPEC+ alliance temper an upswing in global oil supplies. China was the last major economy to lift its Covid-19 restrictions at the end of 2022, leading to a post-pandemic oil demand rebound in the first half of 2023. Yet demand growth in China is forecast to slow markedly from 2024. Nevertheless, burgeoning petrochemical demand and strong consumption growth in emerging and developing economies will more than offset a contraction in advanced economies, says the report. Global upstream investments in oil and gas exploration, extraction and production are on course to reach their highest levels since 2015, growing 11% year-on-year to $528 billion in 2023. While the impact of higher spending will be partly offset by cost inflation, such sustained investment would meet forecast demand in the period covered by the report. However, it exceeds the amount that would be needed in a world on track to achieves net zero emissions by 2050. The report’s projections assume that big oil producers maintain their plans to build up capacity even as demand growth slows. This is expected to result in spare capacity cushion of at least 3.8 mb/d, concentrated in the Middle East. The report nonetheless notes factors that could affect market balances over the medium term FIRST

– including uncertain global economic trends, the direction of OPEC+ decisions and China’s refining industry policy. Oil-producing countries outside the OPEC+ alliance dominate plans for increasing global supply capacity in the medium term, with an expected rise of

Global oil demand will rise by 6% from 2022 to 2028.

5.1 mb/d by 2028 led by the US, Brazil and Guyana. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Iraq lead plans for capacity building within OPEC+, while African and Asian members are set to struggle with continuing declines, and Russian production falls due to sanctions. This makes for a net capacity gain of 0.8 mb/d from the 23 members in OPEC+ over the report’s forecast period.

BREAK

I

VOLUME

41

I

AUGUST

2023

27


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Articles inside

Environmentally friendly low impact, low carbon footprint, low power electromagnetic technique for mineral exploration

12min
pages 97-103

An unbiased spiral array for MASW data acquisition

11min
pages 91-96

Use of geophysical surveys in geotechnical engineering practice — a geotechnical engineer’s perspective

10min
pages 87-90

Permanent 3D data acquisition of geotechnical structures using web-based application of terrestrial LiDAR — chances and risks from an engineering geodetic point of view

13min
pages 81-86

Advances in seismic imaging of quick clays in Sweden

12min
pages 75-80

P- and S-wave seismic imaging of a complex aquifer system in Kurikka, western Finland

13min
pages 69-74

The role of ground penetrating radar (GPR) surveying for indoor Building Information Modelling (BIM)

22min
pages 61-68

Drone geophysics: developing guidelines for international best practice

15min
pages 49-55

Spatial-autocorrelation (SPAC) analysis using seismic ambient noise as applied to engineering applications in Alaska

14min
pages 41-48

Special Topic NEAR SURFACE GEO & MINING

1min
page 40

TGS downgrades its offshore wind energy installation forecast to 2035

1min
page 39

Sercel wins

0
page 38

US auctions solar energy projects in Nevada

1min
page 38

UK announces 22 oil and gas projects in coming years

3min
pages 37-38

PGS releases 20,000 km2 of Cyprus reprocessed data

0
page 37

Rystad predicts shortage of manufacturing capacity for offshore wind turbines

1min
page 36

Oil and gas round-up

2min
page 36

TGS, PGS and SLB expand 3D coverage offshore Malaysia

0
page 35

Seismic survey of coal bed methane scheme in Mongolia gets underway

1min
page 35

Searcher shoots 3D survey offshore Gulf of Papua

1min
page 34

PGS reprocesses data offshore Indonesia

0
page 34

TGS launches processing project offshore India

2min
page 33

US approves wind energy project offshore Atlantic City

1min
page 32

Global oil reserves increase by 52 billion barrels year-on-year, says Rystad

1min
page 32

Chevron plans 4D survey offshore Australia

0
page 31

PGS wins offshore wind characterisation project

0
page 31

Searcher completes 3D survey offshore Namibia

1min
page 30

TGS deploys first LiDAR wind measurement buoy offshore Norway

1min
page 30

Oil demand will drop after 2026 says IEA report

2min
page 29

CROSSTALK

6min
pages 26-28

A building story with a seismic sequel

3min
pages 23-25

Future of organic geochemistry is focus of IMOG 2023

1min
page 22

Chile to host a workshop on mining in the energy transition era

0
page 21

How EAGE can boost your early professional career

3min
pages 20-21

Energy transition on the agenda for Aberdeen LC

1min
page 19

Mark your calendar for data processing workshop in Cairo

1min
page 19

First water footprint workshop to be held in Latin America

0
page 18

Seismic velocity changes in the Groningen reservoir explained at LC Netherlands meeting

1min
page 18

ADDITIONS THIS MONTH

0
page 17

Help us to identify skills needed for the energy transition

1min
page 17

OUR JOURNALS THIS MONTH CHECK OUT THE LATEST JOURNALS

1min
page 16

Edinburgh awaits your participation at EAGE Near Surface Geoscience 2023

2min
pages 15-16

Get yourself ready for GET2023 and the future of energy challenge

1min
page 14

Our Annual in Vienna struck all the right notes

4min
pages 8-9

Update your member affiliation for best EAGE experience

0
page 6

Guiding EAGE’s next energy transition steps

5min
pages 5-6
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