(Bloomberg) – Chevron Corp. mentioned Friday it accomplished an growth at Kazakhstan’s large Tengiz oil area, which is anticipated to pump 1 million barrels a day (bpd) by the center of this yr.
The growth, costing $48 to $49 billion, comes as U.S. President Donald Trump this week mentioned he’ll push the Group of Petroleum Exporting International locations and its allies, which embody Kazakhstan, to carry down oil costs.
“For OPEC, we’re going to comply with no matter steering the Republic of Kazakhstan supplies us,” Chevron’s President of Worldwide Exploration and Manufacturing Clay Neff mentioned in an interview.
Kazakhstan’s oil manufacturing plans have put strain on OPEC+ companions, who’ve agreed to curtail output for for much longer than anticipated. Central Asia’s largest producer has as an alternative introduced plans to lift oil output in 2025.
The work on increasing Tengiz, among the many world’s largest oil fields that represents about 1% of world manufacturing, has seen delays and price overruns. Now, the sector will generate $4 billion of free money stream in 2025 for Chevron and $5 billion in 2026 at oil costs of $60, Neff mentioned.
Many of the lighter-grade oil will go to Europe and Asia, he added. Tengiz at the moment produces about 700,000 barrels of crude per day.
Chevron “reaching this in January probably bodes effectively for the corporate, given the prior delays with the tasks” in Kazakhstan, RBC Europe Ltd. analyst Biraj Borkhataria mentioned in a notice on Friday.
Tengiz is central to Chevron’s pledge to develop its international manufacturing, and the delays have weighed on the corporate’s inventory.
Neff pressured the significance of the Kazakhstan asset within the upstream portfolio. With 1 million boed in 2025, it’s about the identical as Chevron’s U.S. Permian Basin output, which can be anticipated to succeed in 1 million barrels a day this yr
Chevron plans, nevertheless, to cut back its capital expenditures by about 10% within the Permian, which covers the area of West Texas and New Mexico.