Latest update February 10th, 2026 12:40 AM
Feb 10, 2026 News
As Guyana cements its position as one of the world’s fastest-growing oil producers, energy giant Shell is confronting a looming production shortfall—and openly lamenting its 2014 decision to walk away from the South American nation’s deepwater potential.
The company needs either a major acquisition or a significant exploration breakthrough to bridge an expected gap of 350,000 to 800,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2035, as output from its ageing fields falls short of targets, according to Shell and industry analysts.
For years, oil majors have been restrained in topping up reserves, mindful that a swift industry transition to other sources of energy could curtail oil and gas demand. However, with such a transition lagging and demand still climbing, the focus has swung back to those with enough in the tank. Shell’s portfolio is in the spotlight because its so-called ‘reserve life’ – or how long its proven reserves can sustain current output levels – is equivalent to less than 8 years of production as of 2025, from 9 a year earlier, which was its lowest since 2021. This compares with over 12 years each at Exxon and TotalEnergies at the end of 2024, data by Wood Mackenzie shows.
A shorter reserve life increases pressure to buy assets or to have a big exploration success to grow or maintain production. Shell has pledged to grow hydrocarbon output by 1% a year through the decade while keeping crude volumes flat. It is betting long-term on a huge liquefied natural gas market, aiming to boost its LNG sales by at least 5% a year, albeit not necessarily underpinned by its own output. Total reserves at Shell dropped to 8.1 billion boe, the lowest since at least 2013. Chief Executive Wael Sawan warned investors last year that declines across Shell’s portfolio would leave a 350,000 boed gap by 2035 between its production goals and what its current assets can deliver. Shell’s reserves hit their lowest at least since 2013 in 2025 at 8.1 billion barrels of oil equivalent.
The tightening resource base follows years of retrenchment, including Shell’s exit from U.S. shale in 2021 and from Guyana in 2014, two regions that underpin rival Exxon’s growth plans.
“I wish we hadn’t walked away from Guyana when we did,” Sawan said on Thursday.
easing fears of a potential conflict that could disrupt oil supplies in the Gulf. Shell was ExxonMobil’s first partner in the Stabroek Block holding a 50% stake, but it abandoned its partnership with the US oil major around 2014, prior to the major 2015 oil discoveries.
Shell determined at the time that the risks were too high, leading Exxon to bring in Hess and CNOOC as partners.
Indeed, Shell has already tried to bridge some of the expected shortfall in output. In March, Sawan projected a 100,000–200,000 boed gap by 2030, as its mature fields are set to produce less. The company says investments in U.S. Gulf, Brazil, Nigeria, Angola, South Africa and Namibia, and field improvements have largely covered that near‑term shortfall.
But Sawan offered no updated figure for the post‑2030 gap, and Shell declined further comment.
Analysts are skeptical that incremental projects alone will get Shell to its desired production level. “Absent M&A in the near term, we expect these concerns over [production] longevity to linger,” said RBC’s Biraj Borkhataria.
Equity analyst Irene Himona from Bernstein called Shell’s reserve life very low and said a renewed focus on exploration is needed. Sawan said he was “less pleased” that Shell had yet to deliver a major discovery, but did not want to add assets just for the sake of volumes.
Wood Mackenzie expects Shell’s output to fall sharply from 2028, with free cash flow in its gas and upstream units weakening from 2032. Shell’s production is likely to drop by 800,000 boed in a decade based on its current portfolio, said Wood Mackenzie’s vice president of corporate research, Luke Parker. It currently produces around 2.8 million boed. “Shell’s biggest challenge, from our perspective, is that it doesn’t have the portfolio to support its strategy to go longer in oil and gas,” said Parker. How many years do the majors say they can keep up their current rate of production from existing reserves that have a very high chance of being commercially viable? UBS estimates production will drop to 2.5 million boed by around 2035 without further action, leaving a gap of about 400,000 boed to be filled through asset purchases or squeezing more from existing fields. (REUTERS)
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Your children are starving, and you giving away their food to an already fat pussycat.
Feb 10, 2026
Kaieteur Sports – Guyana’s Men’s Under-17 team battled well but came up short against host nation, Honduras, when the two teams met in their Group H encounter of the 2026 Concacaf Men’s...Feb 10, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – For five years, from 2020 to 2025, the PPPC perfected a parliamentary habit that passed for strategy. It was not subtle, nor was it particularly clever, but it was effective in the way that repetition, delivered with conviction and contempt, often is. In every major debate in...Feb 01, 2026
By Sir Ronald Sanders (Kaieteur News) – When the door to migration narrows, the long-standing mismatch between education and economic absorption is no longer abstract; a country’s true immigration policy becomes domestic — how many jobs it can create, and how quickly it can match people to...Feb 10, 2026
(Kaieteur News) – They said he couldn’t talk. He spoke. Proved them wrong. Hostiles said he didn’t know what he was about, that his head is hard. Indeed, his head is hard, which is why he’s still around, makes fools of his detractors. Others persisted through an approach from the...Freedom of speech is our core value at Kaieteur News. If the letter/e-mail you sent was not published, and you believe that its contents were not libellous, let us know, please contact us by phone or email.
Feel free to send us your comments and/or criticisms.
Contact: 624-6456; 225-8452; 225-8458; 225-8463; 225-8465; 225-8473 or 225-8491.
Or by Email: glennlall2000@gmail.com / kaieteurnews@yahoo.com