UK maintenance spending to reach lowest on record, Norway’s to hit 18-year low

May 11, 2020
Western Europe’s maintenance, modification and operations market will likely take a major hit in 2020, according to Rystad Energy, thanks to severe spending cuts and COVID-19 transportation restrictions.

Offshore staff

OSLO, Norway – Western Europe’s maintenance, modification and operations (MMO) market will likely take a major hit in 2020, according to Rystad Energy, thanks to severe spending cuts and COVID-19 transportation restrictions.

Spending in Norway is expected to fall to $3.4 billion this year – an 18-year low – while UK spending is on track to fall to $2.9 billion, the lowest level seen since at least 1990.

This year the consultant expects brownfield-related MMO support to drop by 30% in Norway and 35% in the UK. Oil and gas prices are expected to improve from the second half of the year, and with that, brownfield budgets are set to slightly improve in 2021. However, if companies need to continue with minimum manning and operations for a prolonged period, spending in the region is likely to be even lower for 2020 as a whole.

Rystad Energy’s Lein Mann Hansen, an analyst within Energy Service Research, said: “We expect a drastic decline in MMO manhours ahead as operators reduce activity and handle a greater share of such jobs with their own staff, as seen in the previous downturn. The swift oil price decline is coupled with coronavirus regulations and operators are forced to adjust.”

This will boost the potential for insourcing maintenance and operations jobs and will result in significant cuts in operator expenditures. However, even though oil prices and weak market activity in the medium term will send operators into survival mode, they cannot expect significant cost cuts within the supply chain as there are not many additional productivity improvements to be found, the consultant claimed.

Multiple fields that were expected to come online in Norway and the UK this year have recently been delayed to 2021, reducing brownfield services revenues for service providers. In Norway, the fields impacted by delays are Martin Linge, the Njord Future redevelopment, Hyme, Bauge, Yme and Tor. Restrictions to curb the spread of COVID-19 played an important role for some of these delays.

Norway joins other oil producing countries in cutting production in the second half of the year, and some of Norway’s contribution to this decrease will come by delaying the start-up of some new fields, including Yme.

In the UK there has been no direct communication about potential start-up delays at new field developments, but the consultant says BP’s Vorlich and Shell’s Fram projects may be delayed to 2021.

“As contracts come up for renewal, MMO suppliers are, yet again, in a position of weaker bargaining power. All providers will do everything they can to win these contracts and secure activity and visibility in uncertain times. One thing is clear – suppliers will now face tougher competition, and the operators hold better cards,” Mann Hansen concluded.

05/11/2020