These Are Not the Earnings We're Looking For, Part XVII
And the broader scale of our economies are dependent on a healthy and prosperous oil and gas industry as the primary industry that drives much of the activity that the industry itself depends upon. With over ten years of devastation in the natural gas marketplace. And more than three years in oil. We can measure the impact and number of losses outside of oil and gas that have been adversely affected by this downturn. The service industry has had it much worse. The people who have dedicated their careers to the producers are finding that their efforts are not as valuable as they thought they were when they line up in the unemployment lines with the construction laborers with only their high school education. In Alberta, partly due to mismanagement, the government has incurred a debt of $43 billion. Oil and gas royalties are a big part of their budget which has caused the deficit to form and expand. This in the land where savings in excess of $30 billion had been the norm. I can only assume that the situation is similar with other royalty regimes. And what about the cities and towns where all of these companies and people live and work. They’ve also felt the downturn with many businesses closing and sending the mood across the town’s and cities down too. Alberta is possibly unique in that we are a one industry province and Dallas, Houston and Oklahoma may not be as dependent on one industry to carry the freight for all concerned.
The question that people should be asking is why is this happening? Why is it necessary that investors pay for the capital costs of oil and gas on behalf of the energy consumers? If the consumers are generating real value from the consumption of their hydrocarbons, and the real cost of energy is incidental to its replacement, hire 5,000 people for an hour as a replacement to a barrel of oil to discover the difference. Why don’t they pay full value for that. And full value as we’ve calculated here at People, Ideas & Objects is $137 / barrel for 2017. This wouldn’t be a doubling of the consumers energy costs as most of their costs are taxes that are fixed in nature. Therefore doubling the cost of the feedstock would not have the effect of doubling the consumers energy price. Even if it did can we continue to function as an industry on the basis of finding new and naive investors that will volunteer their capital to subsidize energy consumers? The other alternative is we watch the industry atrophy to the point that it is now, and as we’ve noticed in the first quarter of 2018, begin to see it fall off the cliff where the operational and political declines are as dramatic and as devastating to all those concerned above, but also the consumer who can’t source their energy securely and reliably. Do we have to go to that level of destruction in order to prove the point that this situation is not working?
We can also assume that this has lost its lustre for our friends the bureaucrats. Instead of dining for hours for lunch their having to spend their time finding truck drivers to haul water in the Permian, which isn’t what they signed on for. The logistics of putting the people that are needed into place have now become complicated by the fact that the supplier can’t work for you because you haven’t paid him in 18 months and their starving. Or you haven’t paid them for 18 months and they refuse to work. Complicated by the fact that the cash resources that were used to overcome these kinds of troubles and get the job done is now empty and lining up everyone and everything is near impossible. I’m certain, it’s not that bad in industry today, but do we have to go there before anything changes? The only people that are financially satisfied in the industry are the bureaucrats who are running the show. Although they were challenged here and there at their annual meetings, those have always been useless venues to orchestrate change. And the bureaucrats are now entrenched for another year.
Bureaucrats will never care about these issues. As long as their making out like bandits that’s their only concern. As soon as things become untenable though, as they are now. They’ll hightail it to greener pastures in other industries or retirement as the wheels fall off. It’s up to us to provide the industry with an alternative. That is People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification. That is the only way we’ll proceed as a healthy and prosperous industry.
The Preliminary Specification, our user community and service providers provide for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations. Setting the foundation for profitable North America’s energy independence. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in our future Initial Coin Offering (ICO) that will fund these user defined software developments. It is through the process of issuing our ICO that we are leading the way in which creative destruction can be implemented within the oil and gas industry. 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.