The Future of Energy and the Case of the Arctic Offshore: The Role of Strategic Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- What are the main factors causing instability in the energy sector? What are the main global megatrends affecting the strategic development of oil and gas companies?
- What are the main directions for transforming strategic management and planning systems used in offshore oil and gas projects that are affected by global disturbances?
- We started with a study of oil price volatility and an event analysis of oil market trends, accompanying them with a discussion on break-even points of offshore oil and gas projects in the Arctic.
- We continued by identifying the main global trends affecting the strategic activities of oil and gas companies and the challenges that oil and gas companies face.
- As a result, we present a vision of how strategic management and planning systems can be transformed to reduce the company’s dependence on a highly turbulent environment and increase its preparedness for implementing complex offshore projects in the Arctic.
3. Results
3.1. Volatility in Oil Prices and the Break-Even Point of Offshore Oil and Gas Projects in the Arctic
3.2. Global Trends and Challenges for the Strategic Development of Oil and Gas Companies
3.3. Transformation of Strategic Management and Planning Systems of Oil and Gas Companies: Key Aspects
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
- An event analysis was conducted to study changes in oil prices. Additionally, global challenges and megatrends in the energy sector were analyzed that create a new reality to which oil and gas companies need to adapt. The oil and gas sector including offshore production in the Arctic is characterized by increasing uncertainty accompanied by a variety of risks, among which are environmental, technological, and investment ones.
- Management requirements in the framework of strategic management systems were identified. These systems should be aimed at developing new business models, competencies, and the ability to strategically predict technological and organizational changes. They should also be highly responsible in terms of social and environmental challenges.
- The principles of strategic management for the development of offshore projects in the Arctic were improved. They take into account the need to face the global challenges of recent years including pandemic and post-pandemic trends. In developing strategic plans, it is necessary to focus on a large number of scenarios, develop adaptive mechanisms, and ensure that the company’s operations comply with stringent environmental regulations.
- The focus on creativity is an important point in today’s strategic management systems. In the context of growing uncertainty and an ever-increasing number of extraordinary situations, it is vital for businesses to take a creatively different approach to management. In offshore oil and gas production, a focus should be made on optimizing labor utilization on-site, which strengthens the role of digital technologies and smart systems (both technological and managerial ones).
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Sphere–A Global Trend–Key Challenges | Description | Challenges for Oil and Gas Companies | Companies’ Adaptation Tools |
---|---|---|---|
1 S&E–1.1–E, D | Growing importance of social factors in the company’s activities. A higher degree of the company’s responsibility to its employees and society as a whole |
|
|
1 S&E–1.2–H, D | Growing public concern about the environment. A higher degree of the company’s responsibility to society and the environment |
| |
2 T–2.1–A, C | Growing technological sophistication of businesses against the background of the gradual depletion of conventional oil and gas reserves; the need to implement high-tech projects; more stringent environmental regulations that both production processes and end products have to comply with |
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|
2 T–2.2–G, C | Rapid development of technologies for obtaining, storing, processing, and using data, which provides the opportunity to improve production efficiency and upgrade production and management processes |
| |
2 T–2.3–D, E | Rapid development and improvement of Internet and cloud technologies and the growing popularity of social networks, which makes it necessary to change the conduct of business principles |
| |
3 BE–3.1–B, C, D, F | A volatile and, as a result, unpredictable external environment with ongoing significant changes in prices, markets, and also technological, social, environmental, and regulatory factors |
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3 BE–3.2–B, C, D, F | A high degree of uncertainty regarding key macroeconomic parameters, especially oil prices during the pandemic | ||
3 BE–3.3–D, F | Rivalry between companies for limited areas (markets, consumers, resources) and leadership (technological), which leads to increased competition between oil and gas companies at all stages, from licensing to selling products |
| |
3 BE–3.4–F, D | A growing role of renewable energy sources in the global energy mix due to low-carbon policies becoming mainstream |
|
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1 | For nine months of 2020 based on [50]. |
Period | Changes in Oil Prices | Average Annual Brent Prices, USD/Barrel | Events that Caused Prices to Drop |
---|---|---|---|
1st price drop | |||
1985–1986 | The price for Brent crude plummeted from a record high of more than $110 per barrel that was reached in 1980, decreasing by almost ten times by 1986. | 1985–28 | Oversupply of oil production, OPEC’s rejection of fixed prices and the introduction of Netback pricing, growth in oil production in Saudi Arabia, political events in oil-producing countries |
1986–14 | |||
2nd price drop | |||
Second half of 2008 | Prices decreased by three times from the all-time record level of $140 per barrel in June 2008 to $42 per barrel in January 2009. | 2008–97 | Global economic crisis |
2009–62 | |||
3rd price drop | |||
2014–2015 | Prices decreased by three times from $105 per barrel in June 2014 to $48 per barrel in January 2015 and then to $34 per barrel in January 2016. | 2014–99 | Several events were responsible (political and other events in the Middle East, the crisis in the Chinese stock market, etc.), the main of which was the technological progress in the field of shale oil production in the United States (which resulted in signing the OPEC+ agreement in 2016) |
2015–52 | |||
2016–44 | |||
4th price drop | |||
4.1 January–May 2018 | A decline in oil prices from $80 per barrel in October 2018 to less than $60 per barrel in December 2018, with a short-term recovery and a decline to $20 per barrel in March 2020. | 2018–71 | 4.1—Growth in shale oil production in the United States and the revision of the OPEC+ deal; 4.2—The spread of coronavirus with consequences for the global economy and the termination of the OPEC+ deal (as a result, a new OPEC+ agreement was signed in 2020) |
4.2 February–April 2020 | 2019–64 | ||
2020–41 1 |
Principles | “A new reality”: the era of competition, globalization, and high uncertainty | “A new reality” + pandemic and post-pandemic scenarios = global disturbances |
Authority and responsibility | Greater independence of project managers | Limiting the number of decision makers |
Adaptability | High adaptability of the strategic planning system and integration of programs and projects into current plans | Cyclicity is not a basic characteristic. Changes in strategic decisions in one planning cycle. Planning “online” |
Scenario-building | Baseline scenario and several development alternatives | Simulating a large number of scenarios with detailed risk descriptions |
Risk mitigation | Risk assessment and management | Strengthening the risk management component: mandatory creation of insurance funds and capital |
Efficiency | Commercial (financial), social, environmental | Growth in the role of environmental and social efficiency. Competence and technological efficiency |
Focus on the environment | Environmental risk management is required | More stringent requirements concerning environmental safety. The almost complete exclusion of possible environmental damage |
Focus on creativity | Ability to make non-standard decisions and think out of the box in the context of high uncertainty | Requirements for a decision maker to be a “system integrator” with an ability to solve different tasks through interdisciplinary competencies |
Focus on digitalization | Digital transformation of management and planning systems | Faster digital transformation with the creation of digital managerial competencies |
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Carayannis, E.G.; Ilinova, A.; Cherepovitsyn, A. The Future of Energy and the Case of the Arctic Offshore: The Role of Strategic Management. J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2021, 9, 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9020134
Carayannis EG, Ilinova A, Cherepovitsyn A. The Future of Energy and the Case of the Arctic Offshore: The Role of Strategic Management. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering. 2021; 9(2):134. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9020134
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarayannis, Elias G., Alina Ilinova, and Alexey Cherepovitsyn. 2021. "The Future of Energy and the Case of the Arctic Offshore: The Role of Strategic Management" Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 9, no. 2: 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9020134
APA StyleCarayannis, E. G., Ilinova, A., & Cherepovitsyn, A. (2021). The Future of Energy and the Case of the Arctic Offshore: The Role of Strategic Management. Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, 9(2), 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9020134