Who Want's Money!
The Permission Rights were the first element of our parsing of the revenues of the oil and gas industry into more appropriate hands. We believe the bureaucrats that are running the producers for their own benefit, and no one else’s, would continue for many decades until someone takes the keys away from them. Therefore taking the keys away is the process that we’re now undertaking. What I want to discuss next is the diversion of the funds of the industry to support the service providers. Our service providers are headed up by the individuals that make up our user community. The ones who have complete control over the software and methods in which the industry will be operated from an administrative, accounting and business model point of view. User community participants will own and operate a service provider as their key source of revenue and value generation. The service provider will manage a single process on behalf of the entire industry and bill each individual Joint Operating Committee a fee for their service. This therefore replaces the majority of the administrative and accounting that is conducted in the oil and gas industry today. The producer firm is stripped down to focus on its key competitive advantages of its earth science and engineering capabilities, its land and asset base. Building accounting and administrative capabilities that are similar to all the other oil and gas producers, yet can not be shared or shareable is an unsustainable cost that is adversely affecting the producers and industries profitability. The service providers competitive advantages over the existing methodology are significant and include specialization and the division of labor, quality, automation, innovation, leadership, integration, 5G and AI. To name only the highlights. It will be based on these competitive advantages that the services provided by these organizations will enhance the quality of service substantially for the oil and gas industry, but also be more cost effective due to the reduction of the redundancy of each producer having to build the same capabilities, and specialization and the division of labor being the only known method of economic expansion. Or in other words they will be able to do more with less.
How much does the oil and gas industry incur in terms of their administrative and accounting costs. I haven’t a clue and I don’t think anyone in the world knows. I would also seriously doubt anyone who would claim to have a number that represents these costs. I believe the only thing we can do is look at the cities of Dallas, Houston, Oklahoma City, Calgary and others to marvel at the layers of people that occupy all those buildings and wonder what the costs would be. That I think is the most accurate. With producers capitalizing any percentage of overhead that strikes their fancy the amounts are unknowable. Individual producers will certainly know the amount but they’re not sharing that information. Our sample of 23 producers reported G&A of $9.1 billion yet that is the net after capitalization. It also represents the total overheads, we’re only interested in administrative and accounting. Let's take an estimate for these purposes and say it’s $20 billion per year. Assuming a reasonably efficient service provider sub-industry we estimate that the 3,000 service providers would be generating $15 billion in billings as a replacement to that capability. Giving each of the service providers an average annual revenue of approximately $5 million. Which is consistent with what we assumed when we established the scope and scale of the user community. Now $5 billion in savings may not seem that significant to the bureaucrats in today’s oil and gas producers. And I would generally agree with them, they should look at the larger extrinsic value that we generate. What the service providers enable is a higher throughput of industry output. If there would be a doubling of production from this point, and including Canada’s natural gas ambitions that is close to reality, what would the cost of today’s configuration be in order to manage the throughput. I think that it is safe to say that with the service providers competitive advantages the costs incurred to double throughput may be a small increment of the amount that we’re estimating for the service providers here today.
Creating a second industry based administrative and accounting capability that is variable based on production to replace the producer based fixed administrative and accounting capability would be cost redundant. And that would be the point. The choice as to which system to use would fall to the most efficient system that provides the industry with the greatest profitability. If the property, based on a detailed accounting of all of the costs is profitable then it produces. If it’s not profitable, in the Preliminary Specification, it is shut-in until it can be reworked and returned to profitable production. Unprofitable production in our system attracts no costs as the Preliminary Specification has turned all of the producers costs to variable costs through the establishment of the service providers. If the property is profitable and therefore producing, a message from our task and transfer system will prompt the service providers to conduct their process on that properties data and issue an invoice to that property. If no production occurs no message is generated. A null operation, no profit but also no loss is incurred at the property. Therefore the most efficient method of management of the oil and gas industry would be determined by those that make those kind of decisions. The service providers are also the critical enabling technology / resource / organization / sub-industry that enables the value in our $25.7 to $45.7 trillion value proposition real. Building it at the same time as our software will be a critical, difficult and a necessary element of the changeover to the Preliminary Specification.
As I’ve indicated the service providers are owned and operated by our user community members. This way they have an understanding of the needs of the producers with the management of their process and will have the power and means to affect change in both the software and / or service in the future. The question in many people’s mind is where does the money come from to support the development of the service providers? The user community members are part-time and paid out of our budget for their efforts at the rate of $250 U.S. / hour. The service providers are subsequently licensed from the user community license and the allocation of which processes they will manage will be decided based on the contributions to the development of the Preliminary Specification of that user community participant. Recall we are using AI in order to make these determinations for us with the full involvement of the service providers in the development of that algorithm. Nonetheless we expect that these service based organizations can be developed over the period of our software development with little costs if properly managed. Therefore we are expecting that the establishment of the service providers will be undertaken as an investment by the user community participant.
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 American 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.