News Release
Reserves Reporting — What's it all about?
IHS Energy Considers the Issues Surrounding Reserves Reporting
and looks at Relevant Regulatory Controls
Shell’s recent announcement that 20% of its
reserves were no longer ‘proved’ prompted much debate
over the reporting of such figures. But the issue has also led many
observers and business analysts to ask about the current system
of reserves reporting.
Kenneth Chew, Vice President - Industry Performance
and Strategy, IHS Energy, considers the issues surrounding reserves
reporting and looks at relevant regulatory controls. IHS Energy
enables oil and gas companies worldwide to create and maintain best-in-class
decision-making processes by providing and integrating essential
E&P information, intuitive software and consulting services.
Why do companies report reserves anyway? The purpose
of reserves reporting is undoubtedly commendable and there are good
fiscal and regulatory reasons for doing so. It also allows investors
and the public at large to put a value on the assets of an E&P
company and to make comparative analysis between companies.
However, this only works if all companies report
reserves to the same standards and this is where industry regulators
enter the picture. Financial accounting rules (and thereby reserves
reporting) vary from country to country.
The most commonly used accounting standard, which
is a requirement for all companies quoted on the New York Stock
Exchange, is that of the US Financial Accounting Standards Board
(FASB). Issued in November 1982, FAS 69 (Disclosures about Oil and
Gas Producing Activities) provides the reporting and accounting
rules and reporting formats for (1) proved oil and gas reserve quantities
(2) capitalized costs relating to oil and gas producing activities
(3) costs incurred for property acquisition, exploration and development
activities (4) results of operations for oil and gas producing activities
(5) a standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows relating
to proved oil and gas reserve quantities.
The fifth item is one of the most contentious because
it requires future cash inflows to be calculated by applying year-end
oil and gas prices (no matter how atypical they may be) to year-end
reserves, and bases future costs on year-end costs and the assumed
continuation of existing economic conditions. As Shell said in its
statement “The information so calculated does not provide
a reliable measure of future cash flows from proved reserves…”
Although the FASB makes the rules, the resultant
company reports are filed with the United States Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC). Furthermore it is the SEC that has defined
what is actually meant by the various terms incorporated into FAS
69, such as “oil and gas producing activities”, “exploration
costs” and, perhaps most importantly, “proved reserves”.
Regulation S-X, Rule 4-10, where these definitions appear, was first
published in 1978 and, although slight modifications have been made
to it since that time, it remains essentially unchanged.
This has created numerous problems for companies
because technology has not stood still in the meantime. As an example,
advances in seismic such 3-D, 4-C and direct hydrocarbon detection,
the use of huge computing power to make reservoir simulations, and
probabilistic calculation methods all allow far greater precision
in establishing in-place and recoverable hydrocarbon volumes than
was possible a quarter of a century ago.
As a result of such technological advances, SEC engineers
have been obliged on a number of occasions (e.g. June 2000; March
2001) to issue interpretations and guidance documents to assist
companies in compiling their regulatory filings. It should be noted
that such documents are generally accompanied by a header disclaiming
responsibility on the part of the SEC for the views of its staff.
The SEC engineers themselves state that “it is difficult,
if not impossible, to write reserve definitions that easily cover
all possible situations.”
Nevertheless, the thrust of the SEC proved reserves
definition remains that companies may “disclose only proved
reserves that a company has demonstrated by actual production or
conclusive formation tests to be economically and legally producible
under existing economic and operating conditions.”
The interpretation of “conclusive formation
tests” has become an issue in deepwater Gulf of Mexico, where
companies are reluctant to conduct drill-stem and production tests
for cost and environmental permitting reasons, preferring to rely
on log analysis, wireline formation tests and cores.
Not only technology has changed in the past 25 years.
Internationally, the widespread use of the production-sharing contract
has also had an impact on what a company can report as “owned”
proved reserves.
Given the fundamental uncertainty that exists about
all reserves estimates (they are just estimates) and the varying
possible interpretations that can be placed upon terms such as “reasonable
certainty” and “conclusive”, it should not be
thought surprising that there can be a considerable variety of opinion
on what constitutes “proved reserves”.
Broadly, the SEC encourages a conservative approach,
especially in the absence of supporting data. It also takes a conservative
approach regarding frontier area developments, requiring some sort
of evidence that the reserves will be developed, either in the form
of signed sales contracts or a commitment to develop the necessary
production and transportation infrastructure. It is probably on
these grounds that Shell had to recategorise the resources associated
with the super-giant Gorgon gas-condensate field on Australia’s
northwest shelf.
The SEC has not specified a confidence level for
the certainty of proved reserves. The Society of Petroleum Engineers
(SPE), on the other hand, has specified a 90% confidence level for
proved reserves. It is interesting to note that the Russian oil
company Yukos reported SEC proved liquid reserves of 10.45 billion
barrels at end-2002 and SPE proved liquid reserves of 13.73 billion
barrels.
In other words, the SEC reserves definition was even
more conservative than the SPE’s 90% confidence level in this
instance.
So how useful are SEC proved reserves data?
As mentioned above, the SEC reserves definitions and guidelines
have the merit of allowing company evaluations and inter-company
comparisons of what otherwise would be a fairly subjective item,
on the basis of reasonably standardized criteria.
While this may be the best solution as far as the protection of
the public and the average investor is concerned, the need for standardization
and the inbuilt conservatism result in a significant loss of information
that could be of significant value to an informed and experienced
analyst.
Some of the things that the SEC does not allow to be reported
in filings are probable and possible reserves. Oil recoverable from
oil-sand operations must also be excluded from disclosures about
oil and gas producing activities (the SEC considers it as mining)
although most companies describe oil-sand reserves separately.
The absence of data on probable reserves is a serious loss of
valuable information. Canada’s NI 51-101 – Standards
of Disclosure for Oil and Gas Activities – requires a statement
of probable reserves and permits a statement of possible reserves.
The Shell situation highlights this problem. While Shell’s
SEC proved reserves have diminished by 20%, the chances are that
Shells’ resource base – the total inventory of Shell’s
discovered hydrocarbon resources that are likely to be developed
at some future time – has changed very little if at all. The
recategorised reserves have simply been shifted from one pocket
to another and will probably be shifted back again at some time
in the not-too-distant future.
From an investor’s point of view, it is valuable to know
what is a company’s assessment of its total resources. ExxonMobil
gets round this difficulty by reporting its resource base and annual
resource base additions in a “Financial and Operating Review”
that does not have to be filed with the SEC. The 2002 Review makes
for interesting reading.
While ExxonMobil’s SEC proved reserves at end-2002 stood
at about 21.1 billion barrels of oil equivalent, the company’s
discovered resource base was some 72 billion barrels of oil equivalent
i.e. only 29% of resources were reported as proved.
Another significant feature is that ExxonMobil’s 2.2 billion
barrels of new-field resource additions and acquisitions tells one
what the company actually accomplished in 2002. By contrast, the
1.2 billion barrels of discoveries and extensions reported in “proved
reserve” additions give no indication of how ExxonMobil performed
as an explorer in 2002. It is quite possible for not a single barrel
reported to the SEC as discovery and extension additions in 2002
to have been drilled in 2002. They may simply reflect earlier discoveries
that now conform sufficiently to SEC proved reserves criteria to
allow them to be booked.
A final example from Shell highlights this situation. In September
2001 the UK Department of Trade and Industry authorised the development
of the Penguin group of fields in the northern North Sea. Shell’s
share of the proved resources of this development duly appeared
as discoveries/extensions in its SEC filing in 2002. The first Penguin
discovery well was completed in November 1974! But because the fields
were not viable until advances in development technology took place
(including a 65-km sub-sea tie-back), they first appeared as “discoveries”
almost 30 years after the initial discovery was made.
So, in summary, while the SEC’s conservative definition
of proved reserves may have the effect of protecting the investor,
they also have the effect of depriving analysts and investors of
much valuable information.
IHS Energy (
www.ihsenergy.com
) enables oil and gas companies worldwide to create and maintain
best-in-class decision-making processes by providing and integrating
essential E&P information, intuitive software and consulting
services. IHS Energy is a privately held, wholly owned subsidiary
of IHS Group.