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Hess sees tight oil market in near term, underinvestment risk ahead

Published 27/09/2021, 04:12
Updated 27/09/2021, 04:25
© Reuters. Pumpjacks taken out of production temporarily stand idle at a Hess site while new wells are fracked near Williston, North Dakota November 12, 2014.    REUTERS/Andrew Cullen/File Photo

By Sonali Paul

MELBOURNE (Reuters) -Hess Corp sees oil markets remaining tight in the short term and supporting strong prices as demand recovers more quickly than supply post-pandemic with U.S. shale producers holding back capital spending, its president said on Monday.

The oil producer expects a V-shaped recovery in demand and a U-shaped recovery in supply, Greg Hill said.

Global demand is seen climbing to 100 million barrels per day (bpd) by the end of 2021 or in the first quarter of 2022 and rising further to around 102 million bpd next year from 98 million bpd currently, he added.

"So we're probably going to have adequate price support kind of in the short term - it's probably $60 to $70 Brent until that supply and demand catch up and go into balance," Hill said at the Platts APPEC 2021 conference.

Brent futures on Monday hit a near three-year high at $79.52 a barrel. [O/R]

Longer term there are three wild cards - the potential return of Iranian crude to the market, inflation, and chronic underinvestment in new supply, Hill said.

The biggest wildcard is global upstream oil investment, which has slumped from $650 billion before the COVID-19 pandemic to around $300 billion.

"So that tells me the industry is massively underinvesting to meet future supply," Hill said in a recorded interview.

Hess is betting on growth from its stakes off Guyana, where it is working with Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM) in what is considered the world's best oil prospect, with a recoverable resource heading towards 10 billion barrels, as well as Suriname and the Gulf of Mexico.

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Thanks to new imaging technology, Hill said there are "huge swathes" in the Gulf of Mexico where geologists can now see through salt layers that were previously hard to assess.

"We've got 80 blocks to work with now and within that we see some very nice prospectivity," he said.

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