Woodside Cuts Output Guidance on Gulf of Mexico Project Delay

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Australia's Woodside Energy Group trimmed its production outlook for 2022 on Thursday and flagged a possible delay to a U.S. oil project inherited with BHP Group's petroleum assets, sending its shares down 4%.

Woodside, now a top 10 global independent oil and gas producer following its merger with BHP's petroleum arm, said the Mad Dog Phase 2 oil project in the Gulf of Mexico, due to start operations in 2022, may face delays after problems were detected in some equipment. [The Mad Dog 2 is operated by BP]

At the same time, [Woodside] said it expects its full-year output, excluding BHP assets, to be between 88 million and 94 million (mmboe), down 4 mmboe from its previous forecast, due to "new conversion factors," which analysts said was not well explained.

"The market is confused, and when these sort of complexities are poorly explained by the company, the market fears the worst. It's probably an overreaction today," said Dale Koenders, an analyst at Barrenjoey.

The production downgrade came as Woodside reported its second-quarter revenue more than doubled to $3.44 billion, including one month's contribution from BHP's assets, bolstered by booming oil and gas prices in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Woodside also said it has called off plans to sell a stake in its $4.6 billion oil project off Senegal after it failed to find a "quality partner" at a good enough price following nearly a year of talks.



"Look at the market conditions today, the Sangomar grade of crude is an excellent fit for many European refiners, so in our eyes the value of the asset is looking even better than when we took FID (final investment decision)," Chief Executive Officer Meg O'Neill told Reuters.

Analysts said Woodside had no need to sell down the Sangomar stake as it is cashed up with BHP's assets and strong oil and gas prices.

"It's quite logical for Woodside to hold on, rather than selling down and destroying value," said Suhas Nayak, an analyst with fund manager Allan Gray, a Woodside shareholder.

Woodside also pushed out a decision to 2023 on developing the 100,000 barrels per day Trion oil project off Mexico, inherited from BHP, amid rising costs for manufacturing components for mega projects worldwide. BHP was aiming for a final decision on Trion in 2022.

"I think we're seeing a lot of uncertainty in the marketplace all around the world amid uncertainty over contracting costs," O'Neill said.

Australia's biggest independent gas producer also hiked its annual capital expenditure forecast to a range of $4.3 billion to $4.8 billion from its prior view of $3.8 billion to $4.2 billion, based on spending at assets inherited from BHP.

(Reuters - Reporting by Sonali Paul in Melbourne, Sameer Manekar and Indranil Sarkar in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath, Anil D'Silva and Richard Pullin)


Categories: Energy Industry News Activity Production North America Gulf of Mexico Africa

Related Stories

US-Israel War on Iran Creates Biggest Energy Crisis in History

MidEast Energy Output Recovery to Take Two Years, IEA Says

Oil Rises as Fragile Middle East Ceasefire Sustains Supply Risks

Energy Crisis from War on Iran Deeper Than Widely Assumed

Oil Hikes 7% after Trump Says US-Israel will Keep Striking Iran

Iran War Sends LNG Prices Soaring, Curbing Asia Demand

Oil Falls on Middle East Ceasefire Hopes, Easing Supply Fears

Oil Executives Flag Long-Term Impact of Iran Conflict

Eni Advances Major Deep Water Gas Hubs with Dual FIDs

Governments Move to Shield Economies as Oil Jumps 25%

Current News

Technology as Enabler of Energy Security in Offshore Asia

Saipem Poised for Middle East Repair Work After Iran War

Middle East Conflict Jolts Offshore Drilling Market

Bureau Veritas Expands Offshore Services with New Asia Hub

Valeura Charters Shelf Drilling’s Jack-Up Rig for Gulf of Thailand Ops

Oil Prices Jump as Ships Come Under Fire in Strait of Hormuz

US-Israel War on Iran Creates Biggest Energy Crisis in History

Jadestone Secures Gas Sales Deal for Fields Offshore Vietnam

Oil Flows to Lag Even if Hormuz Strait Reopens

Eni Makes Major Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

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