This week we're going to get royal.

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Power Up

Power Up

 

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

 

By Ron Bousso, ROI Energy Columnist

 
 

Data refreshes every time you open this email. For more energy news, click here. Please send any feedback to powerup@thomsonreuters.com.

 

Hello Power Up readers,

This week we're going to get royal ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's second state visit to Britain. Amid all the pomp and ceremony of the President's events with the royal family later this week, there will also be important discussions between the two governments. The future of the war in Ukraine and tensions in the Middle East will likely be top of the agenda for President Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Energy will also be a hot topic. Britain and the United States already announced on Monday that the two governments will this week sign a landmark agreement to boost cooperation on nuclear power.

As part of this, Centrica, a British utility, and X-Energy, a U.S. nuclear reactor company, will agree to build as many as 12 modular reactors in northeast England. Separately, the agreement also envisages a $15 billion project to develop advanced data centres powered by small modular reactors (SMRs) in central England.

While these projects are major developments, they are still far from seeing the light of day, as they will face lengthy permitting processes, site licensing requirements and possible political challenges.

Nuclear power is a key pillar in the British government's strategy for reducing the country's greenhouse gas emissions and dependence on fossil fuels. The government has pledged to invest $19 billion in a new plant at the existing nuclear project Sizewell C and is advancing plans for a Rolls-Royce unit to build the country's first SMR.

In a related announcement, Rolls-Royce said it had entered the U.S. regulatory process to develop an SMR in America, paving the way for potential new jobs and investment in the U.S.

Finally, it is likely that Trump will use the visit to reiterate his call for Britain to speed up, rather than slow down, oil and gas projects in the North Sea, a politically charged topic in the UK. The Republican president, a vocal opponent of wind power, may also weigh in once again on Britain's large offshore wind sector. In January, he urged the country to "get rid of windmills."

  • Energy wars: In other news, Ukraine launched a large attack with at least 361 drones targeting Russia overnight, sparking a short-lived fire at the vast Kirishi oil refinery in Russia's northwest, one of Russia's two largest refineries. The attack is the latest in a series of Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries and energy infrastructure in recent weeks. This has significantly curtailed Russia's refining capacity, leading to domestic gasoline shortages and lower exports of diesel from the country, in a major blow to Moscow. Last week, I wrote about the significance of these attacks on the international market.
  • Stranded no more: Finally, I had a look today at how BP's recent discovery of a giant oilfield in offshore Brazil has reignited investor enthusiasm for exploration, echoing the aggressive era two decades ago when companies were thirsty for resources amid fears the world was running out of oil. The discovery - and the excitement surrounding it - signals that oil majors fears of "stranded assets" amid the energy transition may be receding.

I love to get your thoughts and comments, so don’t hesitate to contact me at ron.bousso@thomsonreuters.com or follow me on LinkedIn.

 
 

Top energy headlines

  • Exxon to offer auto-voting to counter shareholder activism
  • Oil rises as investors assess attacks on Russian energy facilities
  • UK and US to announce tech, energy deals during Trump visit
  • Citgo parent auction nears final stages as sale hearing kicks off
  • China accuses US of 'bullying' in push for tariffs over Russian oil purchases
 
 

Back to the 2000s

BP's announcement of the Bumerangue discovery, described by CEO Murray Auchincloss as BP's most significant in 25 years, sparked an 8% surge in the company’s London-listed shares in August, outperforming sector peers.

If fully developed, the enormous field could prove transformational for the beleaguered $93 billion company, which in recent years has faced leadership turmoil, strategic drift, persistent takeover speculation and pressure from activist investors. This discovery reflects that fact that BP is now redirecting cash and talent upstream, after years of downsizing its exploration and reservoir engineering teams. It plans to boost annual upstream spending by 20% to $10 billion by 2027 and keep production steady at 2.3–2.5 million barrels per day through 2030.

BP appears to be pivoting back toward early 2000s strategy – and it's not alone.

For two decades, reserve size was a key investor metric for energy companies. To grow reserves, ‘Big Oil’ firms had to ramp up exploration spending, which grew from $5 billion annually between 1995 and 2005 to a peak of over $35 billion in 2013, according to consultancy Thunder Said Energy.

But the rush slowed in the mid-2010s as shareholder returns were eroded by soaring development costs and falling oil prices.

Appetite for exploration was further dampened by the 2015 Paris climate agreement and subsequent forecasts of slowing, if not shrinking, oil demand in the coming decade. Companies - and investors - began to fear that reserves could become stranded assets never to be tapped and to ultimately become worthless.

Consequently, exploration spending by ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, BP, and TotalEnergies dropped below $10 billion annually in recent years, and companies began to downplay reserve size. Today, Western oil firms hold reserves equivalent to 7 to 13 years of current production, down from 12 to 17 years a decade ago. BP’s reserves stood at 6.25 billion barrels of oil equivalent at end-2024, 8% lower than the previous year and equal to 7.25 years of production, compared with 15 years a decade ago.

Now, of course, the tide seems to be turning, as the excitement around the Bumerangue discovery indicates. Investor sentiment is shifting, and years of underinvestment mean that Western majors must now replenish reserves simply to maintain output.

Read the full column
 

Things to watch out for this week

  • On Tuesday, the International Energy Agency releases a report on the implication of oil and gas field decline rates
  • On Wednesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration publishes its weekly data
 

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