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Deborah Byers's avatar

Good stuff as always Arjun! A couple of real points of interest. 1. While Permian peak is further out, that still means growth for E&P has to come from somewhere else (only so much consolidation will do without ability to add net new geologic resource). If growth is your objective, then you need to navigate the diversification pathway which as note, will cause some investor rotation. 2. Diversified play in E&P--you mean different basins/regions versus integrating further down the value chain? For me, I wonder if there is more room to run in the GOM. Unless we have some major shift in geopolitics I assume LATAM (Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela) is challenged which is why you focus on Canada? What would have to happen to have companies return to those regions? Do you think the time for foreign shale reserves is finally nigh?--Argentina, China, Russia. 3. What about asset light integration? Supply chain JVs with upstream and global midstream/downstream players with low access to reserves?

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Robert Barnes's avatar

Regarding the Permian and shale recovery in general, Darren Woods said at the Bernstein conference that XOM only get's about 10% recovery in shale right now but they think they can double that. If XOM can really double recovery will that have a significant effect on supply, i.e. would they license that tech to other companies such that most shale production can double recovery?

https://seekingalpha.com/article/4608790-exxon-mobil-corp-xom-bernsteins-39th-annual-strategic-decisions-conference-2023-call

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