I Thought This Was Just an Investor Problem? Part V
What I find painfully obvious are the issues in oil and gas have evolved into a more dangerous and difficult period. To state there’s an overall level of unpreparedness is necessary to describe this. People, Ideas & Objects pursued these issues as persistently as we have due to the fact that businesses in the state that we felt the oil and gas industry was in and headed to, pass through three distinct phases of degradation. Each phase becomes more severe as we move through them. Financial destruction leads to difficulties that are eventually felt throughout the industry. From the investors and bankers initially, to the employees of the firms and eventually on down the line to those who are providing services in the supporting industries, whether that be companies or individuals. Oil and gas is a primary industry that can best be described as saying it’s at the top of the heap. There are not many primary industries and the privilege of obtaining primary revenues has been abused by our good friends the bureaucrats as a license to better their personal financial interests at all others’ cost.
The extent of the financial damages are represented to be catastrophic by People, Ideas & Objects. We’ll be able to determine how far they’ve fallen when attempts are made to resurrect normalcy. The initial follow-on consequences of the financial deterioration of any industry are the subsequent loss of what an industry was once capable of doing at volume. This is only reasonable and intuitive. Producers today are not picking themselves up and leaping tall buildings. The rebuilding of capacities and capabilities that have atrophied and were deliberately destroyed through the bureaucrats “market rebalance” theory of suspending field activity for two to seven years while demand catches up to market supply. The service industry will be a necessary component of the return. The final or third phase of these financial difficulties are the impact they have on consumers. Supply constraints become the issue leading to “demand pull” inflationary pressures for consumers. Choices to either pay the difference, seek alternatives or to go without being the three consumer options. This is the issue we’re suddenly at in terms of consuming oil and gas and the one People, Ideas & Objects were working to avoid. We’ve noted these points throughout our writings and as far back as the initial Preliminary Research report (May 2004) in which we determined the Joint Operating Committee was the preferred option for the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producer and industry. These were ignored and only raised the ire of the bureaucrats as it was a serious challenge to their well established franchise of self aggrandizement.
It is the most powerful economy that uses the most energy. Each barrel of oil provides 23,200 man hours of labor. Unquestionably the consumer's best deal of the millennium. I have stated these points repeatedly, only to have been ignored. When I said profitability in oil and gas was an issue I was laughed at and told that cash flow was the point of the exercise. When I asserted that oil and gas commodities were price makers instead of the price takers they were assumed to be by the industry, I was ignored. The warnings and concerns that I’ve expressed here are documented throughout the time of my writings. They are consistent and focused on the one issue that has now become what I believe to be a life and death issue that will be unresolved in the short term. Bureaucrats will laugh and ignore it, but there were at least 11 people who died as a result of the Texas snow storm last year. The economic consequences of that event were felt far and wide. We’re no longer talking about one snowstorm in one state. Nor are we talking about just snowstorms.
We therefore need to ask ourselves why did this happen? I’ve always directed my anger and frustration at those who are solely responsible and accountable to ensure this didn't happen. The officers and directors of the producers themselves, or as we call them bureaucrats. They saw their role was to fill their pockets with what can only be described as innovative and excessive executive compensation. As I’ve documented throughout these writings they’ve betrayed their shareholders by lying to them about their activities and performance over the past forty years. Something I’ve detailed in terms of what and how they did so throughout these writings. Yet they ignored it. I’m not raising these points to say I told you so, I’m raising them to show that these bureaucrats were well aware that what they were doing was causing serious problems and difficulties. Which would eventually lead to their current financial damage, industry wide destruction and follow on consequences to consumers. Creating an impact far in excess of most businesses. They didn’t care and today continue not to. They’ve discovered the nirvana that they always sought in their dealings. A place where accountability and performance could never be questioned. Where their lifestyle would be sustained by oil and gas revenues while they failed consistently in their clean energy “efforts” of an unknown nature. Undeterred they would continue to work as hard as they could to “save the planet.” Claiming, as they have stated so many times before, they’re responding to the demands of their shareholders. This time for their investors' concerns for the environment. By doubling down on the myth and lying they do everything for shareholders. Yet they’ve failed to respond to their investors' 2015 protest and strike to correct for their lack of profitability and accountability. In the past few years there has been an explicit demand from investors for producers to upgrade their ERP systems to tier 1 providers, such as Oracle Cloud ERP, the base of the Preliminary Specification. I’ve chronicled their self interest and behavior in this blog since December 2005 and now we’re supposed to believe that this altruistic environmental approach is their motivation?
That we would call this anything but a tragic failure is unacceptable. There has been no discussion regarding any plans or strategies for the future. There are no concerns or consideration about their past lack of accountability, profitability or their investors' lack of support, investors who left in protest of bureaucrats' actions up to six years ago! Silence is not acceptable, yet that is all we’ve ever received under their “muddle along” method of operation. The most convenient corporate strategy to cover for an irresponsible and uncaring executive. We have a leadership that believes their future lies elsewhere and has now summarily given up on oil and gas without the least bit of effort to affect any remedy. When a remedy has been available for at least eight years, the remedy they actively ignored, abused and laughed at. Consumers are now faced with the financial costs of these past inactions and an unknown future. Complicated by a continued non response, lack of concern, caring or action. Most importantly, a time in which consumers are exposed to serious risks associated with their standard of living and quality of life due to a lack of energy and / or its high cost. How did we get here? I can’t scream any louder or swing any harder at these bureaucrats.
What is it that we can reasonably expect to happen as a result of their continued administration? Maybe a better way to ask this question is the following. How stupid do they think we are? Now that they’ve settled into their optimal strategy of clean energy will they move back to oil and gas? We’ve seen no evidence of that and I would question the validity of their claims and opportunism if they tried. What is the financial state of affairs in oil and gas? Are they financially endowed now that prices are higher? Or are they, as People, Ideas & Objects claim, heavily indebted, financially non performant with culturally incapable organizations that move at the speed of dried cement? Many people have moved on from oil & gas, but also the service industry. Will they be convinced to return with the potential of as much as one months pay? Will the oil and gas faculties in the universities fill up based on these latest commodity price changes? Only in four years to dump their graduates into a potentially empty, vast unemployment situation? Damaging the university's reputation further? Will investors in the service industry who saw their past investments cut up for scrap metal reinvest on the basis of a newly printed purchase order? The reputation of these bureaucrats precedes them. They’ve used these and other tricks a few times before and the consequences were realized by those who believed them. In other words that was us, and would be again if we expect any reasonable change from past behaviours.
It’s important to point out. They’ve been laughing at my arguments on this blog since 2005. They chose to do nothing about their business until it degraded to this level. Their decision to deal with it was to declare it untenable and to pursue clean energy. Are we all now going to jump up because the inevitable supply constraints have caused prices to jump and start the party with these bureaucrats all over again? Being in an abusive relationship is something that puzzles people who see the victim repeatedly return to the bully. Case in point.
I see my job as finding the way out of these difficulties, providing an alternative and to offer a choice. I think we’re headed into very difficult times as a result of the manifestation of these problems and something needs to be done. We have always been prepared to rebuild the industry brick by brick, and stick by stick. A phrase I first stated in this blog on October 17, 2008. What I see now is my analogy of the log rolling down the hill is well advanced. Things are happening at a tremendous speed and we are seeing bureaucrats sticking to their green energy plans as a means to avoid responsibility and accountability. No vision, no plan and no strategy for oil and gas. When people see a house on fire they’ll stand around and watch it burn. No one runs into burning buildings but well trained Firemen and no one steps out into rolling logs deliberately. People, Ideas & Objects spent over thirty years working to avoid this and have failed to build the fire houses and hire the Firemen. North American oil and gas is now a tragedy, in my opinion, no one would be surprised at that. I have a greater sense of urgency to begin the rebuilding of the industry, I trust that is shared.