The Pakistan Oil & Gas Report
Independent 5-year oil and gas industry forecasts for Pakistan.
Original oil and gas market research and oil and gas sector trend analysis for Pakistans oil and gas industry.
Competitive intelligence, Pakistani oil and gas company rankings and SWOT analyses on international and domestic oil and gas companies in Pakistan.
The Pakistan Oil & Gas Report has been researched at source in 2007, and features latest available data and forecasts for Pakistan to end-2011 covering headline indicators for oil & gas, LNG, coal and power; company rankings and competitive landscapes covering oil & gas exploration and production in Pakistan, refining, oil & gas distribution and fuels retailing; and analysis of latest industry developments, trends and regulatory issues within Pakistan.
Business Monitor International's Pakistan Oil & Gas Report provides professionals, consultancies, government departments, regulatory bodies and researchers with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on the Pakistani oil and gas industry.
BMI's Executive Summary
The latest Pakistan Oil & Gas Report from BMI forecasts that the country will account for just 1.54% of Asia Pacific regional oil demand by 2011, while providing 0.79% of supply. Asia Pacific regional oil use of 21.4mn barrels per day (b/d) in 2001 reached 24.84mn b/d last year. It should average 25.68mn b/d in 2007 and then rise to around 29.04mn b/d by 2011. In terms of natural gas, the region last year consumed 409bcm, with demand of 620bcm targeted for 2011, representing growth of 51.4% between 2006 and 2011. Production of 329bcm in 2006 should reach 478bcm in 2011 (+45.0%), but implies net imports rising from 80bcm per annum to 142bcm. Pakistan's share of gas consumption in 2006 was an estimated 7.50%, while its share of production was 9.32%. By 2011, its share of gas consumption is forecast to be 7.98%, with the country accounting for 9.42% of supply.
Global oil demand growth is expected to be around 2.0% this year, with Asia Pacific and the CEE regions dominating. This is an encouraging rate of market expansion, given a relatively uncertain economic picture and high commodity prices. Our oil price projections for 2007 as a whole are revised upwards from the last quarterly report. We are now assuming an OPEC basket price average of US$59 per barrel, compared with the US$55 estimate provided by our last two quarterly reports. Based on recent price differentials, this implies Brent at US$62.83, WTI averaging US$61.25/bbl, and Urals at US$59.42/bbl.
Real gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2007 is now forecast by BMI at 6.4%, down from 6.6% last year. In 2008, growth is put at 6.6%, followed by 6.7% in 2009/10 and 6.8% in 2011. Several statecontrolled oil and gas companies are in the throes of privatisation, and already work with IOCs in the upstream segment. We are assuming oil and gas liquids production of no more than 63,000b/d by 2011, with the country able to pump an estimated 55,000b/d this year. Consumption is forecast to increase by around 4% per annum to 2011, implying demand of 448,000b/d by the end of the forecast period. The import requirement would therefore be approximately 385,000b/d by 2011. Gas demand is set to rise from 30.7bcm last year to 49.4bcm by 2011.
In the BMI Business Environment Ranking matrix, Pakistan receives an unchanged composite score of 30 which now ranks the country equal ninth out of 14 states included in the Asia Pacific region, alongside the Philippines. The overall business environment can be considered unattractive in a regional context, thanks to a high level of perceived economic and political risk offsetting better-than-average volume growth. Privatisation is now moving ahead rapidly, with an improving regulatory regime and a better competitive landscape. Large-scale opportunities for IOCs are limited, which means Pakistan will become of increasingly less importance to the major energy groups.
Pakistan Oil & Gas Forecast Report - Business Monitor International