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Chinese Oil Giant CNOOC Sees Profits Plunge By 59% In 2020

Chinese oil giants were not immune to the ravaging nature of the COVID-19 pandemic that decimated oil demand the world over, with CNOOC Ltd reporting a 59% drop in profits for 2020.

CNOOC, the China National Offshore Oil Corp., posted net profits of 24.96 billion yuan (around $3.82 billion), according to Reuters, citing the company's Hong Kong Stock Exchange filing, and revenue of 155.37 billion yuan. In 2019, CNOOC posted 61.05 billion yuan in net profit.

A 59% plunge in profits sounds ominous, but it was still in line with analyst expectations, and the company also noted that reserves and production hit record highs, while costs decreased to 10-year lows.  

"In 2020, all-in cost decreased to US$26.34 per BOE, down 11.6% year-over-year (YoY), hitting a 10-year low, and operating cost was US$6.90 per BOE, down 6.7% YoY, hitting a 13-year low, which continued to consolidate the cost competitiveness of the Company and demonstrated the excellent management and execution capacity of the management," CNOOC said in a press release.

Despite the more upbeat talk of lower operating costs, CNOOC isn't looking forward to a stellar 2021 and warned of tough times ahead still, saying, "The Covid-19 pandemic has not been completely controlled," and CNOOC continues to face "tremendous pressure in the capital market."

CNOOC is eyeing a major uptick in drilling this year, despite the fact that home-grown demand for crude is reaching a peak. According to CNOOC's outgoing president, Duan Liangwei, consumption will peak and then start to decline in the next decade. 

These drilling and spending on drilling ambitions are being driven by Beijing's desire to reduce dependence on foreign suppliers, with Chinese President Xi Jinping focusing heavily on energy security. CNOOC is not alone in this. PetroChina also plans to spend $37 billion in 2021.

By Damir Kaletovic for Oilprice.com

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Damir Kaletovic

Damir Kaletovic is an award-winning investigative journalist, documentary filmmaker and expert on Southeastern Europe whose work appears on behalf of Oilprice.com and several other news… More

Comments

  • George Doolittle - 25th Mar 2021 at 10:04pm:
    It is odd that in the name of fighting the Cold War the United States made it illegal to export oil. Coal never had this problem yet even today remains a far more valuable resource.


    And of course the irony now is just as oil has become legal for the USA to export to the World as indeed the USA does do it would be natural gas that the World demands now and with the exception of the Middle East/KSA "not oil." Incredibly the USA until very recently was exporting oil to same said ahem "Levant" ahem (even Venezuela!) with the straight up simple fact that not just the United States but the whole World is awash in oil and distillate fuels made from refining oil.

    Long $rex
    Rex Energy
    Strong buy
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