A. Introductions
The oil industry has had its share of early adopters of technologies. Companies adopted linear-programming models for refinery economics and planning, advance process control for plant operations, 3D seismic studies in upstream and so on, to drive efficiency of decision-making and operations across the petroleum value chain. Technology innovation underwent a major overhaul and changed the way the oil industry operated.
Cut to 2020, and technology is at its peak, with disruption and explosion in the development of digital technologies. It has started altering the way the oil and gas industry functions. Technology is playing a key role in shaping the future of the oil and gas industry; examples include applied artificial intelligence, big data, intelligent man-machine interfaces, reduced human interferences, enhanced user experiences, prescriptive analytics, virtual realities, and the adoption of drones.
While the COVID-19 pandemic suppressed mobility and industrial activities, and forced lifestyle corrections in society, acute demand disruptions coincided with the steep fall of oil prices early in 2020. This has turned out to be the worst downturn to hit the world economy. The oil and gas industry wasn’t immune to its effects either. Cost cutting, holds or reductions in capital investment, project postponements or cancellations set in with over 25% of the 2020 planned capex investment reduced from over 200 billion (estimated from the GlobalData graph below).
The entire global supply chain has received a jolt, and it does not appear as if a ‘factory reset’ will be feasible when the COVID fades away. Rather, the supply chain will need to reinvent itself to respond to the new paradigm emerging, adapt to newer ways of balancing and co-existing with newer scenarios, for a long time to come.
This article highlights the need for a healthy debate on how oil and gas planning processes and supply chain operations need to respond, in the prevailing situation.
B. Postulates for the Implications:
With falling output triggered by lower prices (refer fig below), and vanishing cash from operations impacting the ability to cover interest and spend on operating expenses, the business models of big oil and gas companies are in need of disruption. When there is tremendous wealth, inefficiencies can hide behind the same. Now is time to bring in efficiencies and work to optimize the entire value chain. In addition, uncertainties have crept in. Over 80% of the COVID-19 infections are in the top 22 oil-consuming nations that contribute approximately 80% to the global gross domestic product. Several factors such as a shrinking economy, reduced fuel consumption, potential fuel slate changes, and a circular economy, will have an acute impact on the oil and gas planning processes and supply chain. The industry will be looking to “blue sky thinking” to imagine how the future will evolve in view of new fundamentals, a low-touch economy, social distancing, work-from-home practices, supply disruptions, and an impact on currencies and rising inflation leading to structural cracks in the economy. The oil price collapse is causing new break-even points to be set; where production is not economically feasible, companies are compelled to cut production, and drop major capital projects, with over 25% of the capital cost budget reduced for 2020. Companies are focusing on the levers that drive efficiency and adopt technology, review the workforce hierarchy and structure for better agility, inclusiveness of young workforce, decision-making processes and tools to squeeze the last drops.
Possible implications and reactions – The oil and gas sector is undergoing rapid transformation, and some of these changes will be permanent and structural:
C. Beyond Today…
Given that the oil and gas supply chain is at the heart of the global business value chain, major disruption will be needed to compel innovative ways of reducing supply chain cost and improving efficiency. The ideas below are offered for debate, as ways to release trapped value and increase profitability across the value chain. The immediate focus is on enduring the current situation to minimize damages and losses. However, transformational steps are required in the medium term to ride a growth path in the coming days. The distinction between leaders and laggards will be very clear: significant re-imagination followed by bold moves will be required of leaders and will set them apart.
The transitions expected in the following areas of supply chain and planning operations:
End-to-end optimization, squeezing more out of investment and supply-chain operations, real-time risk analysis, increased global competition leading to planners looking for margin improvement areas, supply chain and planning process to become more complex, real-time scenario planning becomes mandatory, real-time demand assessment, competitive intelligence, global/regional logistics simulation.
Some key areas that need serious consideration under the current situation are listed below:
This article is jointly authored by Dharmendra Kumar Sah, Chandrasekhar Chebiyyam, and Natarajan Viswanathan.
Dharmendra Kumar Sah
Partner, Wipro
Dharmendra has over 23 years of experience in the Oil and Gas Industry, including ~16 years with Reliance Petroleum Business & AspenTech, where he was responsible for APAC business consulting. With extensive experience in Operations & Business Consulting in Process Plant Operations, Supply Chain Planning and Optimization, Supply and Trading, Oil Movement, and Port Operations, he drives solutions and services across the Oil & Gas value chain including LNG. Dharmendra has been a panel author of the iMOM guidebook by MESA International and has published articles in Petroleum Review, UK, on Supply Chain Management. He can be reached at dharmendra.sah@wipro.com.
Chandrasekhar Chebiyyam
Consulting Partner, Wipro
Chandra Chebiyyam is a Consulting Partner, Energy D/S COE at Wipro Technologies. He has 30 years of experience in the O&G industry. He spent the first half of his distinguished career with the Oil & Natural Gas Corporation, a National Oil Company in India, in various capacities covering production and refinery operations. For the past 15 years, he has dealt with IT within the Oil, Gas & LNG space, covering the entire gamut of Functional Design & Consulting, Implementations, Client engagement, Solution building, and Solution architecture. He is an SAP Certified Application Associate - Supply Chain Planning and Execution with SAP for Oil & Gas and a certified Quantityware – BCP Consultant.
Natarajan Viswanathan
Principal Consultant, Energy - Downstream
Natarajan has over 14 years of experience. He is a chemical engineer with manufacturing experience providing consulting, digital solutions and services, and solution design to oil & gas clients.