Houston-based worldwide
drilling contractor GlobalSantaFe reported
that the company's worldwide SCORE, or Summary of Current Offshore Rig
Economics, for April 2002 was down from the previous month's SCORE by
0.5 percent.
GlobalSantaFe President and CEO Sted Garber said, "The Gulf of Mexico
SCORE hit its inflection point in April, reversing a 10-month downturn
as dayrates responded to improving utilization for certain jackup rig
classes. Elsewhere, while the offshore rig markets in Southeast Asia
and West Africa remain moderately strong, there has been some mild
erosion in jackup dayrates. We expect the dayrate declines in West
Africa to abate as the Gulf rig market continues to tighten, decreasing
the incentive for Gulf-based rigs to compete for work there."
GlobalSantaFe's SCORE compares the profitability of current mobile
offshore drilling rig dayrates to the profitability of dayrates at the
1980-1981 peak of the offshore drilling cycle. In the 1980-1981 period,
when SCORE averaged 100 percent, new contract dayrates equaled the sum
of daily cash operating costs plus approximately $700 per day per
million dollars invested. In addition to a worldwide SCORE covering key
types of competitive offshore drilling rigs in key drilling markets, a
separate SCORE is calculated for certain types of rigs and certain
regions to indicate the relative condition of rig markets. The release,
which is made available for publication on the third Monday of each
month, includes separate SCORE calculations for the U.S. Gulf of
Mexico, the North Sea, West Africa and Southeast Asia. Rig types
include jackup and semisubmersible rigs.