SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Rat's Nest - Chronicles of Collapse -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (341)6/14/2005 1:03:57 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Respond to of 24225
 
Rising energy prices raise red flag
Margaret Allen
Staff Writer
A new survey shows that rising energy prices are a big concern to business and industry.


A quarterly survey of U.S. manufacturers found nearly half consider sky-high oil prices a barrier to their growth. And most of those surveyed, some 59%, said they are passing along high oil prices to customers in the form of price increases on their own products.

That's according to the "Manufacturing Barometer" survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers. Researchers interviewed 73 senior executives about the first-quarter business climate at their multinational, industrial manufacturing companies.

Fuel prices might be the reason some executives had less confidence in the economy than the previous quarter. The survey found that 71% of the manufacturers remain optimistic about the nation's economy over the next 12 months. But that's an 11% drop from the 82% who felt that way in the previous survey.

In line with those findings, PricewaterhouseCoopers also found manufacturers expect average, 12-month revenue growth of 6.5%, compared to estimates of 7.8% the previous quarter.

Executives are seeking solutions abroad over the next 12 months. Some 37% plan moves into new international markets, which is up 32% from the previous quarter; and 22% are looking at adding manufacturing and distribution abroad, an 18% increase.

"Higher oil prices affect industrial manufacturers on multiple fronts," said Jorge Milo, the U.S. leader of PricewaterhouseCoopers' industrial manufacturing practice. "Raw material prices go up, energy costs increase to operate their facilities, and distribution costs rise to transport their products to their customers."

Blockbuster summer
The airlines may be crying about high fuel prices, but it doesn't appear to have put a damper on summer air travel. This summer will be the busiest travel season in six years, according to the U.S. Dept. of Transportation.

It's estimated 715 million passengers will fly this year, the most since the 9/11 terrorist attacks. That's up from 688 million in 2004.

mallen@bizjournals.com
bizjournals.com



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (341)6/14/2005 1:17:07 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24225
 



June 14, 2005

Oil industry ‘struggling to find new reserves’
By Carl Mortished, International Business Editor



THE international oil industry is struggling to discover enough new oil reserves, despite surging global demand for crude oil, according to a study by Wood Mackenzie, the energy consultants.



In the face of steady annual increases in demand for oil over the past decade, the West’s big oil companies largely have failed to improve the yearly exploration yield of new reserves to their portfolios, the study shows. Smaller discoveries and diminishing reserves per well are adding to pressure on oil companies in the West to gain access to large, unexploited oilfields in Russia and the Gulf states.

The Wood Mackenzie report, Global Oil and Gas Risks and Rewards, shows that typical annual returns from oil exploration — in the region of between three billion and five billion barrels — have not changed since the early 1990s. The only exception to the largely stagnant exploration trend was the discovery in 2000 of Kashagan, a ten billion barrel oilfield, in the Caspian Sea.

Graham Kellas, vice-president at Wood Mackenzie, reckons that the international oil companies were highly successful in finding oil during the past decade, but now are working in a diminishing field of opportunity. “The hunt for oil continues, but it is becoming increasingly difficult,’’ he said. “There are few areas of the world that are unexplored and that is why the larger companies are so keen to get access to areas that are off-limits.”

Shut out from the large known reserves of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq, the West’s oil companies have had significant successes, such as in the deep water of the Gulf of Mexico, Angola and Nigeria. There have also been failures, such as Brazil and Azerbaijan.

Mr Kellas said: “Deep- water Brazil has been a big disappointment. No commercial discoveries have yet been made by international oil companies, despite having spent nearly $1.5 billion.” The collapse in the oil price in 1998 and the ensuing wave of company takeovers led to cutbacks in exploration spending that the oil companies have been slow to restore, fearing further oil gluts. Exploration drilling peaked in 1998 with a total of 725 wells drilled, but in 2003 the West’s oil industry completed just 554 wells.

The diminishing average size of new discoveries is another factor causing the oil companies to seek access to Russia’s known oilfields. “Most of the activity in the former Soviet Union is the development of discoveries made in the Soviet period,” Mr Kellas said.

PRICE PROBLEM

Opec producers held out hope of further rises in production at today’s ministerial meeting to try to tame soaring crude prices, but they said that the oil cartel has little power to curb price rises, which were due to a lack of refinery capacity rather than crude supply. UK Brent crude closed up 57 cents at $53.24 a barrel.


business.timesonline.co.uk