Norwegians square up to offshore challenge

A growing number of laid-up OSVs and sweeping job cuts in Norway’s offshore sector present major challenges to the owners and operators of some of the most sophisticated offshore vessels in the world. Numbers change on a regular basis but, by mid-October, about 70 offshore vessels of various types were laid up, and more would be idle in the coming days, analysts predicted.

The Norwegian economy is, of course, heavily dependent on offshore energy but in good times, the country has been prudent with proceeds. Its sovereign wealth fund is the largest in the world. And the Norwegians are used to riding the peaks and troughs of energy prices with pragmatism. Adjusting to downturns is painful in the short run, but part of life.

Norway’s west coast offshore cluster, located around Aalesund and Fosnavåg, is home to a bunch of blue-chip names involved in every stage of servicing North Sea energy companies. According to Per Erik Dalen, Chief Executive of Campus Aalesund—an educational hub at the center of the cluster—the region is home to no fewer than 13 ship design firms, 20 ship operators and 169 equipment suppliers.

DeBeers KlevenVessels currently under construction include a deep-sea mining vessel for De Beers at Kleven Shipyard in Ulsteinvik and what ABB claims to be the most sophisticated cable layer, also contracted at Kleven, for high-voltage cable installation. Across the bay, ship design and offshore builder Ulstein has just launched the design for a new multi-function vessel specifically targeting energy firms seeking to cut CAPEX and OPEX.

The company’s S182, a shallow vessel aimed at the South East Asia, Middle East and African markets, is designed as a platform which can be adapted for a range of offshore functions including cable laying, construction, shallow-water installation, pipe- and cable-laying and dive support. Without mission equipment, the vessel is likely to cost about $45 million, less than 40% of the company’s high-end HX102 unit designed for deep water and harsh conditions.

Meanwhile, Island Offshore – another company within the cluster partly owned by Edison Chouest – lifted subjects on a contract with Kawasaki Heavy Industries earlier this year to build a Rolls-Royce-designed combined well intervention and top-hole drilling vessel capable of a range of subsea and well functions. The UT 777 vessel has DP3, ice-class and the highest level of comfort notation.

Some might question the decision to go ahead on such a vessel at this time, but Managing Director Håvard Ulstein is confident that the decision to proceed, despite the current market, is the right one.

“This vessel will be a significant contributor to our service range and to Island Offshore as a company. We have great confidence in this project,” he says. Delivery is scheduled for 2018 or 2019 by which time many analysts believe oil prices will have rebounded.

At a recent workboat conference in Abu Dhabi, Synergy Offshore’s Chief Executive Fazel Fazelbhoy went so far as to predict oil prices could bounce back far sooner than expected, perhaps even hitting $200 a barrel within the next two years. He proposed a number of arguments, including the fact that today’s 1.5 million b/d crude surplus could easily be offset by depletion rates and cutbacks in E&P spending much sooner than expected.

Campus Aalesund’s Dalen is more cautious but nevertheless positive about the outlook, pointing out that the downturn has had little impact on innovation. The offshore energy sector may be having a tough time at the moment, he concedes, but in a longer timeframe, about 70% of the earth’s surface is ocean, 80% of it is more than 800 meters deep, and roughly nine-tenths remains unexplored.

He concedes that low oil prices are having a greater impact on the North Sea and other regions of relatively high-cost production than, say, the shallow and benign waters of the Arabian Gulf. But when oil prices rebound—whenever that may be—tomorrow’s oil and gas lies in regions characterised by the “four d’s” – deep, distant, difficult and dangerous. Norwegian expertise will be in constant demand.

Bucking the trend
Coming from two separate fishing families, life partners Rita Christina Sævik and Espen Ervik, have developed a unique business model in sharp contrast to those of offshore vessel operators nearby in Fosnavåg on Norway’s west coast. The small tight-knit community in and around the coastal town was traditionally reliant on fishing but has become a centre for offshore innovation focused on the harsh environment of the North Sea.

Today, Aalesund, Fosnavåg and Ulsteinvik are key centres at the heart of the country’s west coast offshore cluster. The cluster includes OSV heavyweights such as Bourbon Offshore, Farstad, Havila, Olympic Shipping, Rem Offshore, Remøy Shipping and Solstad.

But the collapse in oil prices is having a dire impact on many companies’ operations. Although they believe the downturn is temporary, it means laying up boats and laying off seafarers. This is a major challenge in such an offshore-oriented community.

While more OSVs head for lay-up, however, Rita and Espen’s business is thriving. Their antecedents were fishing folk, and both had fishing in their blood. When Rita became MD of her father’s company, Kings Cross AS, in 2005, the pair put their heads together to develop a new business.

Eighteen months later, Ervik & Sævik was set up and work began on the design of an up-to-the-minute fishing vessel capable of working all year round, despite increasingly restrictive fishing quotas. Thus the Christina E took shape.

She is a fishing vessel with a unique selling point. When she’s not landing catches of blue whiting, capelin, herring and mackerel from some of the world’s roughest seas during about five months of the year, the dynamically positioned vessel is deployed on sophisticated offshore operations including seismic work, subsea installation and ROV surveys.

Designed by Vik & Sandvik, with input from SINTEF, equipment supplier MMC and Norwegian state energy firm Statoil, the Christina E was built in Denmark with support from Norway’s NOx Fund. The vessel incorporates latest fishing technologies which enable large volumes of fish to be caught and kept in optimal conditions on board to get the highest prices at auction.

October was the middle of the mackerel fishing season. “We are happy with the prices and the feedback from buyers is very positive regarding quality,” says Rita. But she explains that the ship’s economics would not stack up without working in the offshore sector for up to seven months each year.

Statoil is a repeat charterer, having taken the Christina E on hire in both 2012 and 2013, and for 19 days so far this year. For the rest of the offshore season this year, the vessel has been working for ORG Geophysical as she did exclusively in 2014.

So how do Fosnavåg’s OSV owners view the Ervik & Sævik operation?

“Fosnavåg is a little place and everybody knows each other,” Rita explains. “We have very good contact and a strong marine sector. Since we are a little company compared to the others, I don’t think they see me as a competitor.”

With a strong fishing heritage, it is no surprise that Rita and Espen are diligent about working conditions. Tommy Nielsen, for example, is one of two chefs head-hunted by Rita from fine restaurants. Nielsen himself is a chef and a sommelier.

“Usually, those who cook on board are called stewards,” says Rita. “We are proud to call them chefs.”

Fine food and good living conditions are popular with charterers’ personnel. “All the charterers are very satisfied with the ship and the crew. We have ROV people who have been on board five times and charterers like Statoil and ORG Geophysical take the ship several times,” Rita comments.

So will the Christina E have a sister?

“Our plan is to develop the company in either offshore (another ship) or in fishery (buy more quotas),” Rita explains. “This will depend on how the market develops. Do not say never about something!”

Change is in the air
In the current challenging offshore oil and gas sector, offshore support vessel owners are looking for every opportunity to keep their vessels working, even if it means converting them for other markets.

Ship Design FjellstrandA good example is the Platform Supply Vessel Vestland Cygnus, which is poised to find a new life in the offshore wind market. Delivered this past April by the Fjellstrand Shipyard in Norway, the Vestland Cygnus went to work on a time charter to Apache North Sea Ltd. for a firm 60 days, followed by 30 optional days for work in the U.K. sector of the North Sea.

Now, Norway’s Vestland Offshore says the Fjellstrand AS has been awarded a contract worth around NOK 150 million (about $18 million) to convert the Vestland Cygnus into a wind farm support vessel.

The PSV will be fitted with a 134-person accommodations module, a 100 tonne/40 m offshore crane and a new walkway system for boarding of wind turbines. Additionally 1.2 m sponsons will be added on either side of the vessel.

The converted vessel will have SPS (special purpose ship) class notation.

The design for the conversion is being supplied by Wärtsilä, which provided the original design for the vessel and also supplied a complete electric propulsion system based on the Wärtsilä Low Loss concept with four Wärtsilä 20 engines, as well as an integrated automation system.

“We have developed several concepts for wind farm service vessels, both for newbuilds and conversion projects, and our design is very suitable for this vessel’s new operational profile. We have also worked closely with the Fjellstrand yard for many years on numerous projects and the cooperation between our companies is excellent,” says Ove Wilhelmsen, Managing Director, Wärtsilä Ship Design, Norway.

“The new design will enable the transportation and accommodation of a high number of people. It is important that the vessel has very good stability, even in the most challenging sea and weather conditions, so that personnel can safely board rigs or wind mills. We are confident that the Wärtsilä design meets all our requirements,” says Hans Martin Gravdal, owner of Vestland Cygnus.

Following completion of the rebuild project by the shipyard, the Vestland Cygnus will transport service personnel to and from wind farms.

The conversion will be completed by June 2016.

Atwood extends drillship contract, negotiating Brazil job

NOVEMBER 10, 2015 — In what’s become unusual in the current market, a drilling contractor today had two pieces of positive news to report. Atwood Oceanics, Inc. (NYSE: ATW) said today that

Two provisional winners in NJ offshore wind lease sale

NOVEMBER 10, 2015 — The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) yesterday held a lease sale offering nearly 344,000 acres in federal waters offshore New Jersey for potential wind energy development. The

Charter extended, LNG fueled PSV will add battery solution

Eidesvik also announced that Statoil has entered into an agreement for installation of an Energy Storage System (battery solution) onboard the vessel.

The Viking Energy was the first LNG fueled PSV in the world when it was delivered in 2003, and has been on contract for Statoil since delivery. It will not, though, be the first Eidesvik vessel be retrofitted with a battery solution.

Back in May, Eidesvik announced an agreement with Lundin Norway AS for installation of  an Energy Storage System (battery solution) onboard the vessel Viking Queen.

Eidesvik said that the retrofit agreement was possible through a targeted cooperation between itself and Lundin Norway AS. which has the vessel on hire, and lithium ion battery specialist ZEM AS, as supplier of the system.

Tidewater reports a red ink quarter

For the same quarter last year, net earnings were $60.9 million, or $1.22 per common share, on revenues of $397.5 million.

The immediately preceding quarter ended June 30, 2015, had a net loss of $15.1 million, or $0.32 per common share, on revenues of $304.8 million.

Included in the net loss for the quarter ended September 30, 2015 were:

Income tax expense in the September and June quarters of fiscal 2016 largely reflect tax liabilities in certain jurisdictions that levy taxes on bases other than pre-tax profitability (so called “deemed profit” regimes.)

Included in the net loss for the quarter ended June 30, 2015 were the following:

Tidewater will hold a conference call to discuss September quarterly earnings on Wednesday, November 4, 2015, at 10:00 a.m. Central time. Investors and interested parties may listen to the teleconference via telephone by calling 1-888-771-4371 if calling from the U.S. or Canada (1-847-585-4405 if calling from outside the U.S.) and ask for the “Tidewater” call just prior to the scheduled start. A replay of the conference call will be available beginning at 12:00 p.m. Central time on November 4, 2015, and will continue until 11:59 p.m. Central time on November 6, 2015. To hear the replay, call 1-888-843-7419 (1-630-652-3042 if calling from outside the U.S.). The conference call ID number is 40898911.

A simultaneous webcast of the conference call will be available online at the Tidewater Inc. website, (http://www.tdw.com). The online replay will be available until December 4, 2015.

COWAN’S VIEW

Cowan and Company analyst J.B. Lowe says that the quarterly report has “Modestly Negative Implications.”

Tidewater reported an operating loss per share of $0.28, versus Cowan’s estimate and a consensus loss of $0.02/sh.
“However, much of the loss compared to our estimate was tax driven; operating income of $15.5 million compared to our $15 million estimate, and adjusted EBITDA of $62 million was above our $60 million estimate,” says the Cowan analyst.

Tidewater’s loss from continuing operations of $0.28 compared with Cowan’s and a consensus loss of $0.02/sh. Results exclude a $0.67/sh non-cash impairment charge, a $0.13/sh restructuring charge, $0.11/sh in FX losses and a $0.13/sh loss on asset dispositions. Higher-than-expected taxes negatively affected the quarter by $0.28/sh compared to estimate, meaning the company would have broken even at our Cowan’s tax rate expectation.

The company exceeded  Cowan’s estimates on an operating basis, with operating income of $15.5 million coming in ahead of the $15 million estimate. Better-than-expected results were driven by lower operating costs and G&A expense than forecast, more than offsetting the top-line miss.

Total revenues of $272 million were short of Cowan’s $287mm estimate, while vessel revenues of $264 million were behind Cowan’s $278 milion forecast and below the average $275 million in revenues expected on the F1Q16 conference call. The relative underperformance was driven by weakness in the Americas region, partially offset by higher-than expected results in the Asia/Pacific and Sub-Saharan Africa/Europe regions.

Vessel operating costs of $159 million were below Cowan’s $170 million forecast. Repair and maintenance costs fell sequentially as expected from $37.3 million in F1Q16 to $28.5 million (versus Cowan’s expectation of $34.7million).

Crew costs of $84 million were below Cowan’s  $86 million forecast, although this was partially offset by higher fuel costs of $17 million. Vessel cash operating margin of 40% exceeded Cowan’s 39% estimate and fell within the guidance range of 36-40%. G&A expense of $37 million was well below our $43 millionexpectation, offset by higher-than-forecast DD&A expense of $46 million (vs our $45 mm estimate).

The company-wide average dayrate of $16,039/d was 5% below Cowan’s $16,946/d forecast. Deepwater dayrates of $24,535/d were short of Cowan’s $26,067/d estimate while TS/S rates of $13,689/d were in-line Cowan’s $13,662/d forecast. Worldwide utilization of 65.7% matched Cowan’s 65.8% estimate, driven largely by the ‘Other’ vessel segment as deepwater (63%) and TS/S (67%) utilization were below or in-line with Cowan’s forecasts of 68.3% and 66.5%.

Americas revenue of $89.2 million “fell well short of our $106.7 million forecast, driven largely by lower dayrates ($20,725/d vs our $22,511/d estimate) and by lower utilization (59.7% vs our 66.1% estimate).”

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Rolls-Royce wins power and propulsion order for DP3 DSV

Being built to a new Skipsteknisk, Norway, designated ST-246 DSV, the 120 passenger vessel will be fitted with a 24 person SAT dive system and will have a 250 t offshore crane.

Under the contract with the shipbuilder signed by Rolls-Royce, the vessel will be equipped with the latest DP3 control system and four of the latest Bergen B33:45 generating sets. The total delivery also includes main propulsion, tunnel thrusters and remote controls.

The medium-speed Bergen B33:45 main engines, launched last year, offer a 20 percent increase in power per cylinder compared to existing engines in the Bergen range and comply with IMO Tier II and III rules.The B33:45 is designed to run for 25,000 hours between major maintenance when operating at average loads.

The vessel will be fitted with the Rolls-Royce Icon DP3 (Dynamic Positioning System) — the first Rolls-Royce contract for DP3 for a vessel built in China.

DP systems with classification 3 allow for safe and efficient operations in demanding conditions where any loss of position has the potential to result in fatal accidents, severe pollution or damage with major economic consequences.

The Rolls-Royce DP3 system has an award-winning ergonomic design. A unified look and feel to bridge controls ensures safe operation. The control system itself is closely connected with other inboard control systems and easy to integrate into a bridge arrangement. Among the many advantages, according to Rolls-Royce, is that it provides the vessel owner with a system that is easier and faster to install and commission. Fewer service engineers will also be required for service and maintenance of thrusters and controls later in the vessel’s lifetime.

Helge Gjerde, Rolls-Royce, President Commercial – Marine, said: “We are delighted to win this contract in the current difficult market. We are also pleased to welcome Jumeria Offshore as a new customer and we are looking forward to working with them on such an exciting and advanced ship project.”

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Pacific Drilling cancels drillship order at Samsung

Pacific Drilling S.A. (NYSE:PACD) reports that it has exercised its right to rescind the construction contract for ultra-deepwater drillship Pacific Zonda “due to the failure by Samsung Heavy Industries (SHI) to timely deliver a vessel that substantially meets the criteria required for completion of the vessel in accordance with the construction contract and its specifications.”

Pacific Drilling says it made advance payments totaling approximately $181.1 million under the shipbuilding contract, and will be seeking a refund of the installment payments.

The company inked a contract for the drillship with Samsung Heavy on January 25, 2013 that provided for a delivery date of March 31, 2015.

The cancelation comes after the October 27 news that Fred Olsen Energy had canceled an semisubmersible drilling rig order at Hyundai Heavy Industries and the October 26 announcement that Transocean, Shell ans Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co. (DSME) had agreed to push back the operating and delivery contracts of two newbuild ultra-deepwater drillships – the Deepwater Pontus and the Deepwater Poseidon – by 12 months each.

Fred Olsen Energy terminates rig contract at HHI

Today, Fred. Olsen Energy said that its Bollsta Dolphin Pte. Limited subsidiary has notified HHI that it has exercised its contractual termination right under the newbuilding contract as a result of the delay in delivery of the rig, the Bollsta Dolphin, a Moss CS 60 E, sixth generation ultra deepwater semi-submersible.

Fred. Olsen Energy says that the rig construction contract provides that on termination Bollsta will be
entitled to a refund of the first instalment paid to HHI of $186,390,240 plusaccrued interest.

The rig had been under contract to Chevron North Sea Limited under a contract entered into in October 2012. That contract has now been “mutually terminated” on “amicable terms.”

GulfMark Offshore trims its C suite

On October 21, 2015, says the filing, the company and Mr. David B. Rosenwasser, its Senior Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, mutually agreed that his employment will terminate effective October 31, 2015.

On October 23, 2015, the company entered into an agreement with Mr. Rosenwasser that, among other things, provides for the following:

The agreement also provides for payment for limited consulting services by Mr. Rosenwasser over the following 24 months.

Transocean, Shell and DSME to delay two drillship deliveries

OCTOBER 26, 2015 — In yet another indication of the slowdown in global offshore drilling activity, Transocean Ltd. (NYSE: RIG) (SIX: RIGN) today reported a mutual agreement with customer Shell EP Wells

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