21st Century Marketplace Vision - Issues - Part II
The Issues
21st Century Markets
Throughout the 2026 series of People, Ideas & Objects papers, we advance the view that the oil & gas industry will become increasingly dependent on markets as its primary organizing mechanism. Producer firms will gradually retreat from many of their traditional functions. The Internet enables hyper-specialization, deeper division of labor, and the shared use of critical Information Technology resources and supporting infrastructure. These forces weaken the competitive position of hierarchical organizations. Markets outperform hierarchies not only in cost efficiency, but also in speed, capacity, and capability.
Within this environment, the depth of knowledge inside any single organization must concentrate on its genuine competitive advantages. In oil & gas, these advantages lie in engineering and geological expertise. In a hyper-specialized ecosystem, producers will obtain most operational capacity from the market while focusing their internal resources on high-level scientific and technical work. This concentration will define the basis of competition among producer firms.
Capabilities that are generic across the industry should not be replicated internally by every firm. For example, building proprietary cybersecurity infrastructure for cryptocurrency and stablecoin transactions within each producer organization would be inefficient, duplicative, and consume capital resources. Markets will supply these services more effectively when required.
Participation in a market-based economy requires adherence to certain structural attributes. Objective, standardized, timely and accurate centralized approaches to oil & gas accounting and administration represent a significant efficiency gain. Synallagi, proposed by our user community and service providers, establishes such a framework. Beyond cost savings, it provides a collective understanding of what the industry is—and what it is not.
Our architectural direction implies a structural shift: the ERP platform ceases to function primarily as an internal enterprise control system and instead operates as a market coordination engine. In this configuration, the ERP becomes the infrastructure through which hyper specialized participants—human and / or AI—execute transactions or Synallagi’s in a coordinated, policy-governed manner.
Market coordination is then wrapped in our Marketplace Interface for the three markets of Synallagi. The Petroleum Lease, Resource and Financial Marketplace modules. Providing the oil & gas, service industry and other market participants with the means to engage in commerce within the industry on a stable-coin, crypto enabled, Autonomous Asynchronous Transaction Orchestrated environment.
Within Synallagi, seven organizational constructs have been identified that support both producers and the broader industry:
the Joint Operating Committee
Markets
Intellectual Property
Information Technology
Innovation
Professor Paul Romer’s theory of Endogenous Technical Change (sharing)
Hyper-specialization and the division of labor
Markets function as a defined and supported organizational construct that also imposes constraints on operations. They significantly influence the framework (what, how, where, when, and why) for conducting business.
Additionally, Trust is currently being evaluated as a potential eighth foundational institutional construct.
Whose Problem is This?
Several questions naturally arise:
Are conditions in the industry today accurately represented?
Will those conditions persist in the future?
How secure is long-term energy independence in North America?
Will producer officers and directors intervene to address structural deficiencies?
How much of the calculated $5 trillion in natural gas losses can be mitigated going forward?
Is there sustainable profitability in oil & gas?
Can the industry compete effectively in dynamic North American capital markets?
If not, why not?
Resistance is Futile
Downsides of Decentralization
In the choice between consolidation (hierarchical firms) and decentralized, market-dependent structures, the latter carries several inherent disadvantages rooted in transaction cost economics. Professor Ronald Coase showed that firms exist precisely because organizing activity through markets incurs real costs—searching for partners, negotiating and writing contracts, monitoring performance, and enforcing agreements—that are often higher than issuing internal directives. Even when technologies lower some of these frictions, the trade-offs remain material.
The principal downsides relevant to our situation are provided by Grok 4.2:
Elevated transaction costs and administrative friction — Arm’s-length market dealings require ongoing due diligence, legal safeguards, and dispute resolution that internal hierarchies avoid through simple authority.
Coordination and integration difficulties — Complex, interdependent activities (shared infrastructure, large-scale capital projects, or rapid industry-wide responses) are harder to orchestrate when participants remain independent.
Inconsistency and fragmentation — Standards for safety, environmental compliance, data reporting, and operational quality can diverge across autonomous entities, increasing regulatory burden and investor confusion.
Greater exposure to volatility — As we have discussed, “markets are messy.” Smaller, market-dependent organizations have fewer internal buffers against price swings, capital-market shifts, or boom-bust cycles.
Risk of opportunism and hold-up — Independent actors may exploit asset-specific investments or incomplete contracts to their own advantage, a classic problem identified by Oliver Williamson.
Slower knowledge transfer and public-goods underinvestment — Tacit know-how spreads less efficiently across organizational boundaries, and collective investments in R&D, training, or industry standards suffer from free-rider problems.
These disadvantages are substantially offset by the structural realities of the North American oil & gas industry. Operations span a vast continental domain, with each region displaying unique geological and technical characteristics in addition to the advanced expertise required for field operations. Producers retain full operational control through the Joint Operating Committee. Decentralization of the service sector is therefore not a radical departure but the continuation of a model that has existed throughout the industry’s history.
Moreover, administrative and accounting functions do not constitute competitive advantages for producers. Shifting these responsibilities to the market instead delivers clear benefits: material cost reduction and the elimination of bureaucratic overhead that has long acted as a drag on performance.
That said, many of these downsides are not fixed. Advanced accounting systems, real-time performance visibility, blockchain-enabled contracting, artificial intelligence, and a new class of specialized service providers can dramatically reduce transaction costs and coordination frictions. This is exactly the framework Synallagi is designed to deliver—turning what has traditionally been a decisive argument for consolidation into a competitive advantage for decentralized, market-driven organizations.
