Friday, July 10, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part XV

Unlike ANTIFA People, Ideas & Objects are not interested in tearing things down. ANTIFA’s objectives in tearing things down is wholly consistent with the oil and gas bureaucrats who have and are doing a very fine job in their specialized discipline. And just like ANTIFA, they are of the staunch anti-profit and anti-capitalist mindset. People, Ideas & Objects are rebuilding the industry brick by brick, and stick by stick due to the fact that the damage and destruction is so comprehensive. People are seeing the decline in the industry is rapidly getting worse and there are no attempts to even admit there’s a problem. Trying to save what is left and reconstituting what is already destroyed would be a more ambitious objective at this point than just starting over. We have a lot of work ahead of us at People, Ideas & Objects and the sooner we get our budget funded the sooner it’ll be completed. Our objective is to save the industry from the bureaucratic destruction, we are not the ones that are attempting in any way to destroy it. Our solution provides a viable business model that identifies and deals with the business issues that are present in the marketplace today. And also provides a foundation for the industry to resolve future issues and build a foundation for a dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable producer and hence the entire oil and gas industrial complex associated with the producers.

Absolute control of people’s workday has been the domain of the bureaucrats and their minions in oil and gas. Little is done without a comprehensive command and control environment where the features and productivities of the administration, accounting and governance of the organization replicates a computerized 1950’s scenario. This is the domain that provides the bureaucrats the protection from outsiders such as People, Ideas & Objects and our radical ways. It is how the bureaucrats ensure that any value which is generated is siphoned off and delivered to them personally. Meanwhile in the rest of the world, the 1960’s, 70’s, 80’s… to today have evolved differently. People are expected to do their jobs in a time and place where the expectation is the job is completed in a timely manner. The assumption is made that people have the capacity to think and do what is necessary without the direct supervision of those that provide no real value anymore. As bureaucrats are threatened more and more these days they have the reins tightened and ensure that the organizational discipline and control is broken down to 30 second intervals. This is where we stand today, with organizations that would be competitive in the 1950’s, which just as the former Soviet Union proved their system no longer built value, the bureaucrats system no longer does either. We can either ride the downward spiral with those that have destroyed most of what was ever provided to the industry, or we can replace them and rebuild in the vision of the Preliminary Specification

When will the producers begin to act responsibly and begin to deal with their issues? Deferring the discussion to people and groups that have none of the responsibility for this downfall is well beyond tiring for most people. We heard last week it was the employees fault. No, it’s no one's fault other than the producer bureaucrats themselves. Instead of working to build the business it became a culture of digging into the gravy train for one's own benefit. Producers are responsible for the greater oil and gas industrial complex that they rely upon. It is the source of their capabilities and capacities, which they gladly take credit for, and the groups that are abused financially so that they’re able to access more. These two behaviors are inconsistent with the needs of the service industry and tertiary industries. They are at the behest and are beholden to the producers and do not function for anyone else outside of the industry. They are the reasons producers generate revenues from oil and gas sales. Oil and gas is a primary industry and the producers need to begin operating in a manner that recognizes the fact that they need to support and develop all of the resources they rely on for those revenues. Expecting investors or banks to fund the producers themselves and to finance the innovations and organizations in the service industry has been used and abused to the point where it won’t be available on that basis again. Producers will need to work effectively with all member organizations of the industrial complex and begin to move it forward as they require it. In other words the bureaucrats have blown it. And there will be no second or third chances. 

But I repeat myself. And I ask what it is that can be done to move this forward with such an obstinate group of do-nothings. There is no instinct of self preservation or inclination towards action. Bureaucrats are seeing the looming bonus that will be available once they declare their organization bankrupt and that only prompts them to expand their personal shopping lists. Ten years ago natural gas declined and is showing every sign of a looming global collapse. It has been five years since the investors left without a whisper of concern or anything beyond a shrug. And just as they’ve destroyed natural gas they went on to prove they could do it again in the oil market six years ago. Oil takes more time and effort to destroy due to it being a global market but it looks like 2020 is the year they can begin congratulating themselves on a job no one wanted done. At least they have the coronavirus to blame.

Second quarter financial statements are about to be published in the month of August. What will these read and how will they be presented? I think it’s reasonable to assume that they will show the end of the line as any reasonable person would define it. I know that for a lot of people who work within that greater oil and gas industrial complex the exit doors are getting very crowded and it’s only motivating more people to do the same. Issues regarding the retention of people contrasts the layoffs bureaucrats are executing. People are wanting out and they’ve had enough. They see where this is headed and know instinctively that they don’t want to be there when the roof caves in. Call it survival mode. 

Many such as those that are interested in our user community are not giving up on the industry. They just don’t want to be part of the decline and destruction anymore and want to be part of how things get turned around. They know and intuitively understand that society in general is wholly dependent on oil and gas just as people are dependent on oxygen. Without them it’s terminal. North America stands as the premier economy in the world. For that to continue it will need to remain the largest consumer of energy. Oil and gas will always be a large portion of the makeup of our energy source, at least for the remainder of this century. Energy independence and security are worthwhile, attainable and liberating for our position in the world economy. These are spelt out in our White Paper “Profitable, Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” Something that frightens and scares the bureaucrats because they know they wouldn’t be involved in that, and therefore the gravy train they’re used to would also subside. 

We will always have choices in how we fuel our economy. The issue is the efficiency that is derived from oil and gas is undervalued today. That undervaluation will cease and be overcompensated if the producer bureaucrats continue in the selfish manner that they are. Purchasing our energy from offshore can always be undertaken until the infrastructure is rebuilt from the destruction that we’re witnessing today. The issue would be how much would it cost and how long would it take to turn this ship around. When each boe has the mechanical leverage of 23,200 man hours it can be easily defined as the deal of the century at today’s prices. I prefer to call it the crime of the century when producers are unable to recognize the business is not a business in any way, shape or form. Nonetheless the choice we’ll have is to compete in the world economy with one arm tied behind our back by paying others $600 / barrel while the North American oil and gas industry is reconstituted. If we began this now by adopting People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification, funding its budget and moving it forward then there would be less time and risk of this happening for a protracted period. 

I’m sure that what is going to happen with our good friends the bureaucrats is that they’re going to frame this with their classic spin. If I could be so bold as to suggest for them what they should call it. “Living the Dream.” In their case I’m of course taking the critical point of view that they have their heads in the sand. Although it could also be suggested that this is what they intended all along with the associated destruction being the vision or dream they were always pursuing. I could associate a few other points to the phrase but they would be redundant too. However if the bureaucrats aren’t catching the sarcasm, they are certainly free to use the phrase. 

I will be taking the next four weeks off returning August 10, 2020. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Wednesday, July 08, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part XIV

Just a quick note to follow up on Monday’s post. We originally raised the point about Directors and Officers insurance coverage in our June 2, 2020 post. We subsequently learned producers increased the officers and directors coverage. But since that time nothing has been done. Monday’s post noted that the solution to what ails the industry is for the Officers and Directors to cover off their personal risks, in what I allege to be a reasonably clear insurance fraud. This is not acceptable and should be dealt with. They are the ones that are responsible, accountable and the only ones with the capabilities to act. Yet they’ll just sit and watch what they’ve done in the industry play out without a shrug, care or concern for anything. They’ve got insurance coverage and they couldn’t be happier or more content. Whatever happens in the industry will be beyond their control and they can say they upheld their strategy of muddling through and doing nothing. What is not being considered is the time that we’re in and the state of affairs of the industry are demanding remedial action. Oil and gas prices at these levels do little other than to keep said bureaucrats comfortable. There is no future and the prospects for the future fade each passing day. Whether that is LNG facilities which can no longer find markets, pipelines that can’t be built, the service industry capabilities further eroded or producers preparing people for more losses, more lay-offs, more bankruptcies and more write downs. The second quarter will be the worst quarter in oil and gas, ever. What we’ve learned is that the alleged leadership wanted to skate on through this without any risk by increasing their insurance coverage. And that is all. 

Quiet is the only word to describe the atmosphere in oil and gas. There are the layoff announcements that have the bureaucrats competitive juices flowing once again. “I’ll see your 500 souls and raise you another 200!” Such zeal. All of this is done with no consideration of the future of the industry and how it will function beyond the third quarter of 2020. But then again they’ve been bereft of any planning or strategy for four decades, what good would a plan provide today? With $40+ oil prices bureaucrats are back in the money due to the fact that their royalty and operating costs are below this price. That makes them “profitable” and “cash flow positive” and somewhat assured that the good times are just around the corner, or at least next week. The capital and overhead costs are all being capitalized so these costs will linger in that big vat of unrecognized capital costs of past production. Why would that change? The fact is their innovation in terms of their compensation can resume and start providing bureaucrats with the fruits of their strenuous labors once again. 

In Canada I can say the bureaucrats have been operating these past few years on the basis that all employees are at their desks, figuratively speaking, throughout the day. Activity levels on the street and in the +15 system have been minimal to none while the working hours have been enforced. I always thought that this was so that bureaucrats could ensure that control was maintained at all times. The coronavirus has broken this hold on the staff’s time and location during working hours. It really doesn’t matter where you are does it? The quality of life for most has been increased due to the capacity to work from home. Once the virus is done, I would think that this would be difficult if not impossible to make the change back to the bureaucrats rigid control regime. Other industries are seeing the ability to work from anywhere as a real quality of life issue and a benefit for their staff. It also seems to be a boost in productivity. With the reputations that are being so rightly earned in the industry today, producers would be the odd man out if they tried to continue with their prior version of controlled lockdown. Could oil and gas compete for talent without the ability to work from home?

The converse of this is that the work from anywhere opens new opportunities to the people who were once committed to the industry and may see things differently since their forced exit. Other industries may be as accessible from their current locations just as easily. The loyalty and commitment in terms of being the scapegoat for all that is wrong in the industry is just the latest example of why the bureaucrats will never get this back under their control. Admission or self-reflection as to how we arrived at this point are in short supply. 

People can see now that the shale basins are not going to be turning around, whatever that means, anytime soon. Optimism has waned and the facts are as stark as ever that the industry has issues to face. More and more I’m hearing that the service industry will be the impediment to any quick turnaround. As bad as the oil and gas industry is, the service industry and those that make up the rest of the industrial complex have had it. These people and their companies are being betrayed and are exiting the continent leaving literally nothing in their place. The people who had worked, and the tacit knowledge of how things were done, are walking away and these capabilities will need to be rebuilt from the ground up. Offering big wads of money doesn’t motivate anyone when the trust and belief in the industry is at the levels the bureaucrats have now chosen to operate at. The only question the people have is will there be a second paycheck on the basis of that handsome offer?

OPEC+ the scoundrels the bureaucrats always alleged they were, who allegedly are playing dirty tricks somehow, ended up with all aces. Is this because of their actions or the self-inflicted gunshot wounds of the North American producers? At $40 OPEC+ are profitable in the real sense of the meaning of profits. Sure they’re countries budgets may not be fully funded but when was the last time that Canada’s or the United States federal budgets were? And when did it become the sole responsibility of the oil and gas industry to solve all the financial commitments of the government? Operating costs for Saudi Arabia are $3 / bbl. Ghawar has been producing since 1948 and I doubt has much capital left to retire. OPEC+ have 9.7 million boe / day of surplus capacity until the end of July 2020. This will hang over the market like a dead weight, satisfying any increase in demand for the foreseeable future. $40 oil is going to be as good as it gets for a number of years. In terms of natural gas pricing I think it’s really bad news there as well. The producer bureaucrats haven’t been profitable in natural gas since they first collapsed the price in 2009. Here is a graph of these prices in North America, Europe and Asia. It would appear that the world is now awash in shale gas too. 



Once natural gas prices collapsed in 2009 the race began to reverse the existing facilities for LNG imports and expand the LNG export capacity. The global markets were unaffected by the shale gas overproduction and oversupply in North America. Therefore the global prices were much higher making the LNG business viable. Now with LNG export capacities of the U.S., Australia and Qatar flooding the global market, natural gas prices are emulating the shale based decline of 2009. 


Understanding this only took ten or eleven years for North American producers to orchestrate. And with oil starting in 2014, that means we have four or five more bad years before things turn around, or collapse further. I’ve never stated how long I think it will take for producers to turn this ship around. Eleven years and they still don’t know or understand the issues. It will be at least a decade before the industry pulls itself up to a moderate operating level. That is with the implementation of the Preliminary Specification. The extent of the damage is reflected in this Deloitte & Touche report that shows somewhat accurately the state of affairs. 

HOUSTON (Bloomberg) --Almost a third of U.S. shale producers are technically insolvent with crude at $35 a barrel, according to Deloitte LLP, highlighting the industry’s acute financial strain even as oil prices rebound from a record low earlier this year.
West Texas Intermediate edged up to $40.06 a barrel at 11:38 a.m. in New York, a substantially higher level compared with most of the last few months, especially April, when prices briefly went negative. But the rebound will do little to prevent 15 years of debt-fueled production growth catching up with many shale producers, Deloitte said in a study. Technical insolvency is an accounting way of saying a company will face problems meeting debt repayments.
“New and unforeseen headwinds continue to jolt the industry’s progress,” authors Duane Dickson, Kate Hardin and Anshu Mittal said in the report. “Although the sub-zero price was a temporary dislocation, this intense volatility highlights the fragile state of the industry.”

I would suggest that this report understates the situation in oil and gas as I understand it. It is appreciated that others are beginning to see the industry's problems and difficulties. I would also suggest that Deloitte & Touche are party to the disaster that is oil and gas as they are the ones who are charged with ensuring that accounting is accurate and timely. Now they’re finding that not only are they the ones that should have been standing in the way of the bureaucrats. They should have been the first to raise the issue. We can look at the roots of the problem and see that it is first and foremost an accounting issue of over reported profits, overreported assets, overreported cash flow, overproduction and oversupply. All at the expense of the investors who had been assured their audits were meaningful. That’s right, I forgot, oil and gas is where everyone in authority does nothing about everything. And none of these comments mitigates the CFO’s as culprits in any way.

Maybe a good exercise for those at KPMG, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Deloitte & Touche and others would be to account for the comprehensive losses that have and will be incurred as a result of this disaster. Start with the investors and bankers, then those that have been laid off. Then it might be easiest if they just took the entire service industry's value and trashed it, after all that’s what the producer bureaucrats have done. Maybe these accountants can add an estimate of what their oil and gas industry billings will be once this decline has reached bottom. I now see why the engineers and geologists thought that the only purpose of accounting was to “pay the bills.” This is pathetic and sadly I’ve spelled out a role for these accounting firms in the development of the Preliminary Specification. I’m curious to know now if it's beyond their capabilities and their capacity to understand that role. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Monday, July 06, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part XIII

Bureaucrats have made out like bandits over the past decades. Unaccountable for their inactions is the only way to describe it. As we’ve stated the Preliminary Specification eliminates the bureaucrats in oil and gas, just as all industries are being disintermediated. The Internet and software have that effect on organizations in the 21st century. We see the bureaucrats' motivation for enhanced personal financial compensation is in stark contrast to the destruction their inactions have caused. Inaction motivated to save and protect their personal financial empires from threats such as People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification. These bureaucratic acts of inaction and enhanced personal financial compensation were done for the same reason we were subject to the ostracization and attempted thefts of our Intellectual Property. The only issue the producers face now is will they act in time to save the industry from falling off the cliff. No one would argue that our trajectory is downward and steeply so. The question in the market would be, is it going to get better by continuing to do nothing? The time frame in which to evaluate this is best understood to be what we commonly refer to as July. It seems awfully quiet these days. The only apparent news is coming out of Exxon who commented on their looming second quarter report. Softening people up for the wicked left uppercut they’re about to throw later this month. 

After Shell announced they would be recognizing an additional $22 billion in asset write downs. Exxon announced that it would not be recognizing any write downs in the second quarter of 2020. Adding language that included “may not account for all adjustments and charges required to fully reflect the changes in industry conditions.” However, Exxon announced it was having a difficult time these days. They did say they’ll be reporting a second consecutive loss in the second quarter of 2020. The consequences of this chronic malaise have nothing to do with the people in power. They’re passengers just as we are, they’d claim. This stupefying passivity of the producers, being passed off as “normal operations” is another aspect of the producer bureaucrats that has become very tiring. Here’s a suggestion, fund their share of the Preliminary Specification.

A key point to keep in mind for the remainder of this post is the purpose of accounting is to record the performance of the organization. It is not for the purpose of valuation. Markets determine the value, accounting records the performance and producers build balance sheets. This behaviour is consistent with the culture of the industry. The objective everywhere is to build balance sheets, big bold beautiful balance sheets. I still don’t know what that means. There have been charges made by a former Exxon employee Mr. Franklin Bennet and others that parallel the charges and allegations that People, Ideas & Objects have made regarding the industries accounting practices and culture. Accounting practices that have been instituted and systemically practiced throughout the industry since the late 1978 change by the SEC to accept only Full Cost Accounting in terms of recording exploration and production assets for oil and gas companies. The WSJ notes,

An Exxon spokesman said the company is in compliance with accounting rules and SEC regulation about disclosures to investors. 

Which is exactly the point and the source of the issue at hand. Producers have failed to recognize the SEC has defined the outer limit of what is acceptable accounting practice. Not the goal that every producer must achieve each and every year. This misinterpretation of the rules has led to the demise of the industry. When you overstate your capital assets, which this convenient misinterpretation does, profits are overstated as well. Specious profits raise excess amounts of capital from the markets, excessive investment brings about overproduction. Overproduction as we’ve defined it here is unprofitable production. These “fake profits'' generate what People, Ideas & Objects call the unrecognized capital costs of past production sitting on the bloated balance sheets as property, plant and equipment of each and every producer. A producer seeking to be the most competitive in the marketplace would have retired as much of their capital costs as quickly as possible, especially in a capital intensive industry. This would have seen their previously invested cash recycled quickly from the capital assets account of property, plant and equipment, be recognized as part of the capital costs passed on to the consumer in the process of producing profitable production on the income statement and returned to the balance sheet in the form of cash to be used in paying dividends, paying off debt or funding further capital expenditure requirements. This assumes they’re receiving profitable commodity prices such as the Preliminary Specifications price maker strategy provides. But why run it as a business when you’ve convinced investors that you’re profitable with specious accounting and they’re lined up around the block trying to get in. Eventually the accounting scams become more concerned with the methods and means in which to “get more” for the guilty parties, and less about the business at hand. What’s most surprising is the fact that nothing is being done when the entire industrial complex is collapsing, amazing. 

Producers now want to be evaluated based on their revenues less operating and royalty costs during times of trouble, which is an acceptable thing to do. Recognizing capital during difficult times can be suspended to ensure the organization survives. Producers may want to claim this in the second quarter of 2020. However, People, Ideas & Objects assert the point is moot when the facts clearly state that they’ve been doing so consistently for the past four decades. This graph provided from @SoberLook shows that the common industry interpretation of break even and the time in which properties would be shut-in are different. They shouldn't be. It also shows the interpretation of breakeven by the industry is inconsistent with the term. 



Maintaining production in the short term while prices are poor may be necessary until such time as the issue affecting prices is resolved in the market. This is common sense and everyone can agree that it's the appropriate methodology for the very extreme short term period of a month or two, at the absolute most. However, what’s happened is that the culture of the producers, driven by their misinterpretation of the SEC regulations, have seen them continue to produce well below the “Well Breakeven” price for the past forty years. Doing so for one producer, when the commodity is subject to the characteristics of price makers, causes the price of all of their production to drop below the marginal price. When this industry produces all of its production for decades below its breakeven price you have an erosion of the global oil and gas commodity markets pricing systems where no one will make any money, ever. This began with the oil market price collapse in 1986. For the period extending beyond the extreme short term the “Well Breakeven” has to be recognized as the Shut-in Price or there will never be any money made in the oil and gas industry. Producers only ever reported profits by deferring the recognition of their capital assets, in a capital intensive industry, for decades at a time. Doing so made them appear profitable which created the investment scam which enabled them to produce such innovations in Executive Compensation.

Cash and time have all but run out for the industry. When you’ve run out of cash, the simple request to investors and bankers for more, along with financial statements that show you have none, and don’t produce any cash are all that’s needed to watch them sprint the other way. These are the most certain signals that the organization is unable to deal with whatever ails it. The time to deal with this issue is upon the bureaucrats this month. They can fund People, Ideas & Objects budget before they publish their financial statements, or they can stand and be dealt with by the market after producing their second quarter reports with their classic blank stare regarding the lack of strategies and plans they have to move forward. That is the choice that chronic deferring and denying these past decades provides you. 

We’ve noted before the producers Boards of Directors and Officers as individuals have upgraded their personal insurance coverage that indemnifies them from any risk of the personal costs of litigation arising from their term at the organization. So we can assume they think they have the personal strategies and plans in hand to be able to weather the storm. Therefore why have a corporate strategy and plan? If there is fall-out it will be in the form of investor lawsuits against the Directors and Officers alleging they didn’t fulfill their fiduciary duties. If that should be the case the question comes down to whether their insurance companies will find a clause in their contracts that eliminates the Officers and Directors coverage due to clause “abc” or “xyz?” We’ve all known and experienced how insurance companies like to control their costs. With what can only be trillions of dollars being lost in the greater oil and gas industrial complex. And flying by the seat of the bureaucrats pants is how the oil and gas industry has chosen to be run. Will the insurance companies, upon seeing that there were fraudulent scams by these bureaucrats, those that have been identified, documented and alleged by People, Ideas & Objects and those identified in this WSJ article. The people responsible, accountable and capable of remedying the issue, have done nothing to stop the destruction of these trillions of dollars in investor and others losses, and with the full knowledge of the Preliminary Specifications existence and availability since December 2013. Will that preclude the insurance companies from having to meet their global industry wide commitments? Asking for a friend, who has a follow up question too. When the Directors and Officers upped their insurance coverage last month, does that imply culpability and guilt? Would that also be seen by the insurance companies as dishonest behavior or misrepresentation regarding their obligations and insurability? Say an insurance fraud? Instead of addressing and fixing the problem, upholding their fiduciary duty, just upgrade your insurance! Brilliant, kind of fits in with the muddle along and do nothing strategy. With all the devastation and destruction in the greater industrial complex of the oil and gas industry, I think we can satisfy ourselves that we've definitively found the source of all the destruction. I told my friend he should talk to his broker or agent to get the answers he’s looking for. In the meantime I’ll be upgrading the insurance on everything I own, moving it inside and setting the house on fire to enhance my insurance claim. I should have thought of this before!

With the landscape of ruined careers and financial catastrophes by those that chose to believe oil and gas to be a “good” place to establish a career or business. Are satisfied to know that those that are responsible for this, that were never held to account and were the only ones capable of doing something about it for the past decades. Will be more than adequately covered in terms of their risks by the insurance they’ve now purchased, and in most instances, form part of the innovative personal executive compensation we’ve seen them create. It’s these kinds of actions by the leadership that make oil and gas so special. The problem is these people are otherwise unidentifiable as they walk down the street. Which kind of makes the situation more difficult to accept. But we always knew they were nameless and faceless bureaucrats. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Monday, June 29, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part XII

Let us all note the downfall of Chesapeake yesterday. It didn’t have to be this way however organizations don’t change. What does is the people in the industry and they are turning to People, Ideas & Objects user community. Especially when the comments coming out of the bureaucrats are as follows. This is some commentary from the Dallas Fed’s Survey of oil and gas producer executives. From World Oil

One executive commented in detail, “With the ‘Great Crew Change’ retirement of ‘boomers,’ and COVID-19 work-at-home isolation, the industry is de-populating itself of knowledgeable and experienced personnel. That collective knowledge drain is not being effectively replaced by ‘newbies.’ The newer, younger employees don't know much, and while they can stare at computers and run applications, they are making critical land, legal, financial and business errors at an astonishing rate but try to self-buffer from the real world impact of their errors with mental Maginot Lines of mercurial ego! I'm seeing this happen more and more frequently with contractors, purchasers, operators and business-partner companies. It's causing everything in this industry to move at a glacial pace, because so many errors and problems have to be reported to a knowledgeable supervisor, somewhere, who can then give some one-on-one ‘counseling’ to the error-creator, who tries to defend their error to the company, who reported it in the first place. We wind up having to write more memos and e-mails, or make phone calls to a voice-message recorder, than ever before, just to keep basic functions moving that used to be routine and automatic.”

This is new, this is innovative but mostly this is just the same old, same old. The decline in producer and service industry organizations, the capabilities and capacities of the producers that we’ve warned about throughout the years that this blog has been written. Has suddenly been seen as an issue by those that are in bureaucratic power. For the moment at least and here’s the most important point of all, it’s the employees fault! This scores a triple in the second bureaucratic handbook “Muddling Through for Dummies” when you can affix blame, excuse your own chronic inactions on others and create another viable scapegoat. If viable, scapegoat is not too oxymoronic, its double meaning brings a special ring to it. Training and development of their staff is not their job, quite obviously. And if they’re so unhappy with those that they’ve hired specifically, why not do something about their training and development, or termination? Instead they’ll blast their dirty laundry out about their problems and expect someone else to clean it up for them. Here is the solution to all that ails the industry. Cash, derived from continual “real” profitability such as what we’ve defined in the Preliminary Specifications decentralized production models price maker strategy

The immunity attached to oil and gas executives is a remarkable phenomenon. I’ve yet to see anyone outside of People, Ideas & Objects and our user community hold them accountable for this multi decade disgrace. I keep asking myself where the CFO’s have been, and where are they now? But then again they are helpless and powerless aren’t they. And I’m talking about all of these producer executives who are helpless, powerless, inept and not that smart. I might want to add they’re apparently illiterate. Unable to read what has been written here since 2005 and People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification which was published over the course of August 2011 to December 2013. 

This oil and gas situation is also particularly interesting from the point of view of its uniqueness in business. This attitude of deniability of any issues or difficulties that they’ve caused, that anything they do run into is the responsibility of others is systemic and it's the only law that is recognized or adhered to. There is no deviation from that anyone, anywhere or at any time in terms of any other thinking. This homogenous thinking is the result of decades in which drilling wells was the business and the only part of the business, which required raising capital from markets, and forms the comprehensive culture of do nothing and muddle along. And why not, show me a bureaucrat that’s hurting financially as a result of the culture of the oil and gas industry. Even in bankruptcy they make out like bandits by granting themselves lucrative bonuses for the hard work they’ve never done and will never be doing. There was an interesting article that was somewhat relevant in the Wall Street Journal on Saturday that spelled out the thinking of an executive in another industry. 

I reject that answer. The biggest talent pool in the world doesn’t matter if the ocean that surrounds it is intellectually shallow. If a business is based in a place that expects social and political conformity, then innovation will falter eventually, because it depends on pushing the boundaries. And if our people find it hard to flourish in every aspect of their lives, then the company will struggle in the long run. I think that as the West Coast becomes more insular and exclusive, other parts of the country will become the biggest drivers of tech innovation.

This executive was moving their technology based operation from Seattle to Texas. Imagine this kind of proactive thinking and issue mitigation being executed in oil and gas? Whether that was on a systemic basis or by an individual producer organization. I’m not suggesting oil and gas is “intellectually shallow,” I’m calling this a drought. We’ve seen these same producer “executives” take credit for the innovations of others that have been used in the industry. “Producer innovations” were alleged to have provided coiled tubing and packers in order to make shale fracing possible. Except we all know the difference between fairy tales and facts. Both of those innovative developments were from the service industry whose providers had to pay dearly with their ostracization and banishment from the industry, for long periods of time, before any producer decided to use them and bureaucrats began to reap their financial benefits. We’ve seen the diversity and dynamic nature of thinking throughout the industry fade to zero over these past four decades. Proving correct the technology executives thesis in the WSJ article. I guess we should have noted too at the beginning of this post the level of dishonesty and fairy tales that have been circulating around the producer firms for the last number of decades. Why actually do the work when you can just take credit for it. That being the other side of blaming, excuses, viable scapegoats and chronic dishonesty. Although in their defence I don't think before 2009 anyone knew or understood that Bernie Madoff was dishonest. 

There will be no other posts this week due to July 1, Canada Day and July 4, 2020 Independence Day in the U.S.  Of note, July 4th 2019 is the day we published our White Paper “Profitable, Energy Independence in North America -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” The response that we received over the past year has been overwhelming. I have published a number of papers into this market over the past thirty years and none has been received anywhere near the reception of this White Paper. I am very pleased, and would note this is more to do with the need in the marketplace for a solution to the issues in the industry. We look forward to continuing the value adding work that we’re doing for the industry and are pleased that our audience continues to grow. Thank you.

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Thursday, June 25, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part XI

Looking at the issue of production discipline in the industry. We understand that the attitude of the bureaucrats suggests that they’ve always been profitable and that it’s all the other producers in the industry that have caused the problem. And that to a large extent is the problem. If their firm sought to clean up its act and work within the logic of the decentralized production models price maker strategy, without the Preliminary Specification being built it would be a futile exercise. If they were Exxon going it alone doesn’t get the job done when all the other producers are still participating in the free for all. Production discipline has to be implemented industry wide, or on a North American basis at least. It’s in that way, and only that way, that the industry will be able to prosper and conduct its operations as expected. Bureaucrats state this is collusion! I argue that their argument is not valid for two reasons. The decisions to produce or not are being made independently at the Joint Operating Committee level and in its best interests. Based on objective, standard and actual accounting data and information. This wouldn’t qualify as collusion. And if for some reason collusion was proven to somehow qualify it would fall under the category of implicit or tacit collusion, which is legal. Either way the bureaucrats are holding out the false argument that the decentralized production model’s price maker strategy is something that it is not, or something that is irrelevant to the issue at hand. And choose instead to watch the industry circle the drain. From Investopedia.

The price maker is also a profit-maximizer because it will increase output only as long as its marginal revenue is greater than its marginal cost. In other words, as long as it is producing a profit.

People, Ideas & Objects “price maker strategy” does not reflect that we are fixing prices. What it implies is that we are adhering to the principles of the economic theory of products that reflect “price maker” characteristics. Contrasting the “price taker” strategy employed throughout the industry today. Products with price maker characteristics in markets that are subject to overproduction, experience material downward pressure on product prices. In the shale era of abundance, production discipline must be attained. 

Producers need to understand, and quickly, that as a primary industry the sales of oil and gas are for the benefit of the entire industrial complex. This includes the producers, service industry, tertiary industries and general economy. In many cases such as the service industry their only source of revenue is from the oil and gas producers themselves. They don’t service the retail or automotive industries. The consideration that these groups have been given over the past decades has been very poor as reflected in the commentary of Encana / Ovintiv when they called them “greedy and lazy.” The oil and gas revenues have been the sole source of pleasure and accomodation for the bureaucrats in the many highly innovative ways they’ve expanded the means of executive compensation. All others be damned. Not only have investors come to realize that the oil and gas producers have been running a scam in the past four decades. The bureaucrats assume that the investment and banking community are available to provide “make-up revenues'' to the service and other elements of the oil and gas industrial complex. As I documented in our White Paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale” these days are gone. The investors and bankers are no longer falling for that scam either. If work is to be conducted in the field, it will have to be paid for in advance by the producers, otherwise they’ll have to go without. If a new rig is required then it will have to be paid for in advance. The volume of unpaid bills to the service industry is probably at record highs. Who knows though, it’s not something that the bureaucrats are interested in. And with the looming bankruptcy run we’ll find that these service industry representatives will be given the full scope of their legal entitlement through that process. Which is nothing. Producers should be looking forward to financing and directing the rebuilding of the service industry. Good thing there’s the Preliminary Specifications Resource Marketplace module to do just that. 

It certainly is easier to capitulate on the shale era and say it’s over. As we are hearing throughout the producer population these days. Instead of working to make it profitable, which requires bureaucrats to assert serious effort and make this a business, as we’ve described in our White Paper. Giving up is item number seven in the “Bureaucrats for Dummies” handbook. And I of course can’t agree with them more. If it’s giving up they want to do then we’ll be far better off without them. It’s time for action and if these officers and directors think they can get through the second quarter reporting period unscathed, a) I’ll be surprised, b) we have a long way yet to travel. It would be my opinion that if there is not a “the building is on fire” sense of urgency to act in the boardrooms of the producers then they’ll be personally sued to kingdom come. 

The critical role that investors, us really, play in the oil and gas industry is their wise and prudent direction that they provide. The same role they play in society throughout the public and private financial sectors. It is their money they’ve put into the organization. They are allegedly the smarter of the financial minds as a result of accumulating the capital that they do have. They are generally risk averse and mostly quiet. The invisible hand in Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations. Their presence or lack of it can initiate action and enable economic growth and stability. As long as they are satisfied with the returns, and those returns are competitive to the others in the marketplace, they’ll remain. When investors leave. When they stop funding the activities in an industry as they’ve done here in oil and gas. There is no stronger signal that should garner the attention of the executives and directors. It is a signal that the market thinks your organization is in serious jeopardy. Actions need to be taken to reverse the trend, if possible, and rehabilitate the organization to be consistent with the market expectations. If not they will be replaced by creative destruction. This is maybe the most important role in which investors act. They leave, almost instantly and mitigate their loss. In oil and gas what we heard was the producer bureaucrats mouth in chorus that they had $x.xx billions on their lines of credit they would use. The window of opportunity to access those lines of credit have been closing for a few years now. They seem to be accelerating and don’t appear to be open to anyone much longer. In the zeal to offset our argument that producers were running low on working capital and had in many cases negative working capital. Bureaucratic scammers began quoting their working capital numbers to include the amount of remaining credit on their lines of credit as part of their working capital. Such financial innovation, once again.

In all of the years that I’ve worked in oil and gas I’m at a loss to remember a time when the discussion in the industry revolved around success and failure. The concept of profitability was raised by us in August 2003 and we have paid dearly for the introduction of that. “Put some cash in the ground,” “build balance sheets,” “pipelines,” “OPEC are at fault,” “praying for a cold winter” the list goes on. Don’t see any discussion of profitability, and the criteria of success or failure can’t be assessed in these talking points either. 

The question does arise now that producers are finding the effectiveness on commodity prices of shutting-in production. What will they need People, Ideas & Objects for? Think of the junkie looking for his next fix. This junkie being a further step down from the comforts of living in a dumpster. Costs are piling up unpaid and they’re unable to get things done as they should. What will compel producers to continue to hold off their production until all of the “unrecognized capital costs of prior periods” are accounted for? (Or the term that we call property, plant and equipment on the bloated balance sheets.) Where will any production discipline come from and how will it be implemented when no one knows or understands what their real costs are? We’ve seen an attitude of bureaucratic entitlement overtake the industry in these past decades. Suggesting that they’re profitable, based on the junk accounting they’ve been feeding investors, and therefore it’s not their fault or responsibility that they’re in the condition that they’re in. It’s for others to deal with and somebody needs to save them. Industry has fallen so far down in such a very short period of time. A decade was all that it took to make the industry the worthless, listless, rat infested, garbage dump that it is. Yet producer bureaucrats just continue to cut away at the one resource that still has blind faith in the opportunities they were once promised. More to the point is, do we make these personnel cuts or miss the payroll and have everyone leave. Missing payroll would terminate the firm instantly. A decision that was obviously made at Chesapeake where they asked themselves “do we skip out on payroll or miss the $10 million interest payment? 
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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part X

Many have argued with me that the Preliminary Specification will have the effect of raising prices of oil and gas across the globe for the remainder of the oil and gas era. Which is true. Where else will the industry find the cash resources to fund itself? Oil and gas as commodities have now been proven to fall within the price maker category. Not that this is a tool to raise prices precipitously and for no reason. But to ensure that the industry imposes the desperately needed production discipline that has been missing from their operating methods for the past decades. In the shale era, this lack of production discipline is rapidly leading to the demise of the industry. The cash to fuel the industries resources in terms of the various stakeholders has not been a concern of our good friends the bureaucrats. They have been satisfied with their take at the expense of everyone else. The shareholders, bankers, people within the industry and service industry, but also the tertiary industries and general economy have had to suffer due to the lack of financial resources that are generated by the oil and gas producers. This has also been at the costs of innovations that would mitigate the price increases the consumers may face, and reduce the inherent environmental difficulties that are now present in hundreds of billions in somewhat orphaned abandonment costs that have not been conducted but need to be. Where is the money to deal with those costs? The taxpayers outside of Canada are not going to undertake that. This also leaves the difficult question of how the complex and costly future capital expenditures are going to be funded to ensure that the economy is not short changed in terms of its demand for energy. Investors and bankers are now wise to the manner of the bureaucrats. They’re not fooled repeatedly, and it would be unwise to continue attempting to do so. It is the most powerful economy that will be the largest consumer of energy, always. Oil and gas will always be a significant contributor to our energy makeup. I guess we should thank the bureaucrats for their consideration of all of these demands when they were on their personal “journey of acquisition.” If we critically evaluate the oil and gas industry today what if anything about this situation appears temporary to you?

I would suggest that we review what the real cost of energy is today and take in consideration what these costs are and ask if they are reasonable? Soon after being elected Premier of the province of Ontario, Doug Ford stated that he was going to call all the heads of the major oil companies, get them in one room and ask what’s going on, and specifically why were Ontario consumers paying more than what Americans were. Surprisingly this was all we heard about this rant coming from the newly elected. It is true that Canadians pay about 30% more for their gasoline than Americans do. But why is that? Someone must have quickly pointed out to the newly elected, Ontario and Canadian government taxes, but also American’s like to tax gasoline heavily too, and therefore are responsible for high gasoline prices and these trans border price differentials. If the price of gasoline is going up as a result of implementing the Preliminary Specification, in order to support the broader energy industry infrastructure, to deal with the abandonment costs and future capital costs of bringing on the more difficult and challenging energy, why would the government take an increase as well? 

If we are going to stay with market based economies then we should begin to operate based on market signals. The price of the commodities that the producer receives is all the information that the producer needs to know. It contains the global supply of oil, the reserves, the storage capacity, the state of inventory and the level of demand. All within that price. If that price provides the means in which to produce profitably, based on the standardized and variable cost accounting and administration provided by the user community and their service providers, then the property will continue to produce. Just business, which begs the question what is it that the industry has been doing? Managing and controlling their costs so that they stay below whatever proceeds arise from full production. Also known as the high throughput production model. This method is how the industry is configured today. In an environment where oil and gas is scarce it may have provided some value, however we don’t know as a result of all the shenanigans that have been going on. In an environment where oil and gas are in abundance it’s principle of full production to offset the high overheads is out of step with our current reality. 

What the Preliminary Specification relies on is our decentralized production models price maker strategy. The decentralized production model seeks to provide production only if it’s profitable. Converting all of the Joint Operating Committees costs to variable costs, enabling the oil and gas producers to move up and down their production profile and be profitable at all times. The difference between these two methods is the production discipline that is inherited through the decentralized production models ensures only profitable production is produced. Any unprofitable production only dilutes the producers corporate profitability, and would therefore be shut-in which would incur a null operation, no profit but also no loss. People involved in this oil and gas industrial complex need to see the producers perform. People’s commitment will now be contingent on the ability of the industry to transform their performance. Boom and bust cycles should have been worked out of the industry long ago. Expecting people to succumb to this is only testament to the greed and foolishness of the bureaucrats. We see other industries laying off some staff due to being shut down from the virus. These are temporary, and people know it's due to exceptional circumstances beyond anyone’s control. Why does oil and gas consistently do this to people who have been educated in specialized industry disciplines, placed their careers at the hands of bureaucrats and only after twenty years of kids and mortgages do they find themselves on the street?

Getting back on track now, it is the application of this accounting information process that will be the responsibility of the service providers on a whole. Providing standardized, objective and variable services will be their purpose as we mentioned in our previous post. It will be inherent upon the producers representing the Joint Operating Committee for the property to adhere to the production discipline that is afforded them through the decentralized production model price maker strategy. The production discipline I would think would be applied at the 100% working interest or Joint Operating Committee level and involve the entire properties operation as the determination of profitability. Each producer's individual production may be profitable or not and have to be dealt with the result of the voting rights spelt out in the Operating Procedure. Nonetheless the service providers are providing an important role in facilitating these operational decisions based on actual, factual accounting information that is standard across the industry, objective and based on variable costs which contain the detailed revenues, costs of capital, operating, royalties and actual overheads incurred. 

The accuracy and timeliness of the costs of their service provider fees will be the majority of the Joint Operating Committee overhead costs and they will be far more efficient than what each producer is incurring today. What is done today is that each and every producer has to maintain the administrative and accounting resources to meet all of the regulatory and reporting requirements that the producer has. These fixed administrative and accounting costs are replicated exactly in each producer. However none of these costs are shared or shareable outside of the producer. The effectiveness and efficiency of these G&A costs are a major impediment to the profitability of the industry due to the low utilization of these resources. I would suggest that the industry may have been able to attain a 40% efficiency. This is due to the lack of the application and resources to apply any enhanced specialization or division of labor. Whereas the service providers will be able to strive to achieve 100% efficiency at all times and be able to come close to that due to their very advanced state of specialization and division of labor. But also their other competitive advantages of quality, automation, leadership, innovation and integration. I should also point out that the principle of each service provider is a user community member in the People, Ideas & Objects user community and therefore able to directly change the software process that they manage in ways that enhance their competitive advantages, software and services but also the producers profitability and efficiency. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Friday, June 19, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part IX

We continue to process user community applications for the part-time positions of users in People, Ideas & Objects user community. The application process is spelt out here. These are the critical positions in which the Preliminary Specification will be defined, refined and built based on the knowledge, understanding, skills, experience and ideas of the community. These people will collaborate in their areas of expertise with other members of the community and general population of the oil and gas economy. Gathering, innovating and presenting the needs of the software to our developers. Developers who are authorized to listen to the user community exclusively for input. Users are the critical resource of the oil and gas industry that will ensure that the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas producers are always provided with the software and services needed to fulfill that criteria. Ours is a dynamic offering that avoids the locked-in, software driven, organizational constraints to industry change. If this interests you, preparation of your application should be well on its way. We are looking for a total population of approximately 3,000 user community members. It is also the user community members that we are looking exclusively to, for the development of the service provider organizations that are necessary to fulfill the dynamic nature of the industries operations. The user community member will be the principle behind the service provider. It will be within that organization that the user community member earns their primary sources of income. 

It will be through the service providers where the people and organizations that the administrative and accounting resources of the producers will be reallocated to. There they will manage one process on behalf of the entire industry as their client base. Using specialization and the division of labor, the software that they develop with People, Ideas & Objects to ensure that a standard accounting and administration is conducted across all of North America’s oil and gas properties. This standardization is critical to ensure that any production that is produced is deemed to be profitable, then the producer is ensuring their corporate profits are the highest possible by only producing profitable production. And that determination of profitability is the standard that was applied to all their properties as well as all other production in North America. All producers therefore know that the criteria used to evaluate profitability, and hence production, is consistent throughout the industry. 

In addition to being standard across the industry service providers will be offering producers there services on the basis that their costs are variable. If the property is shut-in as a result of not being profitable, then that property will not have any of the service providers receive any data through the Preliminary Specification that will cause them to conduct any work, or generate any billing for that property. Creating for that producer a null operation for the property, no profit but also no loss. And ensuring that all the costs of oil and gas exploration and production are captured in the prices that are passed onto the consumer through People, Ideas & Objects price maker strategy. Particularly the capital costs, to ensure they match the timeliness and recognition that is necessary in this era of rapidly declining shale formations. It is in this way that shutting-in any unprofitable properties will stop diluting the producers corporate earnings from their profitable properties. Enabling the producers to achieve the highest level of profitability that they can achieve. Shut-in reserves will be saved for the time in which they can be produced profitably and those reserves will not have to carry the increased burden of making up for the continued losses if the property were to continue unprofitably. The commodity markets would also find their marginal costs when the unprofitable production is removed from the market. The effectiveness of removing production from the market during the coronavirus validates this theory. Consistent application of this process across the industry, always, would enable the oil and gas’ greater economy to fulfill its responsibilities of abundant and affordable energy to the consumer for the remainder of the oil and gas era. A key point as the costs of each incremental barrel produced increases.

What People, Ideas & Objects ERP software will be providing to the oil and gas industry is the explicit knowledge that is captured in the ways and means of industry operations. This will be nothing more than an aggregation of what is already known and available elsewhere, repackaged in our offering through the efforts of the user community. Not to belittle our role here but that is the role that software plays in society. The value lies in the tacit knowledge of learning by doing as well as a myriad of other definitions contained here. It is the critical component of the process that we are all undertaking in making the oil and gas industry dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable. To not approach the source and application of both explicit and tacit knowledge in the changes we are making would lessen our chances of success. The user community and service providers are the source and application of tacit knowledge, and therefore the keys to success. This has been the perspective of People, Ideas & Objects since the beginning of our efforts in August 2003. If you’ve read the Preliminary Specification you can see clearly the impact that the Agile Manifesto (2001) has had in the development of the software and services that are needed to make the industry and producers dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable. Specifically the manifesto’s most applicable rules that apply to the user community and their service provider organizations are numbers 1, 2, 4, 5, 11 and 12 which are as follows.
1) Our highest priority is to satisfy the customer through early and continuous delivery of valuable software.

2) Welcome changing requirements, even late in development. Agile processes harness change for the customer's competitive advantage.

4) Business people and developers must work together daily throughout the project.

5) Build projects around motivated individuals. Give them the environment and support they need, and trust them to get the job done.

11) The best architectures, requirements, and designs emerge from self-organizing teams.

12) At regular intervals, the team reflects on how to become more effective, then tunes and adjusts its behavior accordingly.
By no means are these the only rules that we’ve applied, these are only the ones that I’ve highlighted today for the purpose of the user community and service providers. One can also see that there is a role for the producers as well. They’ll only get out what they put into this process. If they decide to sit back and wait for others to carry the freight then they’ll be sorely mistaken when it comes time to use the software and services. It will be far more advanced than what they can comprehend immediately and they will therefore fall back in terms of their performance. In the future it is not that critical to own the oil and asset as it is to have access to, and be able to function with the software and services that make the oil and gas asset profitable

People, Ideas & Objects user community and their service provider organizations are the industry structures that need to be built in order to make the changes in the industry to ensure that everyone can prosper. “Can” being the appropriate word since there has to be a willingness to participate. Providing the profitable means of oil and gas operations to the dynamic, innovative, accountable and profitable oil and gas industry. Does anyone argue the critical role real profits provide everyone in an industry? They are the only reason for the existence of the industry and the pursuit of cash flow has diverted the attention away from the value that profits provide, and now everyone is suffering. Accounting is about performance, and ours will be a standardized and variable service measuring the timing and accuracy of the producers performance. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part VIII

The process of bankruptcy at Chesapeake will seek to deal with the $9.0 billion debt burden the company has incurred. With negative shareholder equity of $3.9 billion, and negative $442 million in working capital there will be no room to maneuver. The Motley Fool has an analysis that is worthwhile to review. All of this occurred during the shale heyday which was also a time of “easy money” or a period where interest rates were negligible. This is the future of the North American producer. If not bankruptcy such as Chesapeake and the few that have already pioneered that route. But delisting as what happened to PennWest, or as they called themselves Obsidian. Or Pengrowth which was purchased for a nickel a share. A Canadian nickel at that. These, as are other companies in the industry, are trading at such small percentages of their former glory that it’s even too painful for me to bother to calculate. Usually one or two companies hit hard times in an industry and are culled from the field. Why would anyone pay over $9 billion for Chesapeake? These are the albatrosses that have been incurred in the competitive environment where “building balance sheets” becomes all the rage. With the expansion of their assets producers did not see any cash being returned due to the low commodity prices producers were charging. To offset those big, bold, beautiful balance sheets that now hold 80% of property, plant and equipment, 9% are inventories and accounts receivable the rest in other assets and goodwill. These “assets” which are really only testaments to the spending spree, are therefore offset with ever expanding volumes of debt and eroded investor contributions. They represent in People, Ideas & Objects opinion the only value remaining in the industry, the unrecognized capital costs of past production, which might be recoverable in the form of cash in the future. How did, and could this disaster happen?

What producers need yesterday is a ready supply of cash. And the only form of cash is more production, which leads to further deterioration in the business but might help with the rent, the lights and payroll that are all due tomorrow. Production discipline in this environment will not be the principle that producers stand by for the next decade. Overproduction will continue until the last producer falls into the same pit as the three mentioned above. 

In the meantime people from every walk of life are thrown into a dilemma as to what to do. You could stay with that promise of big money from the producers. Or take what you’ve got and rebuild your lives elsewhere. That’s what we did in our role as investors, didn't we. We didn’t like being treated poorly and our money used to fuel the lifestyles of the rich and famous. So we left and headed to other industries. And hasn’t that worked out. The NASDAQ has recently been in record territory over 10,000 points, the S&P Oil and Gas Index SPSIOP is 2,277. (NASDAQ was 1,700 in February 2009, SPSIOP was 6,133 in May 2010 and 12,642 in June 2014.) And the NASDAQ used to be considered the dead zone 20 years ago. But the future is inevitable for Chesapeake as it is for the industry. What producers need to do is simple. Recognize how they’ve destroyed the industry and the need to rehabilitate it. Stop lying, blaming others, making excuses and scapegoats and instead take responsibility and act to resolve these issues by funding and building the Preliminary Specification. This will be the most effective way in which they can mitigate their current risk and potential damages. Then operate the industry on a profitable basis for the next decade and prove to the world that this past performance is behind you. 

The industry as it stands today is worthless. The whole point up until now was to find oil and gas reserves. What value do these reserves have? Nothing, if they can’t be produced profitably their present value is zero. Right now they can’t be produced for as much as their operating costs, and they’re almost always produced well below the point of break even. Chronic negative present value. And these reserves are backed by debts that are very highly leveraged. Therefore the sum total of these bureaucratic activities of the past four decades is that the industry is worthless, a drain of investor and banks cash and the banks will always have to be paid first for the vast amounts of disproportionate debt they’re owed. This unfortunately is the reality of the industry's state of affairs. There are no alternatives or opportunities that I can see during the next decade. And this next decades scenario assumes that remedial action is taken today. If it's not...

The belief of the bureaucrats is that investors will swoop in and find great deals now. This is a fallacy of monumental proportions. What the investors see in the industry is representative of a person living in a dumpster, which in Chesapeake’s case is also $9 billion in debt. This individual was once famous and powerful for heading an oil and gas company. Born of the pedigree necessary to find the reserves, they just need help to get out of the dumpster. Is that where and when you throw another billion or two at them? Or, do you hand them your card and say if they ever get back to where they once were to give you a call. It’s about performance, not promise. They didn’t end up in the dumpster because of their high performance. Why would you continue to subsidize their poor performance? Why would you invest in dumpsters when you can make real earnings elsewhere? Oil and gas needs to prove they have the wherewithal to deal with their issues. Taking care of someone on life support because they have an alleged history but refuse to accept they’ve made and continue to make mistakes. That they don’t listen to anyone and continue in their destructive ways, doesn’t appeal to anyone. The only thing that will help in these kinds of situations is the humble approach of looking inward and dealing with what is found. 

I know, organizations don’t change, but people do. What we, as concerned individuals, can do is rebuild our own oil and gas industry to replace this bunch and do so in the vision of the Preliminary Specification. Why not, I am at a loss to find one aspect of the industry that is operating efficiently and profitably. Producers may argue they're not living in dumpsters, but they’re quickly learning. I originally gave them until August 31, 2020 to face their ultimate demise but I think that timeline will be shorter. There is not much time for them to act. And if they don’t, they’ll have no support from anywhere. I’ve spelled it out in this post quite clearly, preaching what each step they need to take. So, let them surprise us and see them do what is necessary. 

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.

Monday, June 15, 2020

"Organizations Don't Change, People Do," Part VII

People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification presents a different vision of what the industry provides its stakeholders. Profitability in the real sense, is necessary in order to ensure that everyone is well established and taken care of throughout their careers in the greater oil and gas economy. This way they can maximize their contribution to the economy and ensure that they can build a life for themselves and their families that will be uninterrupted by unnecessary disruptions due to abuse and neglect by others, or as we call them bureaucrats. Ours is a different vision than the one that has brought the industry to the point that it is today. Ours uses the capitalist system in its expanded role of ensuring all stakeholders are considered in the process of exploration and production of oil and gas. Without profitability in the real sense, vs. what we have today, nobody is winning other than the select few who have put the entire complex in jeopardy, the bureaucrats which consist of the C Suite and Directors. 

Stretching everyone to their breaking point is a necessity that happens now and again as challenges are faced within any industry. The fact is the people who are employed in oil and gas have had to “put in 110%,” “make the effort,” and “we have to push through” constantly without any measure of normalcy other than the times where they're laid off. “It’s boom or bust” don’t you know. Which is a ridiculous assertion in the 21st century. Producers should now understand that this has been, and is, unsustainable and inappropriate. We have a concerned and exhausted workforce that knows there are few replacements standing in to take their place. In addition to the exhaustion of the people, there is no cash in the producers which makes all the issues exponentially more difficult. There is no conceivable way for these bureaucrats to comprehend what it is they’re doing wrong. Or is it just guilt and insatiable greed that keeps them hanging on to their old ways? Why in the 21st century would anyone run a primary industry this way?

With the amount of work that needs to be done in the industry, where is the cash coming from to do this work? If we can’t even capture the operating costs incurred to produce, we can’t capture the past capital that has been invested. And we can’t begin to think what will be required for the future capital demands of the industry. Where does the cash come from to manage this demand? Bureaucratic attitudes are that investors and bankers will be so enamoured with their big, beautiful balance sheets that they’ll give them all the money they’ll ever need. Although we’re looking at this issue from the perspective of today, tomorrow is not another day. It is delusional to believe that this bunch can make any headway in this direction based on their current and past performance. 

We noted in our white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” That any commodity that is subject to the characteristics of a price maker, such as oil and gas, would be invoking price destruction by producing below the technical definition of breakeven. Which involves all of the costs associated with oil and gas exploration and production, including capital. Producers today feel that trading the commodity for the price of its operating costs is the acceptable business that they’re presented with. But what we have in oil and gas is an entire industry that has produced everything, everywhere and always below the breakeven cost for the past four decades. Eroding the prices of both oil and gas commodities across the globe. It is in this graph that the production discipline that the industry must adopt, and can adopt through the implementation of the Preliminary Specification, where nothing is ever produced below a properties breakeven point. Providing the producer with the most profitable means of oil and gas operations by ensuring that none of their losing properties dilute the earnings of their profitable properties. Saving their reserves for a time in which they can be produced profitably and those reserves will not have to carry the incremental costs of the additional losses that it would otherwise incur if it continued to produce. And the commodity markets have the marginal production removed from the market and therefore find the marginal price.



The oil and gas industry is a capital intensive business therefore it follows that most of the costs that are passed onto the consumers would therefore be capital in nature. Bureaucrats believe that capital costs are to be collected, saved and cherished on their big, beautiful balance sheets. Which is nothing more than the industry wide talking point for their scam. The current myopic and short term focus has the entire industry on bucket brigade patrol. There is no concept of tomorrow and there is certainly no concept of success or failure, strategy or vision. Not only in terms of how the future success of the industry will be achieved and wholly attributable to the people that will be involved. Those costs between the breakeven point and shut-in price are capital in nature and I can assure you that 70% of these costs are a result of paying for the work that people are doing. It’s also been a result of these people that have provided whatever success that was achieved in the past. Working against the bureaucrats chronic abuse and misuse. (The bureaucrats apparently are grateful and thank us for all that has been provided to them.) Industry as it is structured today doesn’t have the wherewithal to make the changes or the organizational structure to reap any benefits of any future scenario.

After the first quarter reports we learned that Shell had cut their dividend substantially. The first time their dividend has been cut since World War II. Noting that the virus had made unknown, permanent changes in the way that people will be working through technology. Others did not follow and we see now BP follow through on their promise of cutting more people. A simple choice of who do you see suffering the most under the current conditions, the investors or staff? On June 8 the BP CEO Bernard Looney announced the following.

BP has announced plans to cut 10,000 jobs following a global slump in demand for oil because of the coronavirus crisis.

The oil giant had paused redundancies during the peak of the pandemic but told staff on Monday that around 15% will leave by the end of the year.

He then follows up with an interesting quote about the current situation.

We are spending much, much more than we make - I am talking millions of dollars, every day

The second quarter reports of the producers will not be as bad as the first quarters in terms of the earnings. The scam must continue. There may even be some improvements as a result of the reversing some of the depletion that was recorded in the first quarter. Negative depletion in the second quarter will go straight to the bottom line. However what I think Mr. Looney is talking about is the cash that BP is having to spend in order to attain the production that BP is producing. North American producers were claiming their production costs were anywhere from $23 to $36 / bbl which puts production at any time this quarter as a losing proposition, except for the negative depletion, but also a drain on cash. Cash has to be hemorrhaging out of the industry at such a pace that heads are spinning. 

The justification for the Preliminary Specification is evident to all who are knowledgeable in the ways and means of the oil and gas industry. There are many motivations for those that are not interested in continuing their employment in the industry and we understand that decision. There are many people who share my concern and are as adamant that the solution needs to be undertaken quickly and efficiently. These are the people that we see as members, and potential members of our user community.  

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 have published a white paper “Profitable, North American Energy Independence -- Through the Commercialization of Shale.” that captures the vision of the Preliminary Specification and our actions. 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 587-735-2302 in Calgary or 713-965-6720 in Houston or email here.