Thursday, May 08, 2025
Monday, May 05, 2025
Cultural Stagnation or Revolution
If investors want to involve themselves in consolidation it's their responsibility. Doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results is insanity. There are areas of the investment community with backgrounds derived from oil & gas’ culture. For them to see People, Ideas & Objects perspective takes a certain willingness and courage.
Decision Time
In a decentralized market such as what oil & gas needs. Individual decisions need to be made by independent actors. In the past, or in simpler times this could be orchestrated and coordinated loosely through somewhat primitive means. Today’s demands are far more complex and to suggest this is the reason for consolidation is disingenuous. Accommodating speed, complexity, distance, coordination and accountability is not possible through centralized control. Accountability will most certainly suffer and may be the driving motivation for producers to consolidate. In contrast individuals as actors in a market economy will decide which industry configuration they want and act accordingly. Ray Dalio founder of Bridgewater Associates @RayDalio.
Ultimately, power will rule. This is true of any system. For example, it has repeatedly been shown that systems of government have only worked when those with the power value the principles behind the system more than they value their own personal objectives. When people have both enough power to undermine a system and a desire to get what they want that is greater than their desire to maintain the system, the system will fail. For that reason the power supporting the principles must be given only to people who value the principled way of operating more than their individual interests (or the interests of their faction), and people must be dealt with in a reasonable and considerate way so that the overwhelming majority will want and fight for that principle-based system.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Thursday, May 01, 2025
Shutting In Production
This reluctance to production shut-ins seems symptomatic of a "muddle through" culture within the industry – a tendency to wait for problems to self-correct, often resulting in unnecessary and permanent damage rather than proactive resource management. This passive approach has had staggering financial consequences, contributing to an estimated $4.7 trillion in lost natural gas revenues this century due to overproduction. The industry also largely missed the opportunity to stabilize natural gas prices during the buildout of LNG export facilities, partly due to a failure to grasp fundamental business concepts like "free on board." Today's quiet market activity raises the question: is the industry again missing a chance to improve gas prices by not mastering efficient shut-in and restart processes?
A fundamental problem enabling this situation is the inability to accurately identify unprofitable properties. Current Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems lack the necessary detail, especially regarding overhead and depletion accounting. Without this granularity, producers cannot pinpoint where or address the sources of financial loss, even as the need to rehabilitate oil and natural gas prices grows urgent.
The proposed "Preliminary Specification" offers a solution by establishing detailed, factual financial statements at the Joint Operating Committee level. This approach reorganizes industry administrative and accounting resources to directly allocate overhead costs only to profitable properties, eliminating industry standard overhead allowances. If a property isn't profitable and is shut in, associated work stops, and no overhead is incurred.
Consequently, overhead transforms into a variable cost tied directly to profitable production. By recognizing these actual costs within the cost of production (rather than capitalizing them), the commodity price will reflect the true cost, passed to the consumer upon profitable production. This ensures overhead is either avoided entirely or recovered promptly, creating a self-sustaining cash flow for monthly overhead expenses and ending the constant search for new capital to cover them.
The substantial financial and business advantages of this profitability-focused model, often overlooked by the prevailing "muddle through" mindset, include:
- Maximizing Profitability: Preventing the losses of unprofitable properties from diluting overall earnings.
- Officers and Directors Fiduciary Duty: Ensuring reserves are properly recognized, managed and valued.
- Financial Health: Eliminating the burden of using future revenues to cover past losses.
- Cost Reduction: Shutting in production cuts unnecessary operational and storage costs of unprofitable overproduction.
- Enhanced Reserve Value: Increasing the volume of, and Net Present Value (NPV) of reserves as commodity prices rise.
- Resource Conservation: Saving reserves for the time in which they can be produced profitably.
- Targeted Innovation: Focusing efforts on ”where and how” to make unprofitable properties competitive in the North American capital markets.
- Market Price Discovery: Allowing commodity markets to find their marginal price by removing unprofitable production.
- Reflects the True Cost of Today’s Production: Ensuring commodity prices reflect the actual cost of bringing replacement barrels (such as heavy oil or shale) to market.
- Production Discipline: Profitability is the fairest and most reasonable method of production allocation, aligning actions with financial best interests.
This resistance likely masks a deeper issue: a fundamental inability within the current system for producers to determine with confidence which properties are profitable and which are not. Even if an unprofitable asset is located, understanding the specific business reasons why it's unprofitable is often impossible with existing tools. Navigating the complexities of Producer / Joint Operating Committee dynamics further complicates decisive action. With effective business tools such as the Preliminary Specification engineers and geologists can more effectively do their work.
People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification resolves the co-location issue of where knowledge and operational authority reside. By delivering the knowledge to the Joint Operating Committee – the entity already empowered with operational control – we eliminate a major source of conflict and inertia. This aligns the Joint Operating Committee's operational framework with the industry's organizational structure, creating a unified approach where shared financial ownership motivates consensus among partners.
Under this model, each Joint Operating Committee receives granular monthly financial statements. Crucially, these reports should not be viewed merely as tools to flag properties after they become unprofitable – that approach reflects the limitations of today's data. Instead, their power lies in proactive management. Producers should use this information to identify properties trending towards unprofitability six months or even a year ahead of time. This foresight allows them to investigate the root causes, collaborate with accounting on business solutions, and potentially avoid the need for a production shut-in altogether.
Without the clarity provided by the Preliminary Specification, the status quo persists: producers cannot reliably gauge a property's profitability or determine what effective interventions are available. Current methods of recognizing depletion misleadingly classifies all production as profitable. Overhead allowances provide no insight into overhead costs, failing to control one of the industry's largest expenses. Furthermore, reported G&A costs appear artificially low (3-5% of revenue) due to heavy capitalization (up to 85%). While the existing system of overhead allowances reflect an industry-wide monthly total of $0.00 in overhead allowances each month.
Conclusion
Trust, faith and goodwill in industry leadership were casualties decades ago. Culturally emphasizing a reliance on dwindling cash flows – mistakenly perceived as the only metric that matters. However, the current level of inactivity reveals that cash flow alone is insufficient to repair the extensive damage caused under this long-standing paradigm.
The critical question remains: what is the path forward? People, Ideas & Objects proposed solutions, designed to address these deep-seated issues, have been met largely with silence from an industry gripped by cultural inertia. There seems to be little belief that meaningful change is achievable. Personnel appear to be simply marking time, anticipating layoffs and severance packages, while leadership in the crucial service sector is showing signs of capitulation.
For thirty-four years, as of May 2025, I have persistently advocated for a different approach. The oil price collapse of 1986 highlighted the issue: strategically shutting in a small fraction of unprofitable production would have stabilized the market and mitigated almost two decades of decline. Yet, my analysis from both accounting and operational auditing perspectives made it clear that the industry's structure, then and now, renders even this seemingly simple action impossible. This realization spurred the development of new organizational models and supporting systems starting in 1991. Decades later, I continue to champion the Preliminary Specifications necessary structural changes, and reflect on not only the desolate nature of industry inactivity, but also the persistence and dedication to “muddle through.”
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Monday, April 28, 2025
And We’re Back
I’m pleased with the papers’ content, which share a cohesive theme: the transformative role of People, Ideas & Objects, our user community, and their service providers in rebuilding North American oil and gas producers. Each paper targets a specific industry segment, detailing how the Preliminary Specification will drive change and support the industry’s reconstruction.
The first two papers, released on President Trump’s inauguration day, January 20, 2025, set the stage for this vision, highlighting the opportunities and mechanisms for revitalizing the oil and gas sector.
Reconstructing Oil & Gas
Our first paper outlined how engineers and geologists can leverage the Preliminary Specification to establish their own oil and gas producer firms, revitalizing the industry into dynamic, innovative, accountable, and profitable producers competing in North American Capital markets.A New Era of Innovation and Profitability
Small and startup producers are poised to lead the industry’s transformation, echoing the vision, drive and success of its pioneers. Investors, like Citadel’s hedge fund, are committing billions to non-operated oil and gas assets, relying on these newly formed agile, innovative producers to manage them. As change accelerates, investors seek profitable producers to restore faith, trust and confidence in the industry.
Catalyst for Change
Leveraging Non-Rival Costs
Drawing on Professor Paul Romer’s theory of non-rival costs, our user community and service providers operate through the Cloud Administration & Accounting for Oil & Gas platform. This shared infrastructure, accessible to all North American producers, eliminates the need for each producer to independently build and maintain administrative and accounting systems. By pooling these costs, the industry achieves significant overhead reductions.
Enabling Flexible Operations
This shared infrastructure offers producers the flexibility to shut in unprofitable production. When a property is shut in, no data is generated, no service provider work is performed, and no service provider invoices are issued. The Cloud Administration & Accounting for Oil & Gas system renders the Joint Operating Committee’s financial performance a null operation—neither profit nor loss. This allows producers to focus on innovative solutions to restore profitability to the property.
Innovative Organizational Excellence
Redefining Performance in Oil and Gas
North American oil and gas producers face intensifying performance demands from competitive capital markets—standards they’ve struggled to meet. The Preliminary Specification offers a framework to establish dynamic, high-performance standards and adaptable infrastructure. If leading organizations are setting new benchmarks, how long until these become the norm? Can oil and gas afford to meet only today’s expectations, risking obsolescence once again as capital markets raise the bar?
The Quest for Innovation
Our January 20, 2025 white paper, Reconstructing Oil & Gas, challenged engineers and geologists to pioneer innovations akin to the America’s Cup sailing boats, which achieve 30-knot speeds in 6.5-knot winds. What proprietary innovations will unlock dramatic performance gains in shale formations? With vast known shale resources, engineering and geological breakthroughs could yield significant upside. Is shale’s full potential untapped?
A Call for Collaborative Innovation
Innovation in oil and gas requires a fundamental shift. Producers, the service industry, academia, and other stakeholders must unite to address critical questions: What performance do we expect from oil and gas? How will we achieve it? The industry’s current approach to innovation is inadequate. The first step is to reorganize, aligning efforts to harness the collective expertise needed to meet future demands.
Building a High-Performance Future
By adopting the Preliminary Specification and fostering a culture of innovation, oil and gas can meet and exceed capital market expectations. It should be asked if shale has been fully exploited from an engineering and geological perspective. Organizing for excellence and setting ambitious goals will position the industry to thrive in a rapidly evolving landscape.
Hyper Specialization in an AI- and IP-Enabled Workforce
In our March 17, 2025 paper, People, Ideas & Objects explore the synergy of hyper specialization, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Intellectual Property (IP) within the Preliminary Specification, building on Professor Paul Romer’s theory of non-rival costs. By sharing administrative and accounting infrastructure, producers avoid the burden of building and maintaining it internally. Combined with hyper specialization and division of labor, these principles drive unprecedented productivity and performance in North America’s oil and gas industry, creating value far beyond the sum of their individual contributions.Specialization has driven economic value since 1776, but have we reached the point of diminishing returns, where further specialization costs more than it yields? In the context of hyper specialization—extreme task segmentation—we believe we have. ERP systems, designed to identify and support processes and people, must evolve to accommodate this dynamic. Hyper-specialized markets may appear chaotic, with heightened activity mistaken for inefficiency. To prevent disruption and ensure order, clear mechanisms are needed to manage access, roles, and workflow.
Intellectual Property as Gatekeeper
IP is critical to maintaining control in a hyper-specialized environment. By licensing only authorized participants with defined roles and responsibilities, IP ensures that only those with rights can operate in specific domains. Without IP protections, unauthorized players could encroach, eroding the benefits of specialization and stalling progress. IP safeguards the value of hyper specialization, division of labor, non-rival costs, and AI integration, preserving and enhancing industry performance.
AI as the Orchestrator
AI serves as the intelligent overseer, coordinating the complex interplay of players, roles, processes, and Joint Operating Committees within the ERP system. With its comprehensive understanding of each participant’s status and responsibilities, AI acts as a traffic cop, judge, jury and executor, enforcing structure and functionality. It ensures seamless operations, managing the speed, complexity, and volume of interactions in a hyper-specialized market.
A Synergistic Future
The integration of hyper specialization, AI, and IP, supported by the Preliminary Specification, unlocks transformative value for the oil and gas industry. By leveraging shared infrastructure, tightly controlled IP, and AI-driven coordination, producers can achieve unparalleled efficiency and performance, redefining the industry’s accounting, administrative, operational and economic potential.
Oil and Gas Arbitrage: Citadel’s Strategic Play
On April 7, 2025, People, Ideas & Objects published a paper detailing Citadel’s March 22, 2025 strategy, where one of their hedge funds invested $1 billion in non-operated Haynesville shale gas properties. This move exemplifies oil and gas arbitrage, capitalizing on market inefficiencies.Strategy Overview: Non-Operated Properties
By acquiring non-operated properties, investors following Citadel’s approach benefit from operator management in the short term. This allows direct participation in oil and gas without inheriting the inefficiencies of legacy organizations that struggle with profitability. The paper implies that adopting People, Ideas & Objects’ Preliminary Specification offers the mid- to long-term management solution for these assets.
Rethinking Reserve Valuation
The traditional net present value (NPV) of cash flow for oil and gas reserves inflates asset values due to producers’ outdated “building balance sheets” and “putting cash in the ground” strategies. People, Ideas & Objects advocate valuing reserves based on the NPV of earnings, reflecting true profitability. Producers, unprofitable and cash-constrained, often rely on property swaps or exchanges rather than cash for acquisitions, overpaying based on inflated cash flow metrics and lack of cash makes this now a buyer’s market.
Citadel’s Long-Term Arbitrage
Citadel’s strategy involves purchasing reserves at today’s prices, which are undervalued compared to their future profitable value under the Preliminary Specification. The arbitrage opportunity lies in the price differential between current and future profitable prices, multiplied by the vast shale reserve volumes. All costs are fully accounted for in today’s reserves valuation. Maximizing the differential’s leverage.
Unlocking Value Through Price Increases
As oil and gas prices rise to “real” profitable levels—defined as the replacement cost of a barrel of oil equivalent in today’s market—reserves shift from possible/probable to proven categories, markedly boosting NPV. Replacement costs reflect the ever escalating, real costs of exploration, production, and operations, as defined by heavy oil and shale.
Escalating Costs and Future Funding
Oil and gas production costs rise faster than inflation, driven by increasing engineering, geological, and field efforts. With easily accessible reserves depleted, each incremental barrel demands more resources. Current production must fund these rising future costs to sustain output.
Preliminary Specification: A Comprehensive Solution
People, Ideas & Objects’ Preliminary Specification provides a robust accounting, administrative, and operational framework to manage these assets. It supports flexible participation models—active or passive—yet preserves voting rights in Joint Operating Committee agreements for novated participants.
Citadel’s strategy, underpinned by the Preliminary Specification, positions investors to capitalize on the inevitable rise in oil and gas prices, unlocking significant value from today’s under-realized reserves.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Sunday, April 06, 2025
Oil & Gas Arbitrage: The Market Finds a Way
Our fifth paper of 2025…
Oil & Gas Arbitrage: The Market Finds a Way.
Citadel’s Hedge Fund Begins Rebuilding and Reconstructing Oil & Gas. The Final Cornerstone is in Place
Posted by Paul Cox at 8:11 PM 0 comments
Labels: Research, White-Paper
Monday, March 17, 2025
Hyper specialization, Artificial Intelligence & Intellectual Property
As promised our paper looks at the dynamic interactions that are a result of People, Ideas & Objects use of Hyper Specialization, Artificial Intelligence, and Intellectual Property for our user community and their service providers. The paper entitled…
Hyper Specialization in Today’s AI & IP Enabled Workforce:
Strategic Implications and Operational Consequences
for the Oil & Gas Sector
This is our third paper of 2025 that deals exclusively with our user community and their service providers. Download your copy here before all the shooting starts again.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: Research, White-Paper
Monday, February 10, 2025
As Promised
Our third white paper of 2025 is now published—this also our second white paper this year focused on our user community. Today’s paper is titled:
Innovative Organizational Excellence,
How Elon Musk and Visionary Leaders
Build High Performance Enterprises.
Strategies for Emulating Their Success Within Our User Community
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: User, White-Paper
Thursday, January 30, 2025
And Another!
I’m pleased to confirm that our February 10, 2025, paper—
Characteristics of Entrepreneurs and Innovators: How Elon Musk and Others Excel in Constructing Today’s High-Performance Organizations Strategies for Emulating Their Success Within Our User Community
will be published on schedule.
I can also announce a fourth deliverable for 2025, slated for release on March 17, 2025, under the current working title:
Hyperspecialization: Its Impacts and Consequences for Our User Communities and Service Provider Organizations.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: Research, Service-Provider, User, White-Paper
Monday, January 20, 2025
With Today's Inauguration
And as promised, two white papers are being released from People, Ideas & Objects. Building off of the "animal spirits" being released in the North American marketplace. These papers address how the material and consequential issues that have manifested in oil & gas are dealt with through the reconstruction of the oil & gas industry under new leadership. The titles of these papers are.
Reconstructing Oil & Gas: Enabling Engineers and Geologists to be This Centuries Pioneers and Lead the Industry's Future
Empowering Dynamic, Innovative, Accountable and Profitable Oil & Gas Producers Through People, Ideas & Objects
And
Catalysts for Cultural Change The Leadership Role of People, Ideas & Objects User Community
Reconstructing Dynamic, Innovative, Accountable and Profitable Oil & Gas Producers
These papers can be accessed here and here. Get yours before they're all gone.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: Innovation, User, White-Paper
Monday, December 16, 2024
Characteristics of Entrepreneurs and Innovators in Oil & Gas
People, Ideas & Objects is pleased to announce that we will publish our third research paper on Monday, February 10, 2025. This paper represents the third deliverable from our recently established research capability. As a reminder, Intellectual Property, our user community, and research comprise the three distinct competitive advantages we pursue at People, Ideas & Objects.
Currently, a significant portion of our effort is devoted to research in preparation for the development of Phase I of the Preliminary Specification. Similar to one of the papers scheduled for release on January 20, 2025, this third paper will focus on our user community. The previously mentioned January 20 paper addressing our user community is titled:
Catalysts for Cultural Change: The Leadership Role of People, Ideas & Objects User Community
Reconstructing Dynamic, Innovative, Accountable, and Profitable Oil & Gas Producers.
This publication delves into many details of the Preliminary Specification development, as well as the structure of our user community. It covers the individual phases of development and, most importantly, the compensation framework for our user community throughout the development process.
On January 20, 2025, we are releasing two papers. Both are relevant to everyone, but one targets our user community specifically, while the other is directed toward engineers and geologists. Together, they address the four critical elements needed to provide dynamic, innovative, accountable, and profitable oil and gas operations.
Our February 10, 2025 paper is entitled:
Characteristics of Entrepreneurs and Innovators: How Elon Musk and Others Excel in Constructing Today’s High-Performance Organizations
Strategies for Emulating Their Success Within Our User Community
At People, Ideas & Objects, we view our user community as the source of our solution’s quality. By making our user community a competitive advantage and our primary focus, we ensure the delivery of a high-quality ERP solution for the oil and gas industry. Over the next 25 years, the consequences of implementing a robust and well-designed ERP environment will be critical to the industry’s success. Starting with a thoughtful organizational design ensures that its benefits reach all corners of the sector. Approaching this task haphazardly would only jeopardize the outcome.
Periods of significant economic change—like the one we are entering—are exceedingly rare. We are transitioning into new economic models that promise exponentially greater performance trajectories, far beyond the scope of technology or bioengineering. This transformation will permeate every aspect of the economy, and its impact will be felt most intensely in North America.
Many believe that Artificial Intelligence represents the future of our economy, driving growth through its capacity to leverage intellectual efforts. While People, Ideas & Objects acknowledges that there may be some truth in this, we also recognize the daunting competitive challenge posed by oil and gas. Each barrel of oil equivalent delivers between 10,000 and 25,000 man-hours of mechanical leverage—an extraordinary value proposition that consumers rely on every day. Far from fading into the background, oil and gas still holds its greatest opportunities ahead.
Posted by Paul Cox at 5:30 AM 0 comments
Labels: White-Paper