Over 200 oilfield service firms could become insolvent as coronavirus hits, Rystad says

Around 20% of Europe’s mid- and small-sized oilfield service companies, the vast majority of which are British or Norwegian, are set to become insolvent as the effect of the Covid-19 epidemic will hit the continent’s OFS market hard and cut purchases by about $5 billion year-on-year, a Rystad Energy impact analysis shows.

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Illustration. Author: SP Mac

The European service market, which was expected to stay largely flat this year from the 2019 level of $47 billion in Rystad’s pre-coronavirus estimates, is now facing a number of hurdles because of the outbreak. Cross-border travel limitations, supply insufficiencies, quarantines and capex reductions are only some of the market’s challenges, Rystad noted in its report on Tuesday.

“This will have a pronounced effect on the European energy service market, which is heavily dependent on its international workforce and an efficient flow of goods and services between nations,” says Audun Martinsen, Rystad Energy’s Head of Oilfield Service Research.

Most of the lost purchases – worth around $4.5 billion are expected to hit Norway and Britain, mainly within the segments of MMO, drilling rigs and well services.

Bankruptcies will have to follow as a result, especially for mid- and small-sized suppliers which in the UK and Norway add up to more than 1,000 companies, adds Martinsen. As many as 20%, effectively more than 200 companies, could become insolvent, Rystad Energy estimates. More companies could be added to this number when the rest of Europe is included.

“For Europe, this crisis is worse than the one that OFS companies experienced in 2015 and 2016 after the oil-price fall,” says Martinsen, adding that a recovery back to 2019 levels is likely to happen from 2024.

A case from Norway last week stands as an example of the potential disruption caused by Covid-19: One person on board Equinor’s Martin Linge production platform, currently in the commissioning stage, tested positive for the virus, triggering a dramatic response that saw as many as 90% of the 780 personnel being sent back to shore.

For the oil and gas industry as a whole, the virus has played a significant role in the recent oil price crash, which, combined with the volatile markets, has pushed many field development projects out in time.

This has hurt the bottom line of oilfield service contractors such as Aker Solutions, which sent out a warning last week to its 6,000 employees in Norway about likely temporary lay-offs in 2020. Such a fate could soon apply to many rival engineering houses in Europe as well, according to Rystad.


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