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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Tighter reins likely on oil industry after Gulf spill


By CHRIS KAHN
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Oil companies like Chevron — which is also drilling in the Gulf of Mexico — may face tougher scrutiny following the BP debacle.

AP library photo

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NEW YORK — BP's massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has focused attention on the petroleum industry's loose regulation and failure to plan for the worst.

That is going to change, experts say.

Regulators are likely to make permitting, inspections and equipment requirements for rigs more stringent. Lawmakers want to extract more money from the industry to help pay for any future cleanups. And insurers are bound to raise rates for underwriting this risky business.

The increased scrutiny — and cost of doing business — is all worth it, says longtime oil analyst Fadel Gheit of Oppenheimer & Co.

"This is a vital industry, and we just can't allow it to self-destruct," Gheit says.

What won't change, experts say, is the industry's expanding pursuit of oil and natural gas deposits under the ocean floor. Global offshore oil output has tripled over the past decade — and is forecast to double in the next five years. The reason is simple: The best prospects lie beneath the ocean floor.

Since the April 20 incident, millions of gallons of oil have leaked into the Gulf despite efforts by BP to stanch the flow. Multiple congressional hearings have been held, and federal investigators are looking into what caused the oil rig Deepwater Horizon to explode. A government report supported President Obama's accusation of a "cozy relationship" between regulators and the industry.

Regulatory and industry responses that change the future of offshore drilling won't be known for some time. But experts say the following are likely:

• Tougher permitting and inspections. U.S. regulators may ask offshore companies to present more concrete plans for dealing with blowouts like the one that sank the Deepwater Horizon. Once drilling begins, the frequency of inspections could increase.

• Higher rates for taxes and insurance. The Obama administration wants to boost by one penny per barrel the tax oil companies pay for the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund. That could cost the industry several million dollars a year. Also, premiums could jump 25 percent to 30 percent for property insurance, while the rate on a liability policy could rise up to 200 percent, says Jay Gelb, an insurance analyst with Barclays Capital.

• Additional safeguards on drilling rigs. The Deepwater Horizon's blowout preventer failed to seal the well. Manufacturers could be forced to overhaul these devices to ensure they function at extreme pressures and depths along the sea floor. The U.S. may require more redundancies, such as the remote shut-off switches popular in Norway, to ensure the blowout preventer works, Robert Johnston of the Eurasia group said in a research note.

New safety measures will make drilling more expensive, but oil giants like BP shouldn't have trouble picking up the tab, analysts say. For example, the additional safety equipment commonly used on rigs off the coast of Norway can cost $30,000 to $50,000 more than what drillers in the Gulf commonly use. To put that into perspective: Oil companies routinely pay up to $500,000 a day to lease an offshore rig.

Some companies could be discouraged by more onerous rules, however. Greek shipping company Tsakos Energy Navigation this week said it has dropped plans to enter the deepwater drilling industry in the U.S. The CEO cited the prospect of stricter regulations.

But Big Oil — companies like BP, Chevron and Royal Dutch Shell — won't pull up stakes anytime soon.

Worldwide, offshore oil production now exceeds 5 million barrels per day, according to IHS CERA. That's 6 percent of global demand, up from 2 percent in 2000. In the U.S., nearly one out of every three domestically produced oil barrels comes from the Gulf — and BP is the region's biggest player.

Oil drilling comes with huge risks, but "we don't have alternatives ready to be deployed tomorrow," says Greg Stephanopoulos, an MIT biotechnology professor.