6 - 17 Jan 2025
Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia)
Hotel : Royale Chulan Kuala Lumpur
Cost : 8400 € Euro
This five-day program develops an essential understanding of Oil & Gas Exploration & Production (E&P) accounting, reporting, and performance measurement issues and practices. It develops your ability to prepare, use and critically evaluate information on E&P activities, applying specialist industry knowledge and relevant analytical skills.
The program is designed specifically for those who have a basic understanding of accounting but who need to understand more about accounting and financial reporting policies and practices in the upstream oil and gas industry.
Topics covered include the successful efforts and full cost methods of accounting, the classification of assets as tangible or intangible, the unit of a production method for depreciation of capitalized costs, the testing for impairment of oil and gas assets, and accounting for removal and restoration of oil and gas facilities.
The main requirements of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) relevant to the Oil & Gas Exploration & Production industry are examined for each major phase in the field life cycle.
Learning throughout the course is achieved through illustrated presentations, group discussions, worked examples, exercises, and solutions, and extracts from published financial statements of international companies.
Participants in this program gain a broader and deeper appreciation of the role of the E&P Finance Department and the context in which it operates, encouraging a more confident and proactive approach to their work, developing awareness of issues, and preparing them for increased responsibility.
By the end of the program, delegates will learn how to:
Develop an understanding of the accounting standards, policies, and practices used by companies in the Oil & Gas Exploration & Production industry
Appreciate the nature and financial implications of Production Sharing Contracts and other agreements between host governments and international companies
Examine issues and guidelines in accounting for Joint Ventures
Identify and know how to apply international and national accounting standards most relevant to the E&P industry
Improve the relevance and reliability of financial reports to better meet the needs of users
Review and use publicly available information for benchmarking the business performance of companies in the E&P industry
Each topic on this course is introduced with an illustrated presentation on the activities to be accounted for, the methods used, and the issues arising in the financial reporting of those activities. Learning on each topic is developed by a worked example, and participants then complete an exercise, individually or in groups as appropriate, to ensure that they are able to apply what they have learned. On completion of each exercise, a full solution is issued and discussed, with an opportunity for questions and answers. Having mastered the theory and practice of each issue, learning is further reinforced by an examination of relevant extracts from the annual reports of international oil and gas companies. At the end of each day, participants have an opportunity for a one-to-one session with the course leader to ask further questions and to go over any material that they have not yet fully understood.
More effective Finance support for front-line departments
Greater relevance and reliability of financial and management information
More strategic thinking and focus on performance
More effective use of financial statements of the company, its co-venturers, and its competitors
The ability of Finance managers and staff to work with less supervision
Preparation of Finance staff for increased responsibility
A better understanding of the context and importance of the work you do
Greater awareness of industry practices, problems, and solutions
Increased understanding and assurance to complete tasks successfully
Increased self-confidence and motivation at work
Greater job satisfaction in providing quality support to management
Greater ability to supervise, develop and motivate colleagues
The development and purpose of company accounts
Standards of financial reporting in the O&G industry to stakeholders
Investor reporting
New investors
Taxation and royalties
Stock market intermediaries
A convergence of GAAP and IFRS
Effect on reporting
Migration paths
Effect on PSC reporting
Share pricing and O&G companies
Capitalization and cash flows in the Oil & Gas Industry
Sourcing capital
Capitalizing E&P projects
Effects of IFRS
Capital maintenance
Sources of capital
Oil & Gas Value Chain and Accounting Issues
E&P Exploration & evaluation, borrowing costs, and development expenditures
P&S Reserves and resources
Product valuation issues, impairment of assets, disclosures, decommissioning
Royalties and income taxes
Emission trading schemes
Company accounts, PSA’s and Joint Ventures
Accounting for multiple efforts
Joint ventures – GAAP & IFRS
Business combinations
Currency issues
Accounting treatments
Analysis of financial statements
Analytical tools
Full cost
Successful efforts
Decommissioning obligations
Auditors and reporting to investors in the oil and gas industry
External audit investigations and reports
The auditor’s ‘Opinion'
True and Fair
Sarbanes Oxley
Internal audits
Ethical issues
Corporate governance
Government regulation
Investor confidence and share prices
Creative accounting and investor protection
Investment finance in the oil and gas industry
Processes and lead times
Sources of external finance
Financial markets
Investment criteria
Roles of intermediaries in the financial markets
Shell and BP – Performance and Share Prices
Analysis of Shell Oil and BP Accounts
DuPont hierarchy of ratios
Theoretical conclusions and live feeds from London Stock Exchange
Influencing factors