My Argument, Part IV
Everyone can have deliverability growth with inexhaustible, supportive investors. The industry has proven that 1,000 times in the last four decades. Now with shale, producers have to have deliverability growth that's profitable. And do that without inexhaustible, supportive shareholders, but to be beholden to them for past promises. They’re still around and they have crystal clear memories embedded in the paper documents and prospectuses producers published. This transition from wholly dependant on investors to being a viable going concern is what all producers must now undertake. And just as the DNA of a mouse isn’t fundamentally different from that of a horse, to make a mouse run like a horse is a difficult task. Something I look forward to watching in these next few years.
Production allocation across the industry is a necessity today as it has been for the past few years of shales existence. But who produces what? Should the government tell who has the privilege of producing? Maybe we should just consolidate the producers and create a monopoly producer? Why not just ensure that any production meets the basic criteria that it only occurs if it’s profitable. If production is profitable, then it produces, otherwise it doesn’t. This is the methodology that is inherent in the price maker strategy of the decentralized production model of the Preliminary Specification. Instilling this production discipline in the industry is the production allocation methodology that People, Ideas & Objects believes is the appropriate one for a market based economy. It would seem that People, Ideas & Objects are wholly inconsistent in this regard with the rest of the oil and gas industry. Theirs is a comfortable, unchallenged business model currently in operation that has worked well for the bureaucrats, but no one else.
What is the cost of this downturn? In Calgary ⅓ of all office buildings are empty. Representative of the number of people who no longer commute to, or work. The service industry has taken its traditionally much harder hit than the oil and gas industry itself. Royalty holders are suffering. Government tax revenues are down from corporate tax, payroll tax, and income taxes. The investors, bankers and if I could solicit sympathy for the junk bond investors, all of these people are losing money, unnecessarily so, as the Preliminary Specification has addressed this issue for long enough to have resolved it. The insistence of the producers to muddle along, do nothing, and accept the devastation that society is suffering today, is business as usual.
If we accepted People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification and the elements contained within that software definition. Assume that commodity prices resumed their record highs. The damage that is being done to the industry would be stopped. The future would be stable and people could plan and evaluate their investments and careers on the basis of a reliable and appropriately managed industry. Society would have a reliable source of energy that is proven. Those firms in the industry would be profitable and healthy. They would pay royalty holders and they would of course pay taxes. The service industry would see that they have a reliable source of work that will be done over a consistent period without the boom and busts that have so devastated their firms. Profitable oil and gas operations provide society with significant value.
One of the reasons that producers don’t do this today is they don’t know what's profitable. Their accounting is inaccurate from the point of view of determining which property is profitable and which is not. The overheads within the firm are all consumed by the firm themselves and are allocated on a basis between operations and capital expenditures. Therefore gross overheads for the year are allocated 60% to capital and 40% to operations. Or whatever the numbers maybe. None of the actual overhead costs are allocated to any of the properties. Overhead in today’s market can range from 10 to 40% of the properties revenue. Natural gas is much more difficult to administer than oil. Operated vs non-operated have differences. Some properties are systematically problematic. Others aren’t. All of these costs are dumped into the two accounts, one on the balance sheet the other on the income statement. The properties never see how much a production accountant or any other overhead item costs. And as a result the firms never know what is or isn’t profitable. And there isn’t a soul in the industry, or the planet, that can tell you the real cost of overhead of any property.
It is lazy thinking by the producers that we will “muddle through” and “it's the way of the markets” or “market rebalancing.” They are correct that these commodities are markets and they’re sending information in the form of price. That price information says that you can’t produce profitably at these prices and therefore you shouldn’t produce. But that is too much for them to consider. It is their minds that hold us back from reaching our potential and we continue on in an accounting nightmare that is false and foolish. Where fudge is the name of the game. In a devastated industry that points the finger at others as to who’s fault it is. Doing something themselves. Acting in their own best interests is something that has not been done for four decades and as long as there are investors around it will continue to be the case. Or will it?
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.