PetroVietnam mulls production cut as oil plunges
plunge
HA NOI (VNS)- The Vietnam
National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam) is considering cutting oil
production this year by around 450,000 tonnes in the context of constantly
declining global oil prices.
Oil prices have been in free fall of late, with a
record loss of 50 per cent in just six months, hitting a six-year low of
around US$46 per barrel on January 13. The prices of both Brent and US crude
improved slightly yesterday in Asia trade but remained under $50 a barrel.
In a Thursday interview on Vietnam Television
(VTV), PetroVietnam Chairman Nguyen Xuan Son said the group was considering
decreasing production in oil fields where production cost is above $50 a
barrel.
PetroVietnam would also consider stopping
production at high-cost oil wells if the technology makes it possible, Son
said.
He had earlier explained that the complex
technology involved in oil exploration and production makes reducing or
stopping production a complicated affair.
The average production cost at most PetroVietnam
oil fields is around $30-35 a barrel. At some places, the production cost is
even lower at just $20-25 a barrel, according to Son.
The projected reduction in oil production
announced by PetroVietnam is small compared with the group's production
target of 16.8 million tonnes for the whole year.
Several local media reports and analysts have
said that PetroVietnam's announcement makes Viet Nam the first country in the
world to consider cutting oil production because of the falling prices.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) has said it would not cut production and would keep output
steady despite oil's mounting losses. Meanwhile, the International Energy
Agency has said that non-OPEC oil producers will still increase output this
year but at a slower pace.
Son said that the group could make profits even
at $40-45 a barrel, but as prices plunged below $50, the plan to decrease
production aimed at protecting the nation's natural resources.
PetroVietnam has also considered the possibility
of increasing oil reserves if prices fall to around $40-45 a barrel, selling
them when the price situation improves.
At a meeting held yesterday to review the oil
industry in 2014, Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said the world
situation had become more unpredictable with many unstable factors that would
influence the whole economy in general and the petroleum industry in
particular.
He asked PetroVietnam to monitor global oil
prices closely and have flexible solutions to respond to changes.
Oil is a strategic commodity for Viet Nam,
accounting for a large proportion of its export revenues. Last year,
PetroVietnam reported total revenues of VND745.5 trillion ($34.8 billion).
The group also contributed VND178.1 trillion ($8.3 billion) to the State
Budget.
In the context of many international
organisations and experts predicting the oil prices will continue their
downtrend this year, PetroVietnam has prepared many impact scenarios.
At $60 a barrel, its total revenue will decrease
to VND515.1 trillion ($24 billion) and the contribution to the State Budget
will decline to VND104.2 trillion ($4.9 billion), a loss of VND74 trillion
over 2014.
At $50 a barrel, profit will further decline to
nearly VND473 trillion ($22.1 billion) and the State Budget contribution to
VND93.1 trillion ($4.35 billion). - VNS
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Thứ Bảy, 17 tháng 1, 2015
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