Over 40 Offshore Rig Deals Dropped Since March. Still, There's Room for Optimism

Sarah McLean, IHS Markit
Wednesday, July 8, 2020

After the long, slow downturn that began in late 2014, this year was set to be better with many dormant regions resuming exploration and long-awaited development drilling programs going ahead. 

Then in mid-March, a double disaster struck as an oil price crash coincided with a global pandemic. This double whammy left many operators hitting the brakes, slashing budgets, and deferring those long-awaited programs meaning contractors found themselves receiving dozens of contract termination notices.

There have been 43 rig contract terminations globally since the beginning of March this year. 

Both Northwest Europe and West Africa have been hit the hardest with 11 terminations apiece. 

Both regions have seen a significant hit to their jack-up fleets with six terminations in Northwest Europe and seven in West Africa. 

Few regions have been immune from terminations, however, with Canada, the US Gulf of Mexico, Latin America, the Mediterranean, Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, and Australia/New Zealand all seeing their fair share of canceled contracts.

Figure 1: Global rig cancellations 2014 - 2020

Ultimately these cancellations give an indication of how activity levels are set to shape up in the near future both regionally and globally including which sectors, either region or rig type, have been hit hardest. The wider effects of this downturn are yet to be seen, however, contractors already report that re-bidding exercises for ongoing tenders have been undertaken and negotiations to reduce rates on ongoing charters are also underway. 

A pick-up in supply means sustained downward pressure on day rates for the foreseeable future unless action is taken to remove yet more capacity from the fleet. Contract cancellation data is used by contractors when deciding the future of their fleets. An increase in supply, especially a dramatic increase, is not sustainable and so, decisions to retire and scrap older units are being made more quickly.

In the last downturn, jack-ups were the first rig segment to be hit with contract terminations and it is a similar story this time around, albeit with semis following close behind. This is reflected in the number of attritions we see in the marketplace. 

The current downturn has already resulted in a number of jack-ups and semis retired from the fleet with older units, particularly semis, hitting the scrap yards. Thus far in 2020, a total of 12 semis, five jack-ups, and four drillships have left the worldwide fleet. While there is still a significant oversupply, particularly in regions such as West Africa, removing these older units takes at least some of the pressure off.

Figure 2: Global rig attrition since 2014

Despite these cancellations, there is light at the end of the tunnel. A number of these programs have not gone away with operators stating that there is potential for work to re-emerge at a later date if the oil price is suitable. 

Already the market has seen some decisions to reverse early terminations while yet more operators, particularly in the deepwater sector, have made the decision to place rigs on standby to see out the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic rather than cancel outright. 

The offshore drilling market has shown that it is resilient and there is optimism that once the pandemic is over, some of those canceled programs will become reinstated.


About the author


Sarah McLean is a senior rig analyst at IHS Markit. Her primary expertise includes the offshore rig markets across Africa, the Mediterranean & Black Sea and the Caspian regions.

Sarah gathers market intelligence for IHS Markit RigPoint, an online tool tracking the global offshore rig fleet, and contributes to monthly publications including the World Rig Forecast and the North Sea Rig Report. 

Categories: Drilling Industry News Activity Rigs

Related Stories

TotalEnergies Wraps Up Acquisition of SapuraOMV’s Gas Assets

OPEC+ Passes on Oil Output Increase, Weighs the "Trump Effect"

Seatrium and Cochin Shipyard Form Alliance to Deliver India’s Jack-Up Rigs

Makin' a List ... Trump Prioritizes Energy Exploration, Production, Export

Malaysia's FPSO Firm Bumi Armada Eyes Merger with MISC’s Offshore Unit

Eni Strengthens LNG Ties with Japan

India Opts Out of Buying Gas from Russia's Sanctioned Arctic LNG 2 Project

TotalEnergies Signs LNG Supply Deal with South Korea’s HD Hyundai Chemical

Joint Venture Partners Ink Commercial Deals to Develop Gas Reserves at Azerbaijan’s ACG Field

Korea's Hanhwa Sets Out Plan for Full Takeover of Singapore's Dyna-Mac

Current News

The Five Trends Driving Offshore Oil & Gas in 2025

China’s CNOOC Brings Bohai Sea Oil Field On Stream

Offshore Service Vessels: What’s in Store in 2025

ABS Approves Hanwha Ocean’s FPSO Design

AI & Offshore Energy: The Higher the Stakes, the More Value AI Creates

Floating LNG Conversion Job Slips Out of Seatrium’s Hands

Transocean’s Drillship to Stay in India Under New $111M Deal

INEOS Picks Up CNOOC’s US Assets in $2B Deal

Sunda Energy, Timor-Leste Gov Plan Accelerated Chuditch Gas Development

RINA to Conduct Pre-FEED Study for Petronas’ CCS Project in Malaysia

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com