Equinor ASA (EQNR) Q4 2013 Earnings Call Transcript
Published at 2014-02-07 17:20:09
Hilde Merete Nafstad - Senior Vice President of Investor Relations Helge Lund - Chief Executive Officer and President Torgrim Reitan - Chief Financial Officer, Executive Vice President and Chairman of Corporate Risk Committee Timothy Dodson - Executive Vice President of Exploration Margareth Øvrum - Executive Vice President of Technology, Projects & Drilling
Lydia Rainforth - Barclays Capital, Research Division Theepan Jothilingam - Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., Research Division Michael J. Alsford - Citigroup Inc, Research Division Alex Topouzoglou - Exane BNP Paribas, Research Division Haythem Rashed - Morgan Stanley, Research Division Jon Rigby - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division Peter Hutton - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division Matthew Yates - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division Oswald Clint - Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC., Research Division Mark A. Bloomfield - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division Irene Himona - Societe Generale Cross Asset Research Neill Morton - Investec Securities (UK), Research Division Anne Gjøen - Handelsbanken Capital Markets, Research Division Teodor Sveen Nilsen - Swedbank First Securities, Research Division John A. Schj. Olaisen - ABG Sundal Collier Holding ASA, Research Division Guy A. Baber - Simmons & Company International, Research Division Mehdi Ennebati - Societe Generale Cross Asset Research Christine Tiscareno - S&P Capital IQ Equity Research
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Statoil's Fourth Quarter Earnings Presentation and Strategy Markets Update. My name is Hilde Nafstad, and I am the Head of Statoil's Investor Relations group. This morning at 7:00 Central European Time, Statoil announced results for the fourth quarter of 2013. The press release and the presentations for today's event were distributed through the wires and through also stock exchange. The quarterly report and the presentations can, as usual, be downloaded from our website, statoil.com. I would ask you to kindly make special note of the information regarding forward-looking statements, which can be found on the last page. Today's program will start out with Statoil's President and CEO, Helge Lund, providing strategy update. Thereafter, Statoil's CFO, Torgrim Reitan, will go through the earnings and outlook for the company. This will be followed by a joint Q&A session. Please note that the question can be posted by means of telephone only, not directly from the web. The dial-in numbers can be found on our website, and the operator will explain the procedure for posing questions. Lunch will follow the Q&A session at approximately 1:15 p.m. We will continue after lunch with Executive Vice President of Exploration, Tim Dodson, who will present the exploration performance and the strategy going forward; followed by Executive Vice President for Technology, Projects and Drilling, Margareth Øvrum's presentation on project execution and cost initiatives. After the 2 presentations, we will again have a joint Q&A session. We expect to close shortly after 3:00 p.m. It is now my privilege to introduce our President and CEO, Helge Lund.
Thank you, Hilde, and good morning to all of you. Really appreciate that all of you took the time to come here today. The last few years, I think Statoil has made a good industrial and strategic progress, and I believe we are in a strong position to compete. We have a very sound financial position. We have discovered more oil and gas, conventional oil and gas, than any other oil and gas company in 2013. We have a strong resource base, and I think we have more optionality than ever. On that basis, I really appreciate the opportunity to present our plan to you today, and I look even more forward to executing on the plan. The 3 key priorities or themes of our presentation today is high-value growth, by that, I mean grow with a bit higher return to shareholders; secondly, improve efficiency, and by that, I mean that we intensify even more our focus on cost and capital efficiency; and three, to prioritize capital distribution to shareholders. So let me introduce you to some of the key numbers behind what we're saying. We will continue to grow our business. We expect around 3% CAGR in the period between 2013 and 2016, and we have good growth prospects towards 2020 and beyond, backed by a very strong resource position. But we will grow with less spend. Over the next 3 years, we will reduce our capital spend by USD 5 billion. That is 8% compared to our previous plan. And in our current plan, we expect free organic cash flow to cover dividend from 2016 at $100 oil price. Also we will deliver stable returns on capital deployed under the same conditions. Later today, we will provide you with the details of our program to enhance our efficiency. We have, as you have seen, already implemented a number of improvement measures, and we have identified now further areas for improvement. And today we launched a comprehensive program to deal with efficiency. And we expect savings of around USD 1.3 billion annually from 2016 and onwards. Finally, we will further enhance our competitive capital distribution policy. We will continue to increase our dividend payout. We will introduce quarterly dividends from 2014 and giving, therefore, our shareholders an extra payout in 2014. And we intend to use share buybacks more actively. Before I continue outlining our future prospects, let's take a brief look back. It has shortly been a decade of transformation for Statoil. The merger enabled us to compete more effectively. We have focused more on the upstream, and we have built a highly competitive resource base. And we have, throughout this period, been able to deliver returns to our shareholders above the average of our peer group. And 3 years have passed since we presented you with a strategic framework in New York, and I think you have seen our teams making progress. Our exploration team has truly delivered world-class performance with high-impact discoveries, 11 in Norway, in Brazil, in Tanzania as well as in Canada. And a few years back, many of you raised many concerns about the situation at the Norwegian continental shelf, the outlook was questioned. In the last 3, 4 years, we have seen a development better than even we anticipated at that time. And today the NCS is truly revitalized with a longer perspective. Also our project execution teams have delivered well on our project portfolio, on time and at budget, creating more stability in our performance. And on top of that, we have seen profound changes in the European gas market. We decided to move quickly to adjust and to modernize our gas contract portfolio. At the outset, this was not without risk, but it has worked. And I think it turned out to be the right move. In summary, I think we can say that the strategy has worked and our teams have delivered. The details of the 2013 numbers and performance will be outlined by Torgrim later on today. I will limit myself to give a few overall perspectives. And looking at our performance, operationally, I think we were more stable with continued safety improvements and production as expected. I already talked about our exploration performance. And we had the highest RRR at 147% since we started reporting on SEC reserves back in 1999, confirming, I think, the long-term outlook of Statoil. And remember, the recent high-impact discoveries has not yet moved into the RRR ratio. And on the financials, I think we still deliver competitive returns on capital employed. But of course, there are also areas where we need to improve. And let me start with safety. We are improving and it's a clear sign of improving quality of our operations, but we still have incidents, incidents that should not happen, so we need to continue to work hard to strengthen our performance. On security, following the In Amenas terror attack, we have addressed security more forcefully. We need to improve and we are underway with a comprehensive improvement program, and this will have an impact. Third, being the world's largest offshore operator and with 40 years of operating experience, unplanned losses are still too high, so we need to intensify our efforts to deal with that. And finally, this industry has not the best track record, in my opinion, when it comes to cost and capital discipline. And in today's operating environment, we need to step up. So let's look at our strategy. As I see it, the hallmark of our industrial progress has been our strong technology and upstream positions. And we will continue in the direction that we communicated around in 2011. And this is our roadmap. It shows you how we will move forward and how we intend to prioritize and focus. On the back of leading exploration results, we will continue to invest at a high level in exploration with the same strategy because it works. I think we have an encouraging portfolio that Tim will speak about later today. Further, we will intensify our efforts to improve efficiency and strengthen our competitiveness to deliver value from our operations onshore as well as offshore. On the project side, despite delivering major projects on time and on budget, I'm not happy, I'm not satisfied because the cost in the industry is simply too high. We therefore need to redouble our effort in this important area. And attacking this basic industrial challenge gives the opportunity to set new standards, both when it comes to profitability and return. Then moving to the midstream. We have a superior European gas position, roughly with 15% market share. As you have seen and as I already spoke about, we have adjusted to new market realities, the share of direct sales and sales on liquid hubs are on the increase. At the same time, we continue to realize prices at very good levels for European gas, and we will further capitalize on this position. In the U.S., we have in a very short time strengthened our midstream position, increasing the value of our onshore assets. We have taken positions, as you know, in gas pipelines going to Toronto as well as to Manhattan. And these are actions now providing solid value uplift on our gas positions over there. And finally, we will continue to be more active when it comes to portfolio management as part of our strategy and toolbox to enhance value. So while our direction remains unchanged, we are making some important adjustments. By introducing certain changes, we believe we will deliver improved shareholder value and returns while maintaining the opportunities for our long-term growth. Why and how can that be? We have had exploration success, therefore we can now focus on the best assets and prospects. We simply have more choices. Secondly, we respond forcefully to industry challenges related to increasing cost and capital intensity. Here we are stepping up with a very specific plan and a comprehensive set of actions to deal with this industry challenge. And also in a volatile world and in an industry that is cyclical, we need to make sure that the company can operate in different pricing environments. The adjustments and the plan that we are presenting today will make us, in our opinion, even better prepared for different price scenarios and outcomes both in terms of the balance sheet, but also in our optionality for the future. So let me now tell you how we are going to deliver on this. Growth has been a distinct part of Statoil's profile and will continue to be so. From our position of strength and now more optionality, we will continue to deliver growth. In the period from 2013 to '16, we expect, as I said, 3% annual average growth from our portfolio. Stricter priorities combined with the program for capital efficiency will help us to reduce capital spend with USD 5 billion in the period. And we will talk more about that later and, again, compared to the plan we had previously. And in a $100 environment, the plan enabled us to cover dividends through organic free cash flow in 2016. In recent months, we have analyzed how to benefit from our flexibility. We have scrutinized every part of our portfolio. We have worked hard to improve the profitability of projects, and we have prioritized opportunities that yielded higher return. And you have also seen some of our recent divestments. By focusing on the premium assets and systematically working to optimize concepts and solutions, value will further improve. We will build on our solid project execution record to deliver on time and on budget. And the result is improved profitability, taking the internal rate of return from 16 to 24, if you compare the ongoing projects in execution with non-sanctioned projects. And Johan Sverdrup is, of course, a fantastic example in this respect, and we are in the final stage of selecting the concept, and we expect an investment decision in a year's time. And I think this will be the best example of high-value barrels any CEO can talk about these days, coming onstream towards the end of this decade, delivering value for many decades to come to Statoil and also to our partners. One of the areas, I believe, Statoil stands out is on our operating experience. We have 4 decades of technology development, innovation and operations of complex offshore assets, and this is the real core of this company. In recent years, we have made good progress in improving efficiency and reducing costs. We have introduced a new operating model at Norwegian continental shelf after the merger, driving efficiency and better safety. We have increased industrialization and standardization. Best example was the current portfolio of the fast-track projects. We have taken actions, as you have seen, on the rig site to ensure capacity at good prices. And also in our North American onshore business, we have -- we are improving by taking our operatorships in terms of the drilling. We have also taken important steps over the last few years to leverage the global supplier community better. And right now we are executing a number of the megaprojects in South Korea, offering high quality at lower cost. In addition to all of these actions, we are addressing also organizational efficiency. In January this year, we decided to outsource certain staff functions. And earlier this week we announced the streamlining of our strategy unit. And our efforts have yielded results, they are measurable. And on the NCS, the field costs have been stable for 12 consecutive quarters. We have now launched an extensive corporate efficiency improvement program. We have identified a broad set of areas where we can achieve improvements, from offshore drilling to optimizing midstream assets. This is just not another initiative. It's ambitious, and it's concrete, specific, and it's measurable. In total, our improvement program give expected annual savings of USD 1.3 billion from 2016 and onwards. And Torgrim and Margareth will give you some more details on the program later in their presentations. I have discussed prioritization and efficiency and cost. In addition, active portfolio management has been an integrated part of our strategy, and you have seen us taking actions. And there is a pattern there. We continuously maximize returns from existing producing assets and prioritize the most value-attractive assets. And we will all the time evaluate whether we are the right owner of any particular asset. And in 2013 our strategy provided good opportunities for value-creating divestments in the North Sea, in U.K. and Norway, as well as in Azerbaijan. And these transactions realized significant value and released capital we can now deploy in projects with higher returns. I started my presentation today presenting our priorities and also our financial commitment to you, and let me expand somewhat on what you should expect from direct returns. In line with the dividend policy, the board proposes a dividend of NOK 7 per share for 2013, that's an increase. And following changes in the Norwegian law in 2013, the board will also propose introducing quarterly dividend payments already from this year. And subject to Annual General Meeting consent, the dividend for the first 2 quarters of 2014 will also be paid out in 2014 in addition to the 2013 dividend, giving our shareholders a 50% extra pay out in 2014. We are committed to do the efficient distribution of capital to shareholders, also using share buybacks as an integral tool more actively into the future. So what about the long term? And backed by a very strong project portfolio, we remain a growth company. We are entering into a decade of execution and project deliveries that will support the underlying growth in production, revenues and continued value creation. We have, as you know, a very attractive portfolio at the NCS, with prospects of a prolonged plateau beyond 2020 in both mature, but also in more frontier areas. And we maintain strong positions in the most attractive parts of North American onshore and offshore, Brazil, Angola and Tanzania, to mention some. And as Tim will show you later on, we have achieved early access into basins with high potential for the decades beyond 2020. And I think you will agree with me that the project portfolio and the opportunities on the slide here is a portfolio that very few oil and gas companies can match today. So this is one part of the sustainability, the long-term prospects of the business. There are also other sustainability measures, and trust is a prerequisite for sustainable long-term performance, in my view. It's fundamental for getting access to resources, access to capital but not at least, access to the best people. And trust must be earned, first, by a credible plan and by delivering results, ensuring quality in operations and, of course, a high safety performance. Second, a strong values platform, high ethical standards, following rules and regulations. Yes, compete fiercely, but we would like to win the right way. And third, through openness and transparency, engaging with all our stakeholders to create stability for our operations. These are no -- not nice to have, they're needed to open a competitive space for big companies like Statoil. And finally, a trusted company needs to be in sync with society and the general public. If we are unable to meet the most pressing issues of our time, like the climate change, that will almost be impossible. On all of these issues, there are growing demands and expectations on big companies. But I believe Statoil is favorably positioned, and we will continue to work these issues very hard because we think they are fundamental business issues. Let me close and very, very quickly summarize. We continue to grow our business, we take down the CapEx estimates, we improve our cash flow and we will continue. We will do this while continuing to deliver competitive shareholder returns. This is our plan. This is how we will move forward and build an even stronger Statoil. Thank you for your attention. And by that, I think I should give the word to Torgrim Reitan, our CFO. Welcome, Torgrim.
Thank you, Helge, and good afternoon, everyone. Today I will present the results for the fourth quarter and the full year, and I will lay out the details of our new plan. We are making important changes, entering into a new phase of tougher prioritization and a better balance between returns and growth. But first, let me take you through the results. 2013 was a year of strong strategic progress and good operations. Our earnings were impacted by divestments. However, we maintained a stable production cost. We produced 1.94 million barrels per day, it would have been 40,000 barrels per day higher if we adjust for the divestments and the redeterminations. And this is in line with our expectations. Our reserve replacement rate was strong, 147% in organic RRR. And as Helge said, this is the highest since we started to report on SEC reserves. It was 128% when we take into account the divestments. Then we have another very good year within exploration, 1.25 billion barrels from the drill bit. It's leading in the industry last year. And then we continued to deliver on transactions, more than $4 billion in proceeds, leading -- realizing $2.7 billion in capital gains. And finally, we continue to increase the dividend through NOK 7 per share this year, and that translates into a direct yield of around 4.7%. In 2013 we delivered adjusted earnings of NOK 163 billion compared to last year, this is impacted by divestments and redetermination. In the fourth quarter, adjusted earnings decreased by 12% from 2012. Solid earnings, but international results was impacted by the North American business. And I will come back to this on the segments. The quarter was also impacted by lower production, and this is as expected. Our reported cost and SG&A were influenced by increased activity, and this is related to activity-based cost, asset royalties and transportation and one-offs. So adjusting for this, our costs are around the same level as last year. We have also made adjustments to reflect the underlying performance as we do every quarter. We adjust for negative impact of around NOK 5 billion in lower fair values of derivatives and NOK 1.5 billion in impairments, and a positive impact of more than NOK 10 billion in capital gains. So all inclusive, we deliver a 14% increase in net income this quarter. So let me then turn to the segments. We continue to deliver strong results from our Norwegian business. The cost focus is paying off. And despite having more fields into production, we have maintained stable production cost for 12 consecutive quarters. We have also started production on our fast-track project #6, which is Visund North, and it is performing as expected. From our operations outside Norway, we achieved record production, ramping up production in the U.S. onshore, in Angola and Brazil. However, you will see that the earnings for these segments are down to NOK 3.6 billion in the quarter. And this is mainly due to higher gas share, lower realized prices and high depreciation in North America. The increase in DD&A is due to a high portion of production coming from U.S. onshore fields with a relatively high DD&A rate. It is worth mentioning that a significant part of the value creation in the U.S. onshore is reported in the MPR segment. For the full year, our international earnings increased by 1%. Around 1/3 of our production now comes from outside Norway. And the cash flow per barrel for our international production is on par with our Norwegian production. So we are growing internationally and it is a profitable growth. Our business in marketing, processing and renewables contributed with around NOK 11 billion last year. And for the quarter, we reported very strong earnings of NOK 3.7 billion. We see a particularly strong contribution from U.S. this quarter, adding significant value on our Marcellus gas by delivering into higher-priced markets in Toronto and more recently into Manhattan. And in addition, we have created a lot of value through LNG arbitrage. Then it's no secret that many refineries are generating losses across our industry, and our refineries are no different. This is, of course, not sustainable, and we are working hard to take out further cost in that business. And finally, we see another strong quarter for our natural gas business in Europe, achieving strong sales and realizing prices at a record level. Equity production was down 4% in the quarter compared to the same period last year. We continued to start up fields and ramping up production. However, this was more than offset by divestments, redetermination, lower off gas -- lower gas offtake on the NCS and expected natural decline. For the year as a whole, production was 1,940,000 barrels per day, and this is in line with our expectations. We generated cash flow of NOK 219 billion from our operating activities last year. This is a reduction from 2012, mainly due to lower volumes and downstream margins. However, it's worth noting that last year we paid more taxes in 2013 than the reported taxes. And this is due to higher earnings in 2012 with a 6-month delay in payments. So adjusting for this, our net cash flow would have increased by NOK 8 billion. So the net cash flow would have increased from minus NOK 4 billion to plus NOK 4 billion for the full year. So looking at our gross investments. Organic CapEx was $19 billion, and this is in line with what we guided for. We delivered a record reserve replacement through a strong effort by our organization, adding 9 new fields to the proved reserves in 2013. And all in all, 900 million barrels have been added. Shah Deniz is an important contributor. And I need to remind you that the effect of the divestments will impact RRR for 2014. This will impact the reported RRR but, of course, not the organic RRR. In 2013, we added resources of more than 2x production through exploration and increased oil recovery. And this secures a strong resource base of 22 billion barrels, and it is the competitive resource base. So then let me move to the Capital Markets Update. Okay. Today, I have 3 messages that you need to remember. First, we are high-grading our portfolio. Prioritizing hard and allocating risk investments into the most value-creating projects. We are reducing our investments by $5 billion in the period 2014 to '16. We are ensuring an organic free cash flow to cover dividends in 2016. And we are increasing the profitability of our projects. Secondly, we are increasing efficiency across our business, with expected annual savings of $1.3 billion from 2016, and making us even more lean and competitive. And third and finally, we reaffirm our commitment to capital distribution. We are growing our dividend, introducing quarterly payments, giving additional distribution this year and making more active use of share buybacks. This will give a return on capital employed on today's level going forward. And 3% annual organic production growth from 2013 to '16 on a rebased basis. And as Helge said, this is how we will move forward and build an even stronger Statoil. Value creation is our target, and we have many world-class projects, like Johan Sverdrup, like Johan -- like Bay du Nord. And the pipeline for the next decade is very solid. Our portfolio can deliver more than 2.5 million barrels per day in 2020, but we will be more selective in which projects we pursue in the near term. Therefore, we have decided to divest certain assets, more than $18 billion in proceeds over the past years and delivering around $10 billion in accounting gains. We have also demobilized some projects, saving them in the bank for later. Examples here are Eirin and Bressay. Then we optimized other projects through specific improvement programs and looking at different concepts. Johan Castberg and Snorre 2040 are examples of this. Through these actions, we significantly improve our value creation. Our future projects with startups before 2020 will give an internal rate of return on average of 24%, assuming $100 per barrel. And we increased net present value per dollar spent from 19% to 37%. This means that the next wave of investments will generate even greater profit than the current developments. And the majority of our new volumes have a breakeven below $45 per barrel. 30% of our investments are non-sanctioned, so we control the progress ourselves. You should expect that we will continue to adjust our portfolio and you will recognize the pattern. I know part of your job is to compare our performance with our peers, and I like to compete. And I'm proud of the quality and depth in our project portfolio. We have more than 100 projects to choose from. And you will see that the expected return from our prioritized projects is highly competitive. And in new developments, we lead our peer group in terms of profitability. So our job is to deliver these projects on schedule and cost. But this will be key, so let me talk about what we are doing within this area. I'm pleased that we are competitive at cost, with a low unit of production cost compared to peers. But at the same time, we must continuously improve, and that is why we are addressing the industry challenges head-on. We have put in place an improvement program that will deliver annual savings of $1.3 billion from 2016. This is included in the investment estimates going forward. And please note that the impact will be significantly larger if we deliver on the ambitions stated to the right. Margareth will go further into detail on the CapEx improvements later on, so let me just comment on our operational cost and SG&A. We will see underlying production growth until 2016. And we aim to keep total production cost at 2013 level in real terms even if production is growing. This is an ambitious target as we already have a competitive unit of production cost. In addition, we will continue to reduce operational costs at our refineries and processing facilities. And we are reviewing the entire cost base and reducing money to increase our organizational efficiency. So these improvements will impact the bottom line, and I will report on them annually going forward. We are already seeing effect on the bottom line. The staff and services projects that we have run has reduced field costs in our Norwegian business by several hundred million kroner already. And there is more to come. This is about making the right choices when we can, not waiting until we have to, and every dollar counts. Today we reiterate our commitment to capital distribution. You know our dividend policy well, and we have proposed an increase to NOK 7 per share for 2013. At the Annual General Meeting, we will propose to change the payout schedule, from annual to quarterly dividends starting this year. And this means we will pay out 2 quarterly dividends in 2014, namely, in August and in November, giving a distribution similar to 1.5 annual dividend payments this year. Given the additional distribution in 2014, we will not initiate the share buyback now. However, we expect to use share buyback more actively going forward. This will depend on our proceeds on our free cash flow and the balance sheet. We come from a position of financial strengths. We are generating strong cash flow from our producing assets. And we have reduced our net debt from 27% to 15%, while investing significantly. And at the same time, we have grown dividend and we have maintained a very solid credit rating. In 2014, we will increase our net debt slightly to around 20%. This is impacted by the implementation of quarterly dividends. Going forward, we will maintain a strong balance sheet and maintain net debt-to-capital in the area of 15% to 30%. We expect to generate around $22 billion per year on average in cash flow from operations with a gradual ramp-up. Then we have decided to invest around $20 billion in organic OpEx this year and around $20 billion per year towards 2016. And I want to mention that 40% of this investment program is related to projects starting up after 2016. Let me point out that these are gross investments, so it does not include proceeds, and we will continue to manage our portfolio actively also going forward. And we are investing into profitable growth. Around 45% of our investments will go to our Norwegian business; 60% will be related to liquids; and around 80% will be within OECD, maintaining a portfolio resilient to political risk. Finally, we expect our organic free cash flow to cover our dividend from 2016, and this will be the case also going forward. We will continue to grow our production. The prioritized projects will deliver organic production growth of around 2% between 2013 and 2014. And this is from a rebased production in 2013 of 1 billion -- 1,850,000 barrels per day as we adjust for the impact of divestments and redeterminations. Several projects are starting up this year. On the NCS, we've Gudrun, Valemon, Vilje South and several fast-track projects. Outside Norway, we have CLOV in Angola, Jack and St. Malo in the Gulf of Mexico. And we will also ramp up -- continue to ramp up production at earlier startups, like PSVM in Angola, our fast-track portfolio in Norway and our onshore assets in the U.S. Then our growth will accelerate to 3 percentage points in the period 2013 to '16. Goliat and Big Foot are the main contributors towards 2016 in addition to the fields already mentioned. Our current portfolio of producing assets is performing well. Decline is stable at 5%. As you know, our current portfolio has the potential to produce more than 3.5 million barrels in 2020, but we are prioritizing value over volume. And we have decided to create a better balance taking down investments and balance cash in with our spending. And with this in mind, we still expect to raise production to 2.5 million barrels, but we now expect this to be 3 to 4 years after 2020. And I think it's important to note that this is not a target. This is the portfolio that is there and has the ambition, and our current plans indicate that. This is a result of the decisions we have made to high-grade growth, including divestments and optimizations. I'm pleased that Statoil is performing well on the ROACE compared to our peers. Our ambition is to remain in the top quartile of the peer group. However, I am not satisfied with the falling ROACE in the industry and in Statoil that we have seen over the last years. The measures that we announced in Statoil today will reverse the trend. So going forward over the next few years, we expect to maintain ROACE and returns around the same level as in 2013. Assuming an oil price of $100 per barrel, ROACE in 2013 was 11%. And for the coming years, we expect to see our ROACE at the same level at similar prices. So let me summarize. We are making changes, prioritizing hard and high-grading the portfolio, increasing the efficiency and prioritizing capital distribution to shareholders. This gives a more balanced growth with higher returns. We have the organization and we have the capabilities to achieve this, and we have the technology and we have the asset base. And we have proven that we will deliver on this strategy, we have proven that we do. So I'm really looking forward to the next chapter. So thank you very much for your attention. And then I will leave the floor to Hilde to guide us through the Q&A session. So thank you.
Thank you very much, Torgrim. We will now open up for questions, both to the CEO and to the CFO. And we'll take questions both over the telephone and from the audience. So first of all, I'll ask the operator to explain the procedure to those who are with us on the audio conference today for posing questions.
And we'll start with the questions from the audience here in London. And we'll take the first question from Lydia. Lydia Rainforth - Barclays Capital, Research Division: It's Lydia Rainforth from Barclays. Two questions if I could, please. Firstly, on the improved distributions to shareholders, it's obviously always very welcome. But what conditions would you need to actually trigger the share repurchase scheme? Is it assessing gearing level or is it if you get $2 billion in from capital divestments, that's what you would want to return to shareholders? How will that process actually work? And then secondly, if I can push a little bit more on the costs side. Effectively, much more of it seems to be on the capital side of it rather than on the operating cost side. And I take the points around growing production, but it does seem that it's only about 2% of your existing cost base that you're planning to save on the OpEx side. So should we see this as a minimum level that you are looking to achieve and that you can take that a lot further, not to say 2016 but beyond that?
Well, on dividend, we think about our balance sheet that we should be able to, one, invest in good projects, make sure that we have a resilient balance sheet so that we can tolerate different price levels. And finally, to be competitive in the way we return directly to shareholders. We have the dividend policy that we have delivered on, I think, very precisely over the last few years. We intend to continue to do that. That is the proposal from the board this year as well. The plan, give more capital efficiency, and we indicate that we will use share buyback more actively than we have done in the past. And we tie it to the balance sheet strength, the cash flow, as well as proceeds from transactions. You would also see that we are indicating that we would like to have a single A rating, and we give certain preferences in terms of where we would like to have net debt-to-capital employed. And these are more broad guidelines, not exact numbers. But the intention today is to, again, reinforce our commitment to dividend also directly to shareholders. On the efficiency program, in a way, you are right, but there are many of the costs that eventually go into CapEx, like drilling and how we develop our projects. So if you think about those USD 1.3 billion in savings from 2013 and '16 and onwards, roughly USD 1 billion is in CapEx and the rest is on the efficiency or on the cost side, which covers operational cost and SG&A. And hopefully these processes can lead to momentum so we can capture more, but this is what we are prepared to commit to today.
And then we have Theepan, please. Theepan Jothilingam - Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., Research Division: Theepan from Nomura. A number of questions, please. Firstly, just I think in terms of investment going forward, you highlight around 20% in North America. So I just want to perhaps get a little bit more color how you split that between the deepwater, particularly on unconventional and sort of heavy oil and the onshore? And are you sort of comfortable with the position in North America as it stands? Secondly, just a point of clarity on CapEx. Just going forward, I mean, do you expect CapEx perhaps to just broadly stay flat in the next couple of years beyond '14, or is there a risk CapEx goes up in '15 before then coming down materially in '16? And again, as investors, typically there've been -- we've been given 3-year plans in the past, and cash flow delivery's largely being back-end loaded, so I just want to clarify sort of the comment around a gradual growth in cash flow from operations?
So on the North American business, they have several sort of path. One is Gulf of Mexico, which is existing producing assets, and then a portfolio of very good projects under execution by our partners in Gulf of Mexico, that will be very important contributors over the next 5, 6 years for Statoil's overall profitability, so there will be significant CapEx going into these projects over the next few years, offshore, Gulf of Mexico. On top of that, we have high-graded our exploration program in Gulf of Mexico. Tim will talk about later today, so you will get more details. Then you have the offshore exploration in East Coast, Canada where, of course, we need to continue to explore in the area around Bay du Nord. So Tim will talk about that as well. In terms of the oil sands business, we have the Leismer facility. And the next project in the oil sands business, you'd see on the slide of Torgrim, that these are projects that we need to optimize further. And then finally, you have the onshore business, the shale business and the tight oil in Bakken, Marcellus and Eagle Ford. And of course, they are significant contributors to EBITDA. And then we have to -- as we see the market develops, how much CapEx do we put into that business too. So those are the overall sort of thinking around the portfolio. In terms of CapEx, we guide on the average number, $20 billion for the 3-year's period on average. I wanted to underline also that roughly 40% of that CapEx goes into projects that will start producing beyond 2016, just to underline the importance of building also long-term growth for Statoil. In terms of cash flow from operations, you're right in making the assumptions that, that will be higher at the back end of the period than in the beginning, but we have guided then on 22 for -- on average for that period. You might want to add, if there is anything to add, Torgrim?
It will be gradually increasing towards 2016. We have new fields coming into production with lower tax, in especially the Gulf of Mexico, that will have a huge impact on the cash flow from operations.
We have the next question here in the second row, first, last.
Edward Lucas, The Economist. Can you talk about the gas arbitrage? It's proven so profitable. What is your business model? What gives you the advantage, and how sustainable is that? And secondly, I don't think you mentioned the word Russia at all, your large eastern neighbor. I'm just wondering if you'd talk a bit about your links with Rosneft and whether you see anything there that could replace the huge enthusiasm you once had about the Statfjord [ph] field.
So the gas arbitrage, we have 1 LNG facility up in the Barents Sea in Norway called Snøhvit. So we actually own that contract ourselves, that makes us able to send the gas to the most profitable market, and that's distributed with LNG. And we are pursuing projects in our portfolio that hopefully will give us more LNG. Right now we are maturing more resources in East Coast of West Africa, Tanzania, and hopefully that can be our next LNG project. Of course, there are wide price differentials between the U.S., Europe and Asia. We expect relatively stable prices in Europe. And Europe has to compete for the marginal barrels or cubic meter of gas with Asia. We expect gas prices in the U.S. to increase as there will be more demand and also some export. And perhaps over time when there are more, even more LNG coming to the market, perhaps you will see a slight reduction in Asia. In terms of Russia, huge hydrocarbon potential. We are close to Russia. In Norway, we have areas where I think Statoil has a particular competence, most notably, I think, offshore competence in harsh environment. So we have a joint venture with Rosneft that is covering the Barents Sea, part of the formerly disputed zone between Norway and Russia. And then almost 80,000 square kilometers of acreage in the Åsgard [ph] sea, so we are now running seismic in these areas and are preparing for drilling over the next 5 to 6 years. Then interestingly we have also entered into a joint venture with Rosneft onshore where we are actually using the capabilities that we have built now for several years in doing shale and tight oil in the Americas. And we think that there's a significant potential in Russia also on -- in that part of the industry. So we have worked closely over the last 5, 6 years with Rosneft. We pursued also Statfjord [ph] for many years, both in Hydro, and subsequently in -- and Statoil, and subsequently in Statoil Hydro and then Statoil. But the changes in the gas market and the cost of that project simply did not make it profitable as of now. So the resource base is huge, but so is the capital intensity. And right now it's not profitable, so we are not anymore part of that project. So either the gas market has to change or you have to make a much cheaper concept.
Michael? Michael J. Alsford - Citigroup Inc, Research Division: It's Michael Alsford from Citi. Three questions, just on the framework. Firstly, could you maybe break down what the split is in terms of the CapEx savings of 5 billion between what's been disposed of in terms of assets? What is project deferrals out of the sort of 2014, '16 plan? And then perhaps what is obviously this sort of capital efficiency point that you make? Is it simply the $1 billion that you mentioned in 2016? And then secondly, just on the kind of comment you make about the strength and profitability of your portfolio. When you look at the projects pre-sanctioned that will start up in 2020, when I look at your chart, it's just simply Johan Sverdrup and IOR projects. Is that the case or are there other projects within that number?
So if you want to take the last, Torgrim. On the CapEx and the assets, of course, we have -- we had guided earlier on 2.5 million barrels per day, and the CapEx that we guided earlier were associated with that number. Of course, the resource base and we have much more projects to that. The project list that Torgrim showed, where he had categorized in different columns, gives an indication of that. But we're not prepared to go into even deeper details on that. But I can say that we are prioritizing our project portfolio on a global basis to make sure that we have a portfolio that is efficient from a corporate point of view. In terms of CapEx savings, you're right that the program that Margareth will talk about later today, $1 billion out of this $1.3 billion in savings are associated with savings anticipated from CapEx, i.e., running future projects and drilling in a better way than we do now.
And that $1 billion is -- you need to compare that to our operated share of our investments. And in 2016, that's around $11 billion, that is 1 out of 11, so you get the size of -- and the magnitude. On the 24% and which projects included in that, it is actually 16 projects. Johan Sverdrup is, of course, there. It is a large and a very good contributor to the number, but there are many others. It's a few group of Mexico assets, fast-track projects, IOR projects, and Johan Castberg is also included in that portfolio.
Next question, please? Alex Topouzoglou - Exane BNP Paribas, Research Division: Alex Topouzoglou from Exane BNP Paribas. A couple of questions. On the framework and the CapEx, coming back to that. I think now you're mentioning the 2.5 million barrels, that's still achievable within your portfolio maybe 3, 4 years later. And I think that if we go back to the previous CapEx indication, you were saying that what you were investing was in line with the 2.5 million barrels. So the question is whether we're going to see an increase in CapEx after the 2016 period because you're still going to be chasing the 2.5 million barrels, probably 3 to 4 years later? Second question is on M&A. I think we have seen increased speculation about potential deals. Maybe you can tell us where do you see any kind of gap in the portfolio or where do you think that you can reinforce your portfolio if anything?
I'm not following all the speculations about what we're going to do and not do, but I heard this morning that we were speculating that we will acquire an exploration company. Right now I think I have the best exploration team in the world. I don't need more exploration teams to Statoil at this stage. We have a key focus now actually on maturing, developing our resource base organically. I think, nevertheless, it's our obligation as a management team, as a board, to follow opportunities in the market, both in terms of selling assets when that is right and also buying if that adds value to Statoil altogether. But I would like to send a very clear signal now that the key focus of my management team is really on executing on the plan that we have presented to you today. In terms of the 2.5 million barrels sort of ambition that we had, I think when we launched it in 2011, most people sort of questioned it due to the resource base, not anymore. I think all of you see that we can deliver 2.5 million if we want to do it based on the resource base. It's much stronger than when we launched that ambition in 2011. But I think it's our obligation to think, when our situation change, the market change, we need to change too. And with the cost increases and the capital intensity in this business, I think it's more value-creating by going a bit slower. And we indicate to you today that we will have net cash flow from operations to fund the CapEx and dividend from 2016. Our intention is to live it out within our means also moving forward. But I think also in what happens in 4, 5, 6 years, I think it's too early to say. But we want to send a strong signal again that we're value-driven, and that is the sort of the key guiding star for us moving forward. And we just indicate to you that as we see it now, the current plan gives 2.5 million in 2023. But as Torgrim underlined, this is not an objective for us. The objective is to make money, period. Haythem Rashed - Morgan Stanley, Research Division: Haythem Rashed from Morgan Stanley. Just 2 questions if I may, please. So firstly, on tax rate guidance, both for this year and perhaps longer term, if you could just say a few words about that. Particularly in the context that CapEx now lower your previous guidance, does that mean you get less of an uplift from the NCS, and what that could do to your tax going forward? Second question is on CapEx itself and just on the exploration side, what are you assuming beyond 2014? You've given guidance for 2014 exploration spend, but for '15 and '16, are you assuming that, that tails off or actually moves higher from current levels?
So I think my role on taxes is really to speak with as many governments as possible to make sure that the taxes are stable as we move forward. So maybe you want to respond to that. On exploration, roughly 1/3 of sort of our exploration activity will go into the CapEx number, that is basically as we have done it the same, so the ratio that we have had before.
Okay, very good. On taxes, going forward, you should expect corporate tax rate around 70%. We have said 70% to 72% earlier. But as we look at it now, it's more close to 70%. And that goes due to the mix in the portfolio. If you split that further, I think you should anticipate on the Norwegian business, 72% to 74%; internationally, 50% to 55%; and MPR, 50% to 60%. There are some adjustments to that outlook on tax rates.
Jon, please? Jon Rigby - UBS Investment Bank, Research Division: It's Jon Rigby from UBS. And I'll preface the question by just saying I very much like the structure of the financial structure that you're describing about the way you're looking at the business right now. But what I wanted to say was or ask was it's become evident perhaps over the last 18 months or 2 years that your thought process had changed about how you're running the company. You had a view out to 2020, but clearly the actions you were taking in terms of disposals and so forth were already jeopardizing that volume number. So you were clearly already starting to think about balance of growth and returns. So 2 questions come out of that, I think, is first is, how are you measuring value and the balance between growth and returns? What is it internally within the company that you can make the judgment call about whether you're going for the extra 1% or so of volume versus the lower CapEx that you've made that choice today? And following on from that is, can we understand the structure and the outlook that you're now providing as one that's going to be a sustaining one going forward? Because it feels to me that you did start to wander off the sort of vision that you made 3 or 4 years ago. The second question is just a particular one on one of Torgrim's slides. I think you indicated that there's some investment CapEx going into projects with a sub-10% IRR. I just wondered why you were doing those projects.
So in my view, the strategy of this company has not changed in the sense that I would like to think about Statoil as a technology-focused upstream company. I think we have steered the company in that direction very firmly in over the last 5 to 10 years. We have sold shipping. We have sold petrochemical. We have sold retail -- the retail franchise. We have sold the pipelines simply to put capital into the area where we think we can compete most effectively, and that is really on -- where we have our basic skills. So that is one part. The second part that we will like -- we would like to continue to grow our company, and there is no change to that today. But we are taking down -- we're taking the foot off the accelerator a bit and go with a little slower pace because we think that makes more sense in the current industry environment. The way we think about profitability and how we measure it, I can, unfortunately, not give you wrong number that we look at, but how we think about it is that we run every project through a very rigorous mechanical project where we test IRR, net present value. We tested the solidity of the project and so on and so forth. And based on that, there is a ranking. And then of course, we, as a management team, we have to assess other factors as well. i.e., do we have to attempt to a project now because the license is going out? Do we have to do it even though it's a third quartile project because otherwise you lose the resources in -- on the ground? And there could be other reasons as well. But based on that, we try to find the right balance. What we have tried today is actually to be quite specific, not only saying that we give priority or trying to find a better balance but also trying to provide some evidence that actually the actions we have taken in our best measurement will give higher returns. Maybe you want to take that?
Yes. Thank you, Jon. We don't decide everything ourselves, so I think that's the sort of my first question. I can give you an example. Shah Deniz Phase 2 is more to the right in that chart to the left. We are not operator, and we choose to reduce our ownership share in that field.
Okay. Peter is next, Lars. Peter Hutton? Peter Hutton - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division: Peter Hutton from RBC. Thanks, and particularly thanks for the targets and guidance that you're giving, which is sort of nicely round -- nicely joined up and distinctively, has ROACE in there because I think some of the other people are missing. One question following up from that though is, I think, you said during your presentation that 40% of your CapEx over the next 3 years was going on projects that would not be delivering by 2016. So that suggests that as you're spending $60 billion, 40% of it is not going to be producing $25 billion capital not employed. Is that included in your keeping your ROACE target as 11.8%? Or are there some adjustments that we might expect to have to make?
No adjustments, only price. So this -- in 2016, there will be quite a bit of capital unemployed. So if you adjust to that, it will, of course, be a much higher return on capital employed.
Matthew? Matthew Yates - BofA Merrill Lynch, Research Division: It's Matt Yates from Bank of America. A couple of questions if I may. First one to Torgrim around the balance sheet strategy. Having now -- I think in the past you've said you wanted to keep a fairly conservative balance sheet in order to fund future investments. With you scaling back the CapEx slightly, does that give you more flexibility on the balance sheet side to maybe take advantage of lower rates and boost group returns that way? And then second question is around the results we had in Q4 in the international business. Can you talk about -- some of the issues you highlighted are arguably more structural in nature in terms of realizations. Does that in any way come into your strategy about future CapEx or future acquisition appetite on onshore U.S.?
So on the international business, we tried to be very specific to put [ph] the international business apart from the onshore business and the North American business, but that had some fields out of stream, in the quarter weighed [ph] absolutely fine and according to our plans. The way I look at it is that technically the resources that we have entered into, are one of -- some of the most competitive U.S. onshore, Eagle Ford, Bakken as well as Marcellus. I think we have now shown actually that we can operate it technically. We can use the skills that we have generated from many years of oil and gas activities. And then, of course, the price pattern is quite significantly different than we saw already a few years back, and of course, that has to impact also the way we allocate the capital and how we think about it. If you see -- on the other hand, we cannot only think about the next 1 to 2, 3 years. We need to also think about the longer term. The way I think about Marcellus, for instance, most likely be a very important legacy asset for Statoil for many, many decades with a very efficient cost base and hopefully with more demand on the gas side, could give for us a very profitable long-term assets moving forward. But the short answer is yes, of course, market circumstances must also impact the way we allocate capital.
On the balance sheet, it's very important and it's very strategic for us to run with a solid balance sheet and significant liquidity. What we say that the strength of the balance sheet should be an A rating on an unsupported basis. In a credit rating, we have some support in the rating in there. So that is the strength of the balance sheet. Liquidity, we run with cash and cash equivalents. We're some NOK 125 billion by the end of the year, so it's a significant amount. And it's due to that, we have actually used the bond markets quite actively in 2013. We picked up more than $10 billion, and that was due to that the rates were very good and very attractive. So the balance sheet is very solid, and it will remain so. And that is due to the uncertainty that we see in the market environments. I mean, we need to be robust. And I remember, Helge, when you hired me, you told me never put me in a situation where I'm run by the balance sheet, and that is important for me to...
Yes, to deliver on. Maybe a few comments on the quarterly results of DPNA. There's an internal pricing within the segments. So the DPNA organization, we get the local Marcellus price, and we know that, that is flooded with gas, and it's a low price, MPR, guess the Toronto price, Manhattan price and debt margins. So I think it's important when you look at that business that you take into account the value chain. And I think this just demonstrates the importance of taking care of your hydrocarbons in the U.S., and I think we have done that pretty okay so far.
Oswald, please? Oswald Clint - Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC., Research Division: Oswald Clint at Sanford Bernstein. Maybe going back to returns, you talked about Statoil's returns and industry returns being terrible and how you like to aggressively tackle cost. I'd like to just ask you about the -- what sort of response are you seeing from your service suppliers as you embark on this strategy. What sort of response are you seeing from them already? Or what sort of response do you think you will? And is there enough of this happening around the broader IOC world that you can really start to see some cost reduction from your suppliers? And then secondly, I think most of the companies maybe over the last 5 years probably spent a bit more on maintenance CapEx than they expected to do because of obviously natural decline rates. I wonder -- maybe you haven't seen that, but if you have, is that something you factored into the next 3 years' CapEx numbers?
In my view, this is not an individual oil company challenge on the cost and capital intensity. I think it has a large -- to a large extent, to do to with how this industry is working. And I'm not sure that this is the oil and gas companies against the service industry. I think that this is a challenge that we need to work on together. And I think there are other industries that have been more effective in dealing systematically and over time with the cost base. I think the pattern -- and I've been in this industry in several sectors now for 15 years, and I think we are quite effective to work [ph] cost 1 or 2 years and then the prices changes, and then we move on. So I think this time we try to attack it more structurally. And Margareth, you talk about how deep we go into some of these areas. I think, for instance, there are quite significant quality costs in this industry. I think there are costs associated that we are not planning well enough. I think this is an industry that love to develop new things, so I think we can standardize much more. And I think also including Statoil, the oil companies have developed extremely specific technical requirements that sort of drive costs and make it, I think, very challenging for some of the suppliers to really deliver efficiently. So we have specific projects in Statoil but also with suppliers to see how we can deal with this issue. Also there are examples like how many concepts do we work on before we decide and for how long time. And I think there is also an opportunity there to use our experience and to go faster towards the right concept instead of using all the engineering houses in the world to work on the different concepts. To the large extent, I think this is something that we have to do together. And the more people that engage in this from the industry, I think the higher chances that we will have an impact. The advantage, I think, we have in Norway is that we are relatively big so that we can also look at opportunities across fields where we are operator and for instance, the way we have attacked the fast-track projects, the way we have dealt with the rig intake to take down the cost on certain fields where we have to drill for many, many, many years. Instead of paying down the rig 3 times, we own it ourselves and run the drilling program. I think this will have been very difficult unless we had operator position on several fields. When it comes to IOR, if I understood the question right, we have factored the CapEx that goes into that work also into the guiding for '14, '15 and '16. I hope I understood the question right.
And then we have Mark. Mark A. Bloomfield - Deutsche Bank AG, Research Division: It's Mark Bloomfield from Deutsche Bank. Your guidance on operating cash flow of $22 billion seems to imply around a 30% uplift relative to what you generated in 2013 on a 10% lower oil price. I guess a 3% compound growth rate in volume goes some ways of explaining that, but perhaps you can be a little bit more specific in helping us understand the contribution from the other significant moving parts here. And I'm thinking margin and whether you're making any specific assumptions around working capital or cash tax movements in there.
Sounds to be a very good CFO question.
Thank you. I think the starting point, it's important to get right. There's a drag on taxes, so there's a lot of taxes paid in this year compared to last year. But on a comparable level, around $19 billion [ph] to -- in this year. So the same growth from cash flow from operations. And it comes from the production mix. The current mix has a lot of natural gas in the U.S., and there will be more liquids over the next years, and there will also be more liquids in low tax -- the lower tax regime, and then it's built up by production and all of that. So it is a -- growth is rather stable growth in that direction. Then the efficiency in the working capital is also very important, and this is something that we work very diligently on. And it's important because the big size of the marketing and processing business.
And we have Irene next on the list. Irene Himona - Societe Generale Cross Asset Research: It's Irene Himona at Société Générale. You highlighted the importance of being resilient to different price scenarios and the importance of the credit rating. The targets are given on an oil price of $100 real. Are you prepared to give us a sense of what your return on capital would look like? And is there any flexibility to the CapEx plan should oil turn out to be $90 for a period? And there is concern in the market right now obviously, with discussions on Iran and indeed the increase in U.S. supplies.
Well, there is, of course, flexibility in our plan. I think actually this is one of the most important commitments that we can give our shareholders that we need to find a way where we balance or are able to steer the company without very deep cost through different cycles. And I think you have seen us operating this quite effectively since the financial crisis back in 2008 and '09, actually as Torgrim said earlier today, with a stronger balance sheet now than we had at that time. Of course, the balance for us is that we -- and what I try to say in my introduction today is that we both need to be prepared to handle significantly lower oil prices for a period of time but also that we do not give away optionality for the future if you see a significant tick-up in the prices. And hopefully we have found that balance. In terms of the oil market, normally we are very careful in predicting on that, but if I should give a few comments around that, it seems to me at least that the market outlook is a little bit better than it was maybe a year or 2 back but still with uncertainty. And if you look at the oil market, it seem that there will be next year or this year some more growth in the non-OPEC side of things. So maybe that is indicating perhaps some softening, but I said before that I think a monkey can predict oil price better than I can, so it's hard. But we have -- I think these are the factors that we need to follow.
If I may, Helge. I think we use $100 per barrel as a sort of a reference price in the calculations. We use a different price, a lower price than that in our planning and in our decisions. And when it comes to our planning, we use various scenarios. We call them the good, the bad and the ugly. So it is about testing out that we are resilient in all the scenarios and have the sufficient tools in place to deal with it.
And we have 2 questions in the back there, Lars. Neill Morton - Investec Securities (UK), Research Division: It's Neill Morton at Investec. Two question please. You've been asked in the past about the government stake, Helge, and you've quite correctly said that it wasn't your place to comment. But there have been studies recently linking a possible dilution of the government stake with perhaps a corporate move by Statoil. Can you confirm or deny those kinds of conversations have taken place? And then secondly, late last year you gave an interview in a trade magazine where you were quoted as saying that you saw or you foresaw a major restructuring of the oil and gas industry over the next 5 years. Could you clarify what you meant?
Well, for some reason, I always get that question. As far as I understand it, the new government have said that they will issue a new white paper on the Norwegian state's ownership positions in different companies in Norway, and this is not a white paper on Statoil as far as I understand it. It's a white paper on strategy on the Norwegian government's ownership positions. And we, of course, also await the signals from that. I will never ever comment on individual situations or speculating on individual rumors. But I can say as a general direction now, the key focus we have in our management team now is actually to deliver on the plan that we have presented to you today. And I saw also there were some comments on, are we going to buy an exploration company and so on and so forth. It's not very meaningful for us right now actually when we have to select from very good internal projects. Having said that and repeating what I said before, I don't think you would like us either not to think about asset divestments or acquisitions if that is value-creating. But I think what we need to do is to be very clear on if we do a deal on an asset, buying instead of developing ourselves, it has to make strategic sense, and you should understand why we do it. On restructuring of the industry, I think you will always have those speculations. And I think there could be reasons like addressing the cost side or you want to establish yourself in a specific geographic region, you would like to build a specific line of business or it can be simply 2 parties that have a different view on oil and gas prices moving forward so that there is an area to transact. But again, this is not something we spend much time on these days. We spend time on the plan, and we spend time, all the time on looking at our portfolio to make sure that, that is optimized as best as possible. I think we sold for $18 billion over the last few years with a quite good return as well.
Was there another question in the back of the room or did I -- no? Okay then -- okay, one more question over here, and then we'll turn to the audio audience.
Nick Cullen [ph] from Argus [ph]. Just a very quick follow-up on pricing and flexibility. In the Troll field, the gas market is quite interested to know, given the recent fall in gas prices, will you pump to the cap in production of 30 billion cubic meters a year? Or would you scale that back upward?
So as you know, we have 2 fields where we have flexibility, on Troll and Oseberg. And we have a commitment to you, our shareholders, and also to the marketing instruction that we have with the Norwegian government where we are also selling their gas on our behalf to not maximize volume but to maximize value, and that is what I'm prepared to say about that. And of course, Troll and Oseberg, very important fields for Statoil. That was a political answer, but I think you understand I cannot say much more.
Right. Then, we'll take a few questions over the phone. [Operator Instructions] So the first one to go is Anne Gjøen. Please, go ahead, Anne. Anne Gjøen - Handelsbanken Capital Markets, Research Division: I have a question in relation to return on capital employed in 2016 on the free cash flow because -- could you tell about the amount on capital employed in 2016 because the point is that you're talking about organic and free cash flow in the $100 per barrel in 2016, and I know that is very far from analyst expectations, although consensus have been too high with our estimates for a rather long time. So how much capital employed? And it's somewhere here that is very different assumptions. Probably it's on natural gas price.
Okay, thank you, Anne. So I'm not prepared to give you the number for capital employed in 2016, but I think a good starting point is accounts for this year and investments and DD&A as an estimate. The capital employed is expected to increase towards 2016. So return on capital employed, around today's level on similar prices.
Next on the phone is Teodor Nilsen from Swedbank. Please go ahead, Teodor. Teodor Sveen Nilsen - Swedbank First Securities, Research Division: Just one, from which fields did the increase come from? And should we increase the RRR to stay on levels close to 150% over the next few years given that you have several more projects to be sanctioned over the next years?
So we have had a quite active year in terms of sanctioning new projects but also to increase revisions or increase resources from our existing projects. Some of the projects that we have approved, of course, is Aasta Hansteen and also Shah Deniz. You will see result from the IOR activities and also some from the onshore business but smaller amounts from there. We have said or we said in New York in 2011 that we would see roughly an RRR replacement ratio about 1 for the decade -- the next decade, and I think we are well underway to do that on average. And we will not guide in -- be more specific of that. But of course, we have some major fields coming up like the Johannesburg. We are indicating that we will make a sanctioning on that project in 2015 for example. So we are confident that we can deliver more than 1 on average over this period. But of course, it will be -- it can vary from year-to-year. Actually I think this is one important development at Statoil because, so far, almost a decade, we have reserve replacement ratios above or below -- significantly above 1. And we have turned it now and we have a rich portfolio, as we have discussed, that give more confidence about the longevity of our business, which is good for you, I think, and is good for the company and for our people. Teodor Sveen Nilsen - Swedbank First Securities, Research Division: So we didn't book anything, any resource from Marcellus or oil sand in 2013?
There are some, but I mean, we are not providing numbers. But it's not the major part, a small part.
Then we go to John Olaisen from ABG. John A. Schj. Olaisen - ABG Sundal Collier Holding ASA, Research Division: A question on the return on capital employed over the next quarters or in between here and 2016. I guess 11.8% will be yardstick that we'll have to measure on. Should we expect the return on capital employed to be flat in '14, '15 and '16? Or should we expect it to go down, then up again in '16? Could you tell a little bit about that so we compare -- so we are prepared when we look at the quarterly numbers going forward?
Thank you, John. So we will naturally fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter, and -- but it is a pretty stable return on capital employed over the next 3 years, so there's no profiling of that. It seems to -- the decline in return on capital employed probably sort of turned, so then it's approximately on the same level.
Then the next question comes from Guy Baber from Simmons. Guy A. Baber - Simmons & Company International, Research Division: You guys mentioned your commitment to portfolio optimization and divestments a number of times during the presentation, but you have no divestiture targets though. So I was just hoping you could once again share with us the framework as to what drives the divestment decisions. Do you believe you need to further optimize geographically or you buy segment exposure? And then also do your return on capital employed targets make it less likely for some of your non-core assets to be divested if those sales would be ROCE dilutive? Just trying to get a better sense of how material divestments could be and what specific criteria you guys used to screen them.
I think my starting point is that we don't have to make divestments. You have seen the balance sheet. And so we do it if we feel it's value-creating for Statoil. And as we discussed earlier on the call, we are not prepared to give divestment targets for individual years or for periods. In my opinion and in my experience, that drive you towards having to make a transaction before that and that time, and I don't think that's value-creating. So we try to assess the strategic profile of our portfolio. The investment levels, the profitability, the CapEx profile and of course, also the buying universe and whether we feel that we can get the right value for the asset. And of course, I think we -- when it goes to prioritization of projects, not necessarily related to your question, but on a general basis, it's clear that the framework that we have put out to you today, there are projects that will not qualify and has not qualified. And then we have to think about, do we delay it? Do we rework the concept so it's more profitable? Or is it better or more value-creating to sell it? I think you understand that there is not an exact science into this, but we have to assess all of these factors.
Our last question before we break for lunch comes from Mehdi Ennebati from Société Générale. Mehdi Ennebati - Societe Generale Cross Asset Research: I will ask one question. You had a lot of success regarding explorations in Sweden [ph]. Now I wanted to know if you are thinking about taking the opportunity to farm out some of your recent discoveries and use the cash to invest or enter into promising areas with potentially high return projects, why you are currently not, such as -- for example, onshore East Africa, Uganda, Kenya or any other area. Or do you think that you will stick to the fact that you have enough to do by selecting your own discoveries to develop and are not interested in doing that? And if I can ask just a very, very quick second question regarding In Amenas in Algeria. It seems production started to ramp up in Q4 versus the last 3 quarters, and the Algerian minister of oil announced to the press that production will come back to plateau relatively quickly in the weeks to come. Just would like to know if you already took this into account in your 2% production growth guidance for 2014.
So if I understood the question right, the way we think about it in Statoil that if you have discovered a resource, you can think about that as a resource you have, and you have to put that through the same sort of methodology that we just spoke about, that we have to make sure that is -- are we the right company to deliver -- to develop this resource or should be divest it or farm out? Tim will speak -- talk more about this later. And Tim and his management team has a very, very active view on their portfolio and do farm in and farm outs all the time to optimize value and activity plans. And I think you will see him be active also moving forward. Perhaps more on the farming out than farming in given the portfolio we have. But there is also time perspective here, and you have seen that the exploration team has been and Statoil have been quite active in building acreage position also for the longer term. We have taken positions, as you have seen, in Brazil, in Norway, in Australia to name a few, which has -- New Zealand, which has a much longer-term perspective but falls very well in line with the strategic framework that Tim and his team has developed with early access, higher risks and bigger positions. And in order to discover something big, Tim tells me that you have to drill on a prospect that is big. So...
Sorry. On Algeria, we have repatriated our people to Hassi Mouina and part of In Salah. Probably the rest, over the next few weeks. It will take some more time at In Amenas. We cannot disclose any date today on that. There is not field production on In Amenas, and we have factored that into our guiding moving forward.
Thank you, and that will conclude the Q&A session for this -- for now. And we'll break for lunch. Lunch will be served right outside of this room, and we will start the next session again at 1:45 p.m., and we'll try to start precisely on time due to -- in consideration for our webcast audience. So have a nice lunch. [Break]
Thank you much, Hilde. Good afternoon, everyone. Good to see you all. Already a lot have been said about exploration, so I will do my very best over the next 20 minutes to keep you awake after lunch. I'd like to share with you Statoil's exploration success story and then, of course, to talk more about how we continue to deliver world-class exploration performance going forward. So let me start with our 2013 exploration results. This slide kind of speaks for itself. In 2013, we were the leading explorer. We found more conventional oil and gas than any other company, and we also made the single largest oil discovery in the Bay du Nord in the East Coast Canada. In total, we found 1.25 billion barrels, 1.15 according to IHS and this IHS statistics on the screen here. And that's almost 10% of what the entire industry found in 2013. 2013 was, without any doubt, a great exploration year, and I would say, hasten to add another great exploration year. We've now discovered more than 1 billion barrels of oil equivalents, each of the last 3 years, and added 3.9 billion barrels of new resources in total and made 11 high-impact discoveries, that is discoveries more than 250 million barrels on a 100% basis or 100 million barrels net to Statoil. And I think you'll agree that is consistent world-class performance. We also opened up 6 new plays in 4 different basins. And you should all know what that means, significant follow-up potential. So all of this has been achieved for less than $3 a barrel. In the same period, we've replenished the portfolio with attractive acreage in Norway, Gulf of Mexico, Angola, Canada, Brazil, Russia, New Zealand and Australia, to mention the most important. In sum, we have an opportunity-rich, geographically diversified and oily portfolio. In my judgment, our exploration portfolio has never been stronger. We created optionality for the company, and we have significant follow-up potential in Norway, Tanzania, Brazil and Canada. And we have a portfolio, I know, most of our competitors envy us. But let me now show you that our exploration success delivers value too. Big volumes are usually better from a value perspective. And as you can see from this slide, our high-impact discoveries have even lower CapEx per barrel and higher rate of return than our sanctioned portfolio, which, of course, is a robust and attractive portfolio in itself, as both Helge and Torgrim have shown. This proves that our strategy of accessing and drilling more high-impact opportunities create significant value. That's confirmed by WoodMac, if you look at the chart on the right-hand side, where they rank value creation from exploration for the period 2010 to 2012. That value creation stems from a mix of the high-impact discoveries I've already mentioned and high-value barrels from near-field discoveries, especially in Norway. Note that the 2013 discoveries are not included there yet but, of course, I expect that the positive trend will continue with the likes of the Bay du Nord high-impact discovery. So my main point, looking back, is that we have successfully delivered on both volume and value dimensions the last 3 years, 3 to 4 years. So now I'll share with you how we intend to sustain such leading exploration performance. I believe the recipe for continued success is threefold: high grading, prioritization and capital discipline. First, the high-grading. We've gone from 2 to 6 core exploration areas in 3 years, and we'll continue to deepen with more quality acreage and following up on our successes to take it up to full potential in those areas. We have and will continue a selective access strategy to replenish the portfolio. We will focus on large-scale, quality acreage positions with a potential to become a new core area. An example is our entry into Russia, where we are now progressing well with the onshore and offshore joint ventures with Rosneft. Prioritization. True global prioritization is probably the most important ingredient. We prioritize basins, we prioritize prospects, we prioritize wells, we prioritize rigs and we prioritized seismic. As an example, one of many, we redeployed the Discovery Americas drillship from Gulf of Mexico, first in Mozambique and then to Tanzania to follow up on our success there. Then I'd like to tell you a story about acceleration, about accelerating one of our best opportunities. In March last year, when I was visiting with our exploration team in Calgary, they told me that they had a better prospect to drill than what was planned. In the space of 2 weeks, we had changed our plans and secured partner and authority approval to drill Bay du Nord. This was definitely one of the best decisions I've ever made, and it demonstrates our ability to act swiftly and decisively when we see a good opportunity. And now we're looking at the possibility of accelerating the development of this high-impact discovery. We also will continue to churn the portfolio, so only the best opportunities stay. We've recently withdrawn from the Beaufort Sea and dropped the Block 47 in Suriname. We strive to mitigate our risk in cost exposure in the high-risk and cost opportunities. And that's why we farmed down twice in Mozambique before drilling, another good call. I'm not going to spend a lot of time on improved efficiency. Margareth will revert on that in more detail. Needless to say, our well efficiency is extremely important as around 60% of our exploration spend is on wells. Exploration is and will be measured on how much value we create for every barrel we find. And as such, we will prioritize the projects with the best value proposition when selecting both drilling canvas and new access. So now I've given you what I believe the recipe for further success is. Let me turn to our exploration strategy, which should -- all of you should all be familiar with. As Helge has already said, our strategy stays firm. It's brought us consistent success, and the 3 main pillars stand firm as I said. Three years ago, we really only had 2 core exploration areas or portfolios, if you like, Norway and the Gulf of Mexico. Now we added additional high-quality portfolios in Angola, Tanzania, Brazil and East Coast Canada, giving us 6 in total. And as I say, we'll continue to deepen our position in these core areas in order to exploit the full potential, just like we've done in Norway for many years. The second pillar is about high-impact wells. And this may sound pretty sort of simple and maybe even stupid, but I think it was as simple and stupid as this. Once we started thinking bigger, we were on the right road to success. If you don't think big, you don't access big, you don't drill big and you don't find big. Drilling enough high-impact wells has been the key contributor to our volume success. And in 2013 alone, high-impact wells contributed 80% of the volumes discovered. In 2014 we'll be drilling high-impact wells in 6 different basins, 6 different countries. Early access at scale is about replenishing the portfolio. And we going to -- we intend to do this by selecting opportunities that represent timely, low-cost options for the future. Our sound regional and geological understanding is, of course, the basis for our selective access approach. I have a fantastic and highly competent exploration team. They've screened the globe for the best opportunities for many years. Now we're reaping the rewards of all their persistent efforts. So let's now take a closer look at the potential in our plans for the 6 core areas, and I'll start in Norway. I'm going to start in the far north in the Barents Sea. Statoil is breaking new ground in the Barents. We participated in 2 play openers, the Skrugard discovery in the Johan Castberg area in 2011 and the Wisting discovery in the Hoop area in 2013. In the Hoop area, we will drill Apollo and Atlantis this year. These structures are in the same geological setting as the Wisting play opener, and this obviously increases the likelihood of success. In Johan Castberg area, we are currently drilling a prospect called Kramsnø, and we will follow up with a new prospect called Drivis. We are also preparing for the 23rd concession round. And a group comprised of 17 oil and gas companies has established a project operated by Statoil for joint seismic acquisition in the Southeast Barents Sea this summer. And that joint effort should be extremely cost efficient. So staying in Norway, but moving further south to the prolific Norwegian Sea and North Sea. Let me draw your attention to our near-field exploration efforts. Over the last 3 years, we have proven approximately 250 million barrels of timely, highly valuable resources and made 15 near-field discoveries with a success rate of 81%. In the Norwegian Sea alone, Statoil has made 3 high-value, near-field discoveries close to Åsgard, Norne and Njord fields last fall. We will maximize the value of these discoveries, either by direct tie-ins to the platforms and to the host installations or by fast tracking them. We've extended the reach for fast track, which means that an increased number of discoveries can now become fast-track candidates. And Margareth would tell you more about this in her presentation. We will keep a similar near-field exploration drilling activity level during the next 3 years due to the attractive value proposition and the high chance of success. So now I want to take you across the Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, another highly prolific basin that where -- one where we as operator are still striving to make our first operated oil discovery. The GoM continues to deliver high-value barrels as demonstrated by the recent discoveries made by BP and Chevron. Over the last year, we have worked extremely hard to further high grade our portfolio in this prolific oil basin. And right now our top 3 prospects in the Gulf of Mexico are Martin, Perseus and Monument. And all of these rank very highly in our global prospect portfolio. In 2014 we will drill Martin, which is one of our top prospects in terms of volume and value. Martin is right in the heart of the Mississippi Canyon, a very prolific area of the Gulf of Mexico, as you can see from the slide behind me. Perseus will be drilled off the Martin, assuming all the required approvals and permits are in order. The value proposition for significant oil discoveries in GoM remains attractive, and it is one of the main drivers for continued exploration in GoM. But we will only drill the very best prospects. But personally I believe we have the competence needed to succeed here as we have elsewhere. So let's continue the journey. This time eastwards to the Indian Ocean, more specifically to Tanzania where we had our breakthrough gas discovery, Zafarani, in the 2012. Since then, we've had 100% success in Tanzania, and the area has been elevated to an exploration core area in a very short period of time. Following the Zafarani success, it was all hands on deck to quickly mature and drill new prospects and to acquire 3D over the entire license. Less than 2 years later, we've drilled an additional 5 wells, and we are currently production testing the Zafarani-2 appraisal well. That was made possible, as I said earlier, by redeploying the Discoverer Americas drillship from Gulf of Mexico to East Africa. The latest discovery made in the fourth quarter, the Mronge, brings our in-place gas volumes, proven gas volumes in Block 2 to somewhere between 17 and 20 Tcf in place. And that provides the foundation for a major gas development. In addition, and as you should be able to see from the chart in the middle of the slide here or the image on the middle of the slide here, we have identified significant upside potential. In the central area of the block where we've made all the discoveries so far, we have met 5 low- to medium-risk prospects, which we believe hold significant potential, somewhere in the range of an additional 5 to 15 Tcf. Following the ongoing drill stem test, we will drill a new appraisal well on Zafarani before continuing our exploration program on the Piri prospect. The same year, 2012, was we made the Zafarani discovery, we also participated in the Pão pre-salt discovery in the outer Campos Basin in Brazil. So let's now see how we're progressing there in Brazil, one of the true exploration hotspots of the last decade. Together with Petrobras and the operator Repsol, we have recently embarked on an extensive appraisal program of Pão. Today, however, I'd like to focus on the Espírito Santo Basin to the north, another emerging oil play in Brazil. We are now well positioned in this basin, where we acquired 6 new blocks in the 11th concession round last year. We believe that the successful oil play is proven and extends from the multiple discoveries with a mate into our new blocks. We're already part of the Indra discovery in the Block BM-ES-32. That discovery has been appraised by Petrobras in the license to the north and a 200-meter oil column was announced. A second oil discovery, São Bernardo, has been made just to the north of Indra. We are very positive about our new acreage in Espírito Santo. We're operators in 4 blocks, partner in 2 others. We will operate a very large 3D seismic data covering all of these blocks, and that will commence shortly. Our plan is to mature the prospect in 3 and to start drilling in 2016. And we have a commitment across the 6 blocks to drill 10 wells, of which Step 4 Statoil will be operating. The last few years, Brazil has been mostly, not only, but mostly about pre-salt. We now know that a similar play has been proven on the other side of Atlantic. So now let's move to Angola, where we will shortly be in testing a very large Kwanza pre-salt portfolio. Statoil operates Blocks 38 and 39, and we're partner on 3 other pre-salt blocks, 40, 25 and 22. The latter is adjacent to Block 21 where Cobalt has made several pre-salt discoveries recently. The pre-salt play is now proven in Angola, and we believe this will extend into one or more of our blocks. Dilolo is the first high in prospect -- high-impact prospect to be drilled by Statoil, and you can expect start-up there in the second quarter this year. As you hopefully can see from the image, this is a mega 4-way closure. It could be in excess of 1,000 square kilometers, and it's one of the largest close I've seen in my career. By comparison, Libra in Brazil was mapped as a 730-square-kilometer closure before drilling according to ANP. However, multiple wells will be needed to fully test the Dilolo closure, and one well will not provide all the answers. You can expect news from Dilolo late 2014 or early in 2015. Over the next 2 to 3 years, we'll participate in 8 commitment wells cross the 5 blocks in which we participate. And while uncertainty remains, the potential for making one or more very large oil discoveries is certainly there. Expectations are high, and all eyes will be on Kwanza in 2014. That was not the case with East Coast Canada where we made groundbreaking discoveries in 2013. So let me tell you more about that. As already said and others at year end, Bay du Nord was the world's largest oil discovery in 2013. Statoil has consistently worked the Flemish Pass, which is the name of the basin where the Bay du Nord was found, for a number of years. We have built, as you can see, a very substantial acreage position with significant follow-up potential, and we are the dominant operator. We are, in fact, the only operator in the Flemish Pass. We've identified several structures similar in size to the Bay du Nord discovery, some with impact potential. Our efforts now will be focused on proving up that potential, at the same time as we plan to start advancing Bay du Nord towards a development decision. We're planning to start a new drilling program in the fall of 2014. I'm very happy about that. And we have the Amok Arik [ph] from Norway to move to Canada, and we've also agreed with our partner, Husky, on the first 2 well targets. We plan to acquire 1,900 square kilometers of 3D seismic in the Bay du Nord area, starting in late spring. This discovery and the neighboring discoveries and surrounding prospectivity represent an opportunity for high-value barrels. Bay du Nord is located in moderate water depths. Reservoir and oil quality are good, and development and production technologies are already largely proven. Statoil has already formed a multidisciplinary task force to assess the feasibility of an accelerated development of the Bay du Nord discovery. I have to say I'm very excited by the recent development in the Flemish Pass. I'm also very confident that there is more, potentially much more to come. So let me sum up. Throughout my presentation, I've highlighted Statoil's successful exploration efforts and that we will continue to follow our successful exploration strategy. Exploration will be the primary growth engine for Statoil, and 2014 has the potential to be yet another good exploration year. I'd like to leave you with 3 messages. One, exploration has delivered consistent world-class performance 3 years in a row. We have a deep, rich and balanced portfolio centered around 6 core exploration areas. And we have a solid foundation for strong deliveries in 2014 to '16. When it comes to 2014, we will continue to high grade the portfolio and to have strong capital discipline. We will maintain our exploration spend at around $3.5 billion, and we will spend almost exactly the same amount on seismic and wells as we did in 2013. We expect to complete 50 wells. And out of these, we will drill high-impact wells in 6 different basins. Our P90-P10 resource estimates for 2014 is 400 million to 1,500 million or 1.5 billion barrels of oil equivalents. I'm confident that Statoil will deliver leading exploration results in 2014 and that we will create even more optionality and thereby, value for our shareholders. Thank you very much for your attention today. I'd now like to give the word to Margareth, Margareth Øvrum, Executive Vice President for Technology, Projects and Drilling. Margareth Øvrum: Thank you very much, Tim. Good to see you all. This morning Helge started to -- by presenting our core messages on why and how we are a distinct workhorse [ph]. This is about high-value growth, improved efficiency and capital distribution, and Tim has just explained how we are doing to source this growth. And now, as usual, I have to do the work. I have 3 messages for you. First, we are performing well on project and well execution and we will continue to do. Secondly, we are a technology-driven upstream company, but we'll increasingly apply a manufacturing-based execution to reduce cost and improve margins. Thirdly, we commit to CapEx savings and CapEx-reducing measure, delivering an aggregated CapEx saving of USD 1.7 billion, and this will start out between 2014 and '16, of which $1 billion is for 2016. These measures are a part of an extensive improvement program, where we are addressing CapEx, OpEx and production efficiency. And as Torgrim explained, the $1.7 billion is part of the USD 5 billion in reduced CapEx from 2014 to '16. So let us -- let's start with our project performance. And I'm proud to present the progress we have made. We have a strong improvement on the HSE result, which enable us really to focus on what is important, operational excellence. Our project organization on facility delivered a serious incident frequency of 0.3 in 2013, and this is the best in the company. And I lead the way and prove it is possible to continue the extraordinary trend. Moving to cost. The total cost of the project portfolio, both the facility side, as well as the drilling side, versus sanctioned estimates has shown a strong improvement since 2009. And we -- and over the last 3 years, we have delivered on cost or below. And we intend to deliver with that level of predictability for 2014 and onwards. And we are delivering our schedule. Actually we are delivering 1 month ahead of plans. Equally, drilling in well show strong results despite high pressure in the market. This is highly important due to the HSE exposure, but also the significant part of our CapEx spend. On HSE, drilling and well delivered us serious incident frequency of 0.7, and it improved from 1.8 the year before. But with no serious well control incident in more than -- in almost 4 years. We managed this despite drilling a record number of wells. In 2013, we delivered 120 offshore wells, an increase of more than 60% from the last -- from year before. And actually we delivered, in addition, 29 drainage ports through our multilateral wells, where we are world-leading in applying that technology, and these add significant high-value barrels. Moving forward, we will consider the right number of wells to create capital flexibility through optimal reutilization and capacity. In parallel and in spite of accelerating market cost, we have reduced cost per offshore well on the Norwegian continental shelf. We work systematically to continue the downward trends on cost, and I will come back to this in more detail. In June I met a lot of you, and you ask for benchmarking. And I'm happy you did. You know I love to compete, but not as much as I hate to lose. I look at this, the November 2013 results from the Independent Project Analysis demonstrates strong performance, project performance for Statoil. We are on or above industry average on all except one benchmark, and we also observed a very positive trend. In 2010, 4 of the 9 benchmark, we're on or above industry average. Today the number is 8. And of a level of maturity reflected in the front-end loading benchmark is solid for all this date: reservoir, well and facility. And that is, of course, a prerequisite for a robust -- operational robust execution. But this doesn't mean that we have won and that I'm satisfied. We still have too many changes, and that is clearly an area for improvement in Statoil. Till now, we have compensated by very good execution. Through systematic work, we deliver our projects with high predictability and competitive development solutions. Currently we are moving in a very positive direction, opposite of the industry. But for sure, our peers will improve and so must we. In short, we have delivered as promised, competitively and without major project failures. Going forward, 3 elements are key for me: first of all is to continue to expect learnings from historic and ongoing projects; then know acceptance to changes in the design; and thirdly, an increased degree of stabilization. So how do we work with execution to systematically support predictability, competitiveness and reduced cost? There are overall spaces [ph] on time, cost and quality in our large and more complex project portfolio is good. Gudrun will start production in Q1 according to the plan, with a facility cost significantly below sanctioned estimate. And right now we are completing the first well and we are just about to perforate. My real plan, that was my plan, was to deliver 2 months ahead. Continuous storms wrecked that, and it obviously annoys me. Valemon is on track to deliver. Hoop is my precious Åsgard Subsea Compression project. The enormous subsea structure, which is already installed on the seafloor, and the compressor is now being tested in a very large pit at Kroshter [ph]. Testing on the portfolio level, we obtained very effective prices with our Asian projects, like the Gina Krog, Mariner and Aasta Hansteen. The common denominator for the industries and the performance on time, cost and quality is largely related to immature engineering. To avoid knock-on effects to procurement, construction and hook-up, we will continue to ensure: one, we will experience transfer from peers on all our own projects; and two, early mitigation of emerging challenges and hands-on interfaces with our suppliers. This is hard work every single day. These measures have been applied for Valemon and Gudrun and will be applied for both Mariner, Aasta Hansteen and Gina Krog. And they are approaching construction all in 2014 according to plan. Then to our drive for cost and efficiency improvement in our early-phase projects. The bar for treating project on a tailor-made basis has been raised. Johan Castberg and Johan Sverdrup are both high-impact projects approaching concept selection. And having said -- and we pursue for these projects. We pursue standardized and cost-effective solutions. Having said that, technologies will also be focused to realize significant value upside for these projects. And the average recovery rate on the Norwegian continental shelf for Statoil field is 50%. We have an ambition to reach to 60%, and we have increased this by 20% on average since they PDO [ph] the projects. The world average is as low as 35%. And on Sverdrup, we believe we with our extensive tool technology toolbox can realize the best recovery rate on the Mcf up to 70% over the drill lifetime. And now, now we are talking. On Castberg, we work hard to increase robustness, including evaluating cost, reducing technologies, such as moving from horizontal X-mas trees too or to go X-mas trees. And let me also exemplify how we, in Tanzania and in the East Coast Canada, aggressively pursue cost- and time-efficient solutions and the use of our technology measures [ph]. For the Tanzania development, we work with our partners to evaluate a subsea-to-shore solution. At the 2,600 meters water depth, we think we can apply standard subsea deepwater solution, as well as extensively and highly advanced reuse of subsea technology and competence we developed for Ormen Lange field and the Snøhvit field. Similarly, we are now assessing a successful development in the frontier of the Bay du Nord discovery, focusing on a solution that will bring us to oil faster than previous projects at that site in the offshore Newfoundland. And following our increasingly more efficient well operation on NCS, we will reallocate Atinsaad [ph], a rig from NCS, to accelerate the appraisal of that discovery. And this is exciting. And even I, being labeled -- in Norway, I'm being labeled a technology babe, maybe I don't understand it. But -- I must face the beauty of our emerging manufacturing-based solutions. And in Norwegian offshore prospects, projects have demonstrated Statoil's ability to adapt and rapidly expand standardized solutions. The result of the simplified execution model for the near-field development and discoveries are substantial. And as you can see on this slide, 6 projects already on stream and 6 -- with 6 more to come, peaking close to 100,000 barrels a day in late 2014. The portfolio is very robust with low breakevens and high returns. The execution risk is low with lead times down to 32 months. Continuous success of Tim's near-field exploration and also development of technology to further extend the reach for these prospect projects will ensure prospect activity going forward. So I'm highly dependent on you, Tim, but you always deliver, so we will succeed on that. Our ambition is certainly to expand our offshore manufacturing segment. Now to another segment we really take pride in, the onshore U.S. This total well CapEx may comprise of up to 90% of the total U.S. onshore development. So any improvement will strongly impact the value and the margins. Statoil U.S. onshore drilling performance is illustrated by the time and the cost per well in our 3 assets. The overall trend is strong, backed by 30% to 50% reduced drilling time and 25% to 50% reduced cost per well from early 2012 to end of 2013, in line with or better than our peers. The main reason for these savings is what we refer to as our perfect well approach, which is a systematic deconstruction of best practices within all segments of the well construction and subsequent drive towards improvement and simplification on each segment. We expect to continue these improvements, and we aim for another 15% reduction on the total well cost by 2016. And there may be some further upside from new technology development. The perfect well approach is already under implementation on the Norwegian continental shelf and for our offshore drilling team, and we are taking learnings from onshore. This picture and the prospect success provides me with confidence in Statoil's ability to deliver highly competitive results, and we adapt faster than I think you and even I would've anticipated a few years back. On execution, let me summarize. Our project and well performance is strong and competitive. We trust our ability to sustain this performance by manufacturing. We will pave the way for a step change in cost efficiency. We need more on the cost reductions. You heard my boss. He is really demanding, and so am I. And I will now provide you with more insight into cost reductions and efficiency initiatives. As referred to by Helge, Statoil has launched an extensive efficiency improvement program. The purpose is, of course, to improve the free cash flow by addressing CapEx, OpEx and production efficiency. And I would like to detail out the CapEx efficiency commitment and measures, which will deliver an aggregated savings of USD 1.7 billion between 2014 and '16, of which $1 billion in 2016 and a sustained level going forward. Note that we see upside to these numbers. For CapEx-reducing measures, the effects will be -- primarily be extracted within well delivery, field development and modification. So how to reach my commitment? This is a toolbox of enriched efficiency improvement opportunities. Some deliver and some -- which we work on. Some will succeed and some might fail. Still, in total, they are sufficient to realize our commitment. I will revert to our standardization efforts in more detail on the next slide. We didn't feel [ph] development and modification. We expect to deliver Gudrun with a facility cost 12% below our sanction estimate, mainly due to reduced cost, we have simplified technical requirements and not at least, we have optimized over procurement processes. Moving forward, we have a firm ambition to reduce engineering hours per ton by 10% to 20%, by further simplifying our technical requirements to increase standardization, increase quality and precision and do it right the first time. We will also reduce our Mcf modification CapEx by 20%, saving equity CapEx on more than 100 million each year, and we will actively pursue leaner concepts for our field development projects. On offshore well delivery, we have leveraged learning from repetitive deliveries to increase efficiency, for instance, on the Troll field. And on the Troll field, we have the most sophisticated and technology-advanced multilateral wells on the whole Norwegian continental shelf. Still, we have made them a standardized well. So we'll do it again and again and again. And we really get very good efficiency out of that. We have reduced construction time for the Troll multilateral with 15% over the last year. Going forward, we have an ambition to reduce average offshore well construction time by 25% and realize cost savings of 10% to 20% per well. By applying the perfect well approach, learning from onshore U.S. and standardized concepts. In addition, more efficient well deliveries create flexibility and, as I mentioned, we will reallocate 1 rig now from Mcf to the Bay du Nord for appraisal, really. As demonstrated, our U.S. onshore team has a strong operational track record of competitive well delivery. We see the potential of additional 15% on total well CapEx savings towards 2016, applying the perfect well and also more deployment of technology. Now to standardization. And this is my stairway to heaven. Statoil pursues step-by-step a systematic approach to mature technology -- mature new technology, as well skills of ours. We are now embarking on a similar systematic standardization journey. Standardization is, as you know, it's not new for Statoil. We have the prospect project. We have the multilaterals well control. We have the old category D and day rates representing standardization in our rig portfolio. And the standardized floating storage unit for Mariner and for hybrid, as good examples. We see more upside going forward, note though, these are examples and that they are not additive. We will apply the standardization approach on our large upcoming development. Use of standard modules and equipment for Johan Sverdrup and Johan Castberg could hold our CapEx savings over a potential USD 150 million to USD 300 million for the licenses. Concept standardization could deliver 8% to 10% in savings on facility cost by reduced engineering. And this is, in fact, some proof we have from -- of a copy from Mariner to Bressay. Standardized vertical X-mas trees for Johan Sverdrup and Johan Castberg have the potential to save USD 0.8 billion to USD 1 billion over the field lifetime, both CapEx and OpEx. Standardized production wells contributes to realized well cost-reduction of 10% to 20%. And the recent contracts on Mcf, based on standardized components, shows a potential reduction of 20% on cost. We have more development now in the shallow water, and I ask my people to develop a lean concept to compete with subsea. And this is a new low-cost wellhead platform, which I call, "the subsea on slim legs." We have completed a feasibility study and are now evaluating implementation in the various fields. For example, for near-field discoveries at the Grane and Oseberg area, potential savings from these immense [ph] concept range between 20% to 30% depending on the size of the field and that is compared to a subsea solution. To sum up, we will develop our standardization capabilities like we have successfully managed our technology development in the past. To me, the examples and opportunities in this slide and the previous one provide comfort in committing to these CapEx savings. And let me end where I started. We deliver on our promises, and we will continue to do. We adapt our execution level to reduce cost and improve margins. We commit to an extensive improvement program, delivering an aggregated USD 1.7 billion in reduced CapEx. Now you see what I mean -- what I meant by doing all the work. Thank you.
Thank you very much, Margareth. We'll now open up for questions to both Margareth and Tim, and I'll ask Tim to join Margareth up here on the stage. We'll again start with questions from the audience, and I see one over there, please. If you could pass the microphone, Lars.
It's Brandon Morton [ph] from Bank of Montréal. Just a couple of questions more for Tim. Just firstly, in Tanzania, just if you can give us any insights into any drilling or expectations for the outboard part of your block that you didn't discuss. And just secondly, just in terms of drilling that we're going to be following at Kwanza basin, if you can just make any comments around the potential or the risk, I should say, for gas on your exposure. And then just lastly, obviously you've been very successful more -- or for what you haven't drilled and if you can just talk through your dropping of your exposure to Surinam and being out of the transform margin?
Okay, very briefly on the Tanzania, the prospectivity and the outboard part of the Block 2 in Tanzania doesn't look that great, so we don't have any firm drilling plans there. When it comes to the Kwanza, I think one of the uncertainties there is, of course, what kind of -- as obviously, whether we find hydrocarbons, but also what type of hydrocarbons we'll find. We've seen that so far, what's been proven by Cobalt seems to be quite similar to the highly volatile system, which we have in the Pão discovery in the outer Campos. So we just have to see, I guess, on that one. There is both oil and gas obviously in the basin there. When it comes to Suriname, it's a pretty conscious decision by ourselves to move away from the conjugate merger. We also quickly in Guyana, we drilled 1 high-impact prospect, it was the only one that was there. It was dry, we moved out again. We've done the same with Suriname. We probably confused you all by going into another license in Suriname that we basically committed before we pulled out on the other one.
John [ph], first. And yes, Please go ahead.
Two questions. The first one, I'm conscious, you're going to be somewhat critical of my mathematics or my understanding of statistics, but if I take the sort of midpoint of your P15 -- P10 and P90 numbers that you're drilling for, you're clearly going to, a, if you come in so much, it looks like you're going to be adding resources well ahead of the production of the company. And I guess that raises the question at some point, rather than the strategy, I think, you've taken so far, which is derisking and taking partners on -- in the spending bit of it, whether you start to look to monetize actual resources that you've discovered, in the same way as I think other very big exploration-oriented companies kind of fits into the strategy. I just wonder if you can talk a little about that. And then the second is just to go on to U.S. onshore. You talked about efficiencies in drilling, but as I understand it -- understood it from a couple of questions I think I've asked in the past is, you have a very different strategy as well in terms of the wells you're trying to drill, particularly in the Bakken, where I think you're trying to get better recovery rates or you are, as I understand it. So the efficiency of the drilling or what you drill is better than your competition and not just the cost of drilling that well. Is it possible you could talk about that if that's true?
Thanks, John. Just to start on the resources. Yes, your observation is correct. Another statistic for you, as you like, is that over the last 3 years, we've delivered the considerably more lumpy 50 [ph] estimates. That doesn't necessarily mean that's going to continue. But in terms of monetizing this, I think as Helge mentioned earlier on, sort of if it fits and we can realize good value for parts or all our equity, also in some of our discoveries, that's something we might consider. Traditionally we farm down the post -- the predrill if we think it's too risky and too costly. But as I say, we have an open mind to doing that also post-discovery. Margareth Øvrum: What I showed with the drilling operation, the efficiency on the cost side and on the time side and, of course, we also have an ambition to reduce the total CapEx further. And as you probably know that the recovery rate in these areas in the oil -- in shale and oil area is normally much lower than we are used to. And I think that we, as a company, we work very hard to improve the recovery rate also in the Bakken. I think we have a very comprehensive [indiscernible], which we will also utilize in the -- on the unconventional in U.S.
And Michael is next. Michael J. Alsford - Citigroup Inc, Research Division: It's Michael Alsford from Citi again. Two questions, if I could, on 2 specific projects. Firstly, on your Johan Castberg, one of the, I guess, reasons for perhaps the delay to that project other than the tax was around resources. Given the recent well results that you've drilled in the area, could you maybe give an update as to whether that is still one of the key challenges or do you think you have sufficient resources now to push ahead with that project? And then just secondly, while Johan Sverdrup, while you might not be happy to give a CapEx number or production profile today, could you maybe talk a bit more broadly about what are the key decisions that you're thinking about right now? What are the key issues perhaps before we get to the projects of scoping and when might that be?
Maybe I'll start on Johan Castberg and then Margareth can continue. On the resource estimates, when it comes to the 2 main discoveries and our resource estimates, yes, they remain the same. As I say, the results of the -- is it 2 or 3 -- 3 prospects, which we drilled up is now being a bit mixed. We did make 1 oil discovery on the Skuld [ph]. We're currently drilling prospect Kramsnø, and then we will drill previous [ph]. And I think until we've drilled those 2 prospects, then we -- I think the sort of jury's still a little bit out in terms of the total resource picture. And then whether what we have is enough already, Margareth is probably better suited to answer than me. Margareth Øvrum: On John Castberg, we are, as was mentioned, we work on both the resource side and as well as on the cost side and, of course, we need some solutions on the tax side in addition. On the cost side, I would say we are trying -- we have a base case, which is the transportation to shore. We try to reduce the CapEx, and we are working on that in a good manner. And -- but, of course, we also evaluate the different concept, which could be even less costly. But, of course, it depends on how much flexibility you built into the concept. I can't really give you any figures on that, of course, as you probably know. Then on John Sverdrup, there will be, as Helge said earlier today, we will have -- early in 2014, we will have a concept selection. But, of course, everyone knows that we will have a field center. We will have 4-plus points and we will have polls [ph] from shore. The key decisions early this year, concept selection; in next year, beginning of next year, the sanction; and we hope that parliament will assess it during the spring session in 2015. But also we are working on the unitization because we need to unitize it before the PDO. So we work on it, will be a very good solution. And we will score high on the benchmark.
She always delivers too. Margareth Øvrum: On the Sverdrup, you know this is very good oil. It's -- you can work with it, and we can utilize the whole technology portfolio we have to increase the recovery. So that will be a very, very interesting to work going forward. Lydia Rainforth - Barclays Capital, Research Division: Lydia Rainforth from Barclays again. Two questions, if I could. Firstly, could you just talk through a little bit in terms of more detail, the reducing modification CapEx by 20% and just how that actually happens and over what sort of timeframe. And then secondly, a lot of time spent on the capital side, I was wondering if you could take us through more on the OpEx side, how much you can try and take out of that and where the main areas are you looking at? Margareth Øvrum: First of all, on the modification side, we are prioritizing modification. We are optimizing the concept, and we are making it leaner -- the work process is leaner than it is today. So that's what we are doing on the modification side. We are, as also Helge alluded to earlier today, our technical requirement, we make it more simple. Then it was on...
It was on the OpEx part, wasn't it? Margareth Øvrum: The OpEx part. I haven't said very much about the OpEx part today, but Torgrim mentioned in 2016, after the $1.3 billion, $0.3 million is SG&A and OpEx. And OpEx is part of the efficiency program, which I'm heading up, which cover both CapEx and OpEx and as well as production efficiency. And I'm not sure I will reveal anything to timing [ph], but we work on maybe on the modification concept, on other maintenance concepts, can we do it in a more efficient way going forward? We are, in all our projects, we have sensors to measure everything. Why can't we use that in another way based on conditions, based on monitoring and also maintenance? So I think one of the things we are really assessing is on the maintenance concept, as an example. And the subsea aftermarket, I think, we can get more out of that, just as a few examples.
Then we have Christine on the left. Yes, if you could transfer the microphone. Christine Tiscareno - S&P Capital IQ Equity Research: Christine Tiscareno from S&P. I just wanted to find out if you could give us, Margareth, an idea of that staircase on Page 12, on the Slide 12, that you have designed, in which you show all the different standardization potentials that you hope to achieve, is there -- can you give us like a timeframe when you think it will be delivered? And then you mentioned about your expenditures, could you tell us what percent -- all these standardization and technology improvement, what percentage of your expenditure, is it a big -- is it 10%, 20%? We know that all these are going to provide a lot of cost savings, but how much is it costing to provide that? And then lastly, I just wanted to know if all the sort of previous operational hiccups that you had were hiccups or whether is that going to be business as usual because of all these things that you're carrying out? Trying to standardize production and putting in more subsea production, taking unmanned platforms. All these changes, are they going to be creating problems as you adjust? Margareth Øvrum: First of all, I hope you see that we have improved everything in here in some years. So we have had changes already and we will continue to do so. And the industry, we -- all we have a program is too costly, we need to increase the margin. So I think the whole organization really understand we need to do something. And it's the same with the suppliers, they also understand. So we need to work very hard to get this with the suppliers. And I think we are in a very good way to work with them now. I'm not afraid that we'll create some hiccups because this is the way you need to work every day. You need to improve from one day to the other. So the work is very important, and this was something I started with. You need to do it right. You need to have your safety record in the right way because if you are, then you can work on improvement. If you have a lot of problems, it's impossible to work on improvement. So safety is prioritized as #1. But then if you have that correct, then you can work on the improvement. And I think, some years ago -- I've been in this industry for many years, and some years ago, the prospect project nobody believed that we would be -- that, that would be so successful. But we have done it, and I don't think we have had any big issues in that context. This time-wise, you ask for the time on the standardization, and I haven't put up any figures on the time scale there, because first of all, as you know, we have very -- some very big projects now. So if we should manage to standardize, we need to do it now because we can do it with Johan Castberg, we can do it with Johan Sverdrup. So we need -- some of these, we need to do now. And on standardization on wells, we have already started, and all other contracts going out now is based on standardization. I said we had 1 contract on completion that was awarded a few months back. And we ask for standardized solutions and then we managed to reduce the cost by over 20%. So you need to use it on all the contracts. You need to use it and discuss with the suppliers and you need to work on it on a daily basis, but Sverdrup and Castberg is our means to do it.
Then we have Peter. Peter Hutton - RBC Capital Markets, LLC, Research Division: Peter Hutton from RBC. Two quick questions, both for Tim, if I could. On the Gulf of Mexico, you had -- you mentioned there are 3 prospects which rank highly in your global portfolio. You talked about Martin, can you give us a little bit of flavor about Perseus and Monument? And how they come in? And then the second question on Angola, you mentioned you're involved in 8 wells, 2 of which you'll be operating. Now you're on 2 blocks, your partner is on 3 blocks. You're operating on average 1 -- you're doing 1 well per block, others are doing twice as many, might we expect more -- a lot more drilling to come from yourselves?
I definitely hope so. Let me just explain that, and the commitments are fairly openly communicated. I think on each of Block 38 and 39 we manage to negotiate down to 1 well commitment on each. But as already mentioned, I think on Dilolo, they're respective of the outcome of the first well, and we most certainly have to drill a second and a third, and it has to do with the size of the structure and the potential variation in reservoir development across the structure, assuming we find reservoir, of course. In the 3 other blocks, there are 2 well commitments on each. So the other block's operated by Total, Repsol and BP. As I say, we probably won't manage to complete more than 1 well this year ourselves on Block 39. We will step across the 38 after that or at least that's the plan. And I think we probably -- even if we have a discovery on Dilolo, we probably need a few months to sort of revisit that and have robust plans for moving forward. So 8 commitment wells. I think our partner -- some of our partners are due to start up sort of about the same time as us, some a little bit later. And when it comes to GoM, some variation on these prospects. I think the characteristics in terms of volume and value and, not least, chance of success are very similar. I don't really dare to say it, but at least they are, as I look at it and the way we risk prospects, medium-risk prospects. I probably shouldn't have said that, but that's just how they are and I have to be open and honest about that. They are impact prospects. They're somewhat different. The stratigraphy is somewhat different on these. The Martin is a big 4-way, as we map that and that's usually good in the Mississippi Canyon. Margareth Øvrum: I'll add thing on standardization, is that okay? Because -- just for you to understand how important it is with standardization because you will reduce engineering. You can reduce the document, all the documents. You can reduce the risk. You can achieve economies of scale because you can...
[Operator Instructions] Margareth Øvrum: You can also have much more leaner work processes, but maybe the most important for me, it is really to -- it's all about changing the culture and how to adapt to our new DNA, which is really margin, margin, margin. So I think standardization in this sense is very, very important for all of us. Oswald Clint - Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC., Research Division: Oswald Clint at Sanford Bernstein. Tim, maybe a question on the Barents Sea, which seems to have been a lot stronger last year. I think Lundin hit some pay in the Permian, the deeper Permian. Are you seeing any of that potential in any of your blocks in terms of the Barents? And then Margareth, you said -- you talked a lot about standardized -- standardization, and then you said -- but then technology adds to the upside, so what's the risk that we go through in standardization and then suddenly you get excited and want to throw science at these things and costs get inflated once again?
Thanks, Oswald. Let me start on the Barents Sea. Our focus, our priorities are the Johan Castberg area and the Hoop area. We've tried over the years unsuccessfully to do what Lundin have done, and that's make on oil discovery in the Permian, the classified [ph] Permian. So good luck to them, good luck to them on that. As I say, it's a challenging play. But there are a lot of challenging plays in the Barents Sea, as you know. Some of them related to uplift and burial, others related to -- extremely shallow stratigraphy in the Hoop area. I think suffice it to say, there's a lot of optimism in the Barents Sea, some significant breakthroughs in terms of finding oil discoveries, but still some way to go in terms of finding the sort of robust, profitable development solutions for many of these discoveries. I think there's something here we all need to bear in mind, it's a rather special setting, it's not particularly difficult from a water depth point of view, from a pressure or temperature point of view, but the geology here continues to play sort of -- have some tricks sometimes in all of these areas actually. Margareth? Margareth Øvrum: On technology and standardization, first of all, I think it's not contradictory. It is -- I had that example, the multilateral wells on the Troll field, they are the most advanced. It's a lot of technology into it. But when you can standardize and utilize or reuse and reuse and reuse all the technology, then it will be very, very cost-effective. And for me, technology, it will be still very, very important going forward, but I think we can push more on developing more cost-effective solutions and more focus on improving margins with our technology measure. But it is not contradictory. I think it's [indiscernible] technology and really -- able to use it.
Brandon Morton [ph] from Bank of Montréal again. Just in terms of what we've heard this afternoon around capital efficiency, focus on internal rates of return, as much as you had great successes in Tanzania with the gas discoveries, where would the project sit within the portfolio going forward? And if it will stay within the portfolio, would you be happy handing over operatorship or do you believe LNG is a core competency of Statoil?
Maybe I'll start and then Margareth can follow up. I think sort of, as we've alluded to here, the fundamental thing here is that we have to find enough gas first. We have to have a robust resource base in order to be able to move forward with any project. Should we move forward, as you know, it will be a huge investment, that's the characteristic of these kind of projects. The nice thing about them is they tend to -- once they start producing, they tend to produce for many, many decades and generate a lot of cash. I think we're in a pretty good place now as I said, 17 to 20 Tcf in place to produce. We're currently testing the Zafarani-2 well. We haven't released any results, but I'm allowed to say that the tests are very encouraging. So I think there's no problem with the -- no problem whatsoever, with the well deliveries, at least based on that test. We have a lot of upside potential, much more than we thought. It's a fabulous story because, going back, we almost didn't drill Zafarani, and it's only because we applied very specialist seismic techniques that we convinced ourselves we should drill it. And then, only then, did we recognize Lavani, and then when we had success on Lavani did we see all the other stuff. And it can sound a bit sort of, well, so you -- it doesn't sound like we knew what we were doing, but there's a huge concentration of gas here and as I say, hopefully we can prove up somewhere between another 5 and 15 then. We have a very solid basis in Block 2 and not withstanding here, sort of together with BG and Ophir, who operate Blocks 1, 2 and 4. And then when it comes to other challenges on Tanzania, maybe [indiscernible] Margareth Øvrum: Yes, we have, of course, a strong complementary partnership and we are in now the process of working off the right joint venture consolidation. And -- but meanwhile, we are the operator on the offshore part, which I alluded to or elaborate a bit, and we prepare for subsea to shore solutions from very, very deepwater to shore, so yes.
And then you asked the question about the potential divestment, I think that's what you said. It wasn't exactly your words, I think. We have a 65% equity in Block 2. So I think I answered, as Helge answered earlier today, and as I answered previously about potentially farming down after discoveries. We have the optionality to do that. At the same time, it's important to have materiality in these kind of projects going forward, but that needs to be balanced out with the risk and obviously the capital exposure because it will be very costly to develop.
Okay. We'll take 2 questions from the telephone audience. [Operator Instructions] First question comes from Teodor Nilsen from Swedbank. Teodor Sveen Nilsen - Swedbank First Securities, Research Division: I think Tim showed a very exciting slide on his Slide #5 chart, which showed CapEx for high-impact discoveries and CapEx for sanctioned discoveries. My question is, if you remove Sverdrup for the high-impact discoveries, how would that chart have looked like?
The simple answer is that I don't know. But there are 10 of 11 high-impact discoveries. It was only Peregrino South which is not included in that chart. So otherwise, Bay du Nord is there, so that's really a very important contributor on that one. Pão is there. Castberg is there. And then actually Tanzania is also there, so that in a way, you can say that would probably weigh up at this point in time, for Johan Sverdrup. So that's about as much detail as I can give you there. But I actually don't know the answer of what it would look like if you took out Johan Sverdrup.
Our the last question before we wrap up comes from Evan Hagen [ph] from ABG Sundal Collier.
On the Johan Sverdrup, you are now mentioning that you're hoping to reach a recovery factor of close to 70%. Is that something that's already baked into the resource guidance that you have provided or is that upside from the figures that you have published? Margareth Øvrum: I have disclosed the figure for what we are putting into the concept selection, and it's obviously not 70%. I just said from our experience, from increasing the recovery rates from 30% to 50% on average, we -- and I know that if you work with that, this is a very, very good oil, and the reservoir is good, and I believe that we can see growth with that over the lifetime. We can manage to get almost a 70% recovery rate.
Then we'll have to wrap up for today. And before we all leave, I will give the floor to our CEO, Helge Lund, again, to wrap it all up. Please, Helge.
Thank you, Hilde. And first of all, thank you to all of you for being patient and being here for so many hours. We really appreciate this opportunity to talk about what we're trying to achieve in Statoil. I would love to go into detail in a detailed summary, but I think the message the we're trying to get across is, one, that we'll pursue within the same strategic framework that we have done before. We will grow. We will focus on the upstream, and we will use technology as an important part of leveraging value moving forward. Secondly, we have been quite specific in this framework that we will deliver on for the next 3 years to provide you with more granularity and certainty around what targets and objectives that we're working towards, and that a key objective for us has been to find -- identify a better balance given the industry environment or providing growth and at the same time, deliver value, both in our operations but also in terms of servicing the shareholders directly. We have not today paid a lot of attention to talking about the long-term. I think you see that we have a very strong resource base. We have very strong projects. We have told you that 40% of the CapEx actually from now and to 2016 is actually for projects following after 2016. So my best assessment and judgment is that we have an approach and the resource base that will give the opportunity for growth and development much beyond the turn of the next decade. And then we have to look at, at what speed do we develop these resources as the market and the industry is developing. Then our team, of course, will engage with you extensively over the next few weeks and whenever you have questions or issues that you want to address because there are many things that we cannot address in a short session like this, but I will not be available next week because people make strategy happen. It's not made by a presentation by executives. So this morning, I sent a letter to 2,000 leaders in Statoil, outlining what we intend to do over the next few years. I also had, I think, a 10-minute webcast to all our employees in Statoil this morning to set out the new framework. And next week I will spend most of my time meeting with my people in town hall meetings in Oslo, in Stavanger, in Bergen, and I will meet with 600 leaders within Margareth's unit because they are essential in order to deliver on the improvements that we have talked about today. And the day after, I'll meet with Tim's team as well to make sure that everyone understand and we can discuss extensively in a broader way than we have been able to do so far due to all the restrictions for a publicly listed company to make sure that we have full force behind the execution of the plan. So I leave it with that. Again, thank you for your patience. Thank you for coming and look forward to engage with you as we move forward. Thank you.