Political uncertainty is clouding prospects for new drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, but Shell SHEL 1.96%▲ PLC—the Gulf’s biggest producer—is still investing billions of dollars in its waters to pump oil for years to come.
Shell’s continued ambitions in the Gulf are on full display in a sprawling fabrication yard in southeast Texas. There, the company is putting the finishing touches on Vito, its 13th major offshore project in the region, with a cost of around $3 billion, according to energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie, shared by Shell and its partner, Norway’s Equinor EQNR 3.86%▲ ASA. Later this month, three tugboats will tow Vito to waters around 4,000 feet deep some 150 miles southeast of New Orleans, where it will start pumping oil and gas from eight wells.
The investment decision on Vito was made in 2018, and Shell will need to invest billions of dollars more in years to come just to maintain current Gulf production levels, said Paul Goodfellow, the U.K. oil company’s global head of deep-water operations. He said the company is confident in a long-term future of steady returns in the Gulf, despite mixed signals from the Biden administration.
“It’s vital that we have the opportunity to restock, replenish the portfolio as we continue to invest a huge amount of money exploring and then developing projects [in the Gulf],” Mr. Goodfellow said in an interview.
President Biden campaigned on a pledge to block new oil drilling on federal territory, including the Gulf, but his resolve is being tested by steep increases in costs of gasoline and other fuels, a political liability as midterm elections draw near. Late last week, the administration outlined a delayed five-year plan proposing to block new oil drilling in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans while allowing limited expansion in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska’s south coast.
Environmental groups quickly criticized the plan as a retreat from Mr. Biden’s campaign pledges, while oil and gas lobbying groups criticized it for leaving open the possibility of no new offshore-lease sales.
Shell and rival BP PLC, the Gulf’s second-largest producer, are moving ahead with current development plans. A BP spokesman said the company was encouraged that the administration released a five-year plan, and Mr. Goodfellow said he was hopeful that the administration would proceed with Gulf lease sales.
Shell, like BP, says it is shifting some investment away from fossil fuels to lower-carbon energy sources. Shell has said it expects to decrease oil production by 1% to 2% a year through this decade and use oil and gas profits to fund renewable energy. But the process will take years, and in the interim, Shell shows no signs of slowing down in the Gulf, which typically provides about 10% of all of Shell’s global oil and gas production.
Production last year from Gulf of Mexico projects operated or partly owned by Shell was around 588,000 barrels a day, up by about 12% since 2017, according to Shell, and its fully owned share was 337,000 barrels. That is the same total volume, roughly, that the company expects to pump this year and next, according to Mr. Goodfellow. But the way the company is building new platforms gives it room to increase production in the future, he said.
Production from existing wells typically declines 15% to 20% a year, according to Shell, and just keeping production flat will cost billions of dollars. Maintaining production requires investment tied to older wells and, within a few years, discovering more oil on new leases, Mr. Goodfellow said.
BP plans to increase its production in Gulf waters, 12 years after the Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill created an environmental disaster and cost BP more than $60 billion. Last year it produced about 290,000 fully owned barrels a day in the Gulf, and it aims to increase production by about 38% to 400,000 barrels a day by mid-decade, according to a spokesman.
“Our strategy is rooted in continued investment in the region,” he said.