We're likely in for a volume war until the next scheduled OPEC+ meeting in June, according to Rystad Energy.

We’re likely in for a volume war until the next scheduled OPEC+ meeting in June, according to Rystad Energy.

If no agreement is reached then, exploration and production (E&P) companies are likely to “slash” capital and operational budgets to make up for “significantly lower cash flows”, the independent energy research and intelligence company revealed.

The total capital and operational expenditure of E&P companies is likely to be cut by $100 billion in 2020 and another $150 billion in 2021 if oil prices remain at a $30 level, a Rystad Energy impact analysis outlined.

Overall oilfield service purchases, which Rystad Energy previously expected to remain flat year-on-year, are forecasted to drop by 8 percent this year if oil averages $40 per barrel and by 15 percent in a $30 per barrel scenario. If OPEC+ continues the volume war into 2021, we could see additional 2021 spending reductions of 7 percent at $40 oil and 11 percent at $30 oil, Rystad revealed.

“Now the E&Ps will turn every stone and cancel every single non-revenue-generating activity,” Audun Martinsen, Rystad Energy’s head of oilfield service research, said in a company statement.

“Unfortunately, this volume war, if it continues throughout 2020 and 2021, will lead to a massive wave of bankruptcies and consolidation in the service market, whose debt obligations are set to grow 27 percent into 2021,” Martinsen added.

OPEC+ is going to war with U.S. shale, according to Sandhill Strategy co-founder Katie Bays, who expressed the view in a television interview with Bloomberg on Sunday.

The Texas Independent Producers & Royalty Owners Association (TIPRO) and the Texas Oil & Gas Association (TXOGA) have spoken to Rigzone following the latest oil price crash.

OPEC is currently scheduled to meet on June 9, and a further OPEC and non-OPEC ministerial meeting is currently due to take place on June 10, according to OPEC’s website.

OPEC held its 178th extraordinary meeting last Thursday and ended up proposing a further 1.5 million barrel per day production cut until the end of 2020. The group met with non-OPEC counterparts to try to finalize the deal on Friday, but no agreement was reached.

To contact the author, email andreas.exarheas@rigzone.com