Ukraine crisis challenges oil industry caution at high prices

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – FEBRUARY 24: The New York Stock Exchange is seen on February 24, 2022 in New York City. U.S. stocks opened this morning dropping after Russia began its attack on Ukraine. The Dow Jones opened 800 points down while the S&P 500 fell 2 percent and is down 14 percent from its record high set in January. Oil prices also dropped more than 5 percent. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

by John BIERS
Agence France-Presse

NEW YORK, United States (AFP) – As commodity prices soar, the Ukraine crisis has prompted demands from petroleum lobbies for a reboot of US energy policy to promote domestic oil and gas production.

But recent history suggests Wall Street may be an even bigger barrier than Washington to increased exploration and production.

As oil prices have risen over the last year — including Thursday’s brief surge above $100 a barrel — companies ranging from giants like Chevron to mid-sized players such as Devon Energy have chosen to only lift capital investment modestly.

That approach has reflected the clear preference within the investment community for producers to steer extra cash to debt reduction and shareholder givebacks, while also ramping up low-carbon investment initiatives.

Companies have also been cautious in light of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and uncertainty over the recovery in energy demand.

Peter McNally, analyst at Third Bridge, predicted companies would not rush to shift strategies over the latest spike in commodity prices.

MILL VALLEY, CALIFORNIA – FEBRUARY 23: Gas prices over $5.00 a gallon are displayed at Valero and Chevron gas stations on February 23, 2022 in Mill Valley, California. The Ukraine-Russia conflict could push gas prices to record highs in California and across the nation. According to AAA, the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline in California is $4.742 a gallon, close to $1.20 more than the national average. (Photo by JUSTIN SULLIVAN / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

“Everyone has been telling these companies not to drill so much, whether it’s the shareholders, (socially minded) investors or President (Joe) Biden,” he said.

“The industry has twice been at price points like this over the last year and it hasn’t ended well.”

Dan Pickering of Houston-based Pickering Energy Partners thinks the political and investor tone towards energy could become “less adversarial and more supportive” in light of Ukraine.

“Climate goals won’t go away, but those long-term initiatives will wind up more balanced against short-term necessities,” he said.

Energy crisis ‘likely’

A flare stack burns excess emissions at the Algiers refinery complex in the Algerian capital’s southeastern suburb of Baraki, on February 24, 2022. – Russia’s assault on Ukraine is reverberating in the energy-rich Gulf, where top oil and gas producers face economic and political dilemmas in easing sky-high prices and alleviating shortages in Europe. As oil prices broke past $100 per barrel and risks of supply disruptions grew, eyes in Europe were increasingly focusing on oil kingpin Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, one of the biggest natural gas exporters. (Photo by RYAD KRAMDI / AFP)

As the world’s third biggest producer of oil and the source of as much as 40 percent of Europe’s natural gas, Russia’s centrality to the global economy as an energy producer has been a key factor in the West’s response to the invasion of Ukraine.

On Thursday, the White House announced a barrage of new penalties on Russia, including sanctions on four major Russian banks and export controls to impede Russia’s high-tech industry.

The measures, though, stopped short of moving directly to impede Russia’s energy production.

But Thursday’s rise in oil and natural gas prices from already elevated levels pointed to the unease surrounding Russia’s output, a dynamic that also boosted shares of Cheniere Energy, a producer of liquefied natural gas that could be used to supplement European stockpiles.

(FILES) This file photo taken on September 7, 2020 shows a road sign directing traffic towards the Nord Stream 2 gas line landfall facility entrance in Lubmin, north eastern Germany. – German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Februrary 22, 2022 that he was suspending the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project with Russia in response to Moscow’s recognition of two breakaway regions in Ukraine. (Photo by Odd ANDERSEN / AFP)

The situation means a “global energy crisis is likely to unfold,” said a note from Rystad Energy CEO Jarand Rystad.

“Full-scale military conflict between Russia and the West is unlikely, but a deep economic war is almost inevitable,” Rystad said, adding that Russia could weaponize its energy exports.

The American Petroleum Institute said Thursday that Biden should shift course due to Ukraine, calling on the president to allow more developments on federal land and in offshore areas and to clear red tape from the permitting process.

“As crisis looms in Ukraine, US energy leadership is more important than ever,” the lobbying group said on Twitter.

Whither green energy?

Congressional Republicans have also cited Ukraine as a component of their opposition to Biden’s energy and environmental agenda, which has included the cancelation of the Keystone Pipeline and restrictions on federal energy development.

CUSHING, OK – MARCH 22: U.S. President Barack Obama arrives at the southern site of the Keystone XL pipeline on March 22, 2012 in Cushing, Oklahoma. Obama is pressing federal agencies to expedite the section of the Keystone XL pipeline between Oklahoma and the Gulf Coast. (Photo by TOM PENNINGTON / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / Getty Images via AFP)

Senator Bill Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican, called for the United States to “flood” the world with cheap energy in order to “destroy” Russia’s energy-financed “war machine.”

But leading US producers, while in broad favor of government policies to allow drilling access, have until now been reticent to emphasize more drilling as their prime focus.

Devon Energy last week released a 2022 capital budget range in line with last year, even as its earnings surged. The company authorized a huge dividend hike and touted its “limited” reinvestment of free cash.

Chevron Chief Executive Mike Wirth also vowed to “stay disciplined on capital,” adding that the company’s long-term pricing outlook “hasn’t changed a lot” and sticking with the company’s vows to expand low-carbon programs to address climate change.

Jim Krane, an energy analyst at Rice University’s Baker Institute, said higher energy prices typically encourage the development of alternatives to fossil fuels.

While the Ukraine crisis exacerbates short-term worries about energy security, it does not alter the need to transition to cleaner sources, he said.

“The world needs to get off fossil fuels and develop alternatives,” he said, adding that the Ukraine crisis “might slow down the process in some places and speed it up in others.”

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