Statoil Squeezes Drillers by Suspending Two More Norway Rigs
Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) — Statoil ASA suspended two more rigs as Norway’s biggest oil company reins in spending, adding pressure to drillers’ rental rates in the North Sea.
Statoil won’t use the Transocean Spitsbergen and Songa Trym rigs from mid-November through at least the year-end because of overcapacity, it said today in a statement. Songa Offshore, owner of one of the rigs, fell as much as 12 percent in Oslo.
The halting of Transocean Inc. and Songa’s rigs follows the suspension of two units owned by China Oilfield Services Ltd. and Saipem SpA since July. Statoil is being sued by Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. after terminating a contract in June.
“Unfortunately we are now in a situation of overcapacity, high costs and lower profitability,” Jon Arnt Jacobsen, chief procurement officer, said in the statement. Statoil, which will have 13 rigs operating in Norway after the latest suspensions, hasn’t been able to find new assignments for the rigs, it said.
The state-controlled company, like Total SA and Royal Dutch Shell Plc, is battling rising costs and boosting shareholder returns by cutting planned investments and squeezing service companies and suppliers. Statoil, operating more than 70 percent of oil and gas output off Norway, may expand spending cuts for 2015 and 2016, Chief Executive Officer Eldar Saetre said last week.
Songa fell 8.4 percent to 1.97 kroner by 11 a.m. in Oslo.
“We read this as another negative for the North Sea drilling market,” Janne Kvernland, an analyst at Nordea Markets, said in an e-mailed note to clients. “This clearly indicates Statoil has more rigs than it actually needs in the near term, putting pressure on dayrates and utilization.”
Negative Action
Statoil’s action is negative, especially for drillers with rigs ending contracts in Norway next year, including Transocean, Seadrill Ltd.’s subsidiary North Atlantic Drilling Ltd., Fred Olsen Energy ASA and Odfjell Drilling ASA, Kvernland said.
Transocean Spitsbergen, suspended even after its “highly efficient” drilling in the Arctic Barents Sea, is under contract with Statoil until the start of the third quarter next year and planning a yard stay from Jan. 1, Statoil said.
Songa said earlier it would carry out maintenance work on Trym as it goes on a 75 percent suspension rate.
The Oslo stock exchange oil-service index, which includes Seadrill and Fred Olsen, has dropped almost 40 percent since a June high as crude prices have fallen to a four-year low.
To contact the reporter on this story: Mikael Holter in Oslo at mholter2@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Will Kennedy at wkennedy3@bloomberg.net Tony Barrett, Alex Devine