CHEVRON plans to slow production growth in the biggest US oil field next year in the most definitive sign yet that president-elect Donald Trump faces an uphill battle to ramp up American energy output.
Chevron will reduce capital expenditures in the Permian Basin to between US$4.5 billion and US$5 billion in 2025, a drop of as much as 10 per cent, the company said on Thursday (Dec 5). Globally, the oil explorer expects to spend about US$17 billion compared to US$19 billion this year in the first budget cut since 2021.
“Production growth is reduced in favour of free cash flow,” Chevron said.
The Permian region of West Texas and New Mexico has been one of the world’s fastest-growing sources of oil over the past decade and now pumps more than six million barrels a day, putting it ahead of Iraq, the No 2 Opec producer. Independent drillers drove the initial shale revolution but supermajors such as Chevron eventually glommed on to the basin’s potential.
The slowdown will be welcome news for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies as they struggle to contain a glut of crude from the US and elsewhere that has pushed oil prices down 18 per cent since the end of April. It’s also a reality check for Trump who has promised to unleash American oil production as part of his “Drill, Baby, Drill,” energy policy that he pledged will cut energy prices in half.
West Texas Intermediate fell 0.4 per cent to US$68.30 in New York on Thursday, bringing the 12-month loss to almost 5.6 per cent. US shale is profitable at such prices but absent more robust demand growth most executives prefer to return cash to shareholders and grow through acquisitions rather than spend money ramping up output.
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Chevron still plans to increase production from the Permian next year, but growth will significantly decelerate from the 15 per cent annual increase since 2021 as the oil driller nears its million barrels-a-day target.
Chief executive officer Mike Wirth last month indicated production from the basin will stop growing and plateau in the late 2020s to “really open up the free cash flow”. The company’s overall US production is likely to increase until then in part due to projects in the Gulf of Mexico over the next few years.
Analysts and traders surveyed by Bloomberg last month saw the US adding just 251,000 barrels of daily output from the end of this year through 2025, which would be the slowest pace since the pandemic-driven drop in 2020. ExxonMobil last week forecast a deceleration in US output over the coming years as companies focus on profits over production. ExxonMobil plans to announce its 2025 budget on Dec 11.
Chevron expects to spend less than US$1 billion on the Tengiz oil field next year as the Kazakhstan expansion project nears completion. The project will increase Chevron’s free cash flow and is a key support to its US$17.5 billion-a-year share buyback programme despite a series of delays and cost overruns. The US$45 billion development is 50 per cent owned by Chevron, while ExxonMobil and state-owned KazMunayGas hold 25 per cent and a 20 per cent stakes, respectively. BLOOMBERG