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Goldman Sachs Global Energy Conference
January 2016
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Forward-Looking Statements
Statements contained in this presentation that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements within the
meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
Forward-looking statements include words or phrases such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,”
“plan,” “project,” “could,” “may,” “might,” “should,” “will” and similar words and specifically include statements
involving expected financial performance, day rates and backlog, estimated rig availability; rig commitments;
contract duration, status, terms and other contract commitments; new rig commitments and construction; scheduled
delivery dates for rigs; the timing of delivery, mobilization, contract commencement, relocation or other movement of
rigs; benefits derived from expense management actions; estimated capital expenditures; rig stacking costs; and
general market, business and industry conditions, trends and outlook. Such statements are subject to numerous
risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results to vary materially from those indicated, including
commodity price fluctuations, customer demand, new rig supply, downtime and other risks associated with offshore
rig operations, relocations, severe weather or hurricanes; changes in worldwide rig supply and demand, competition
and technology; future levels of offshore drilling activity; governmental action, civil unrest and political and economic
uncertainties; terrorism, piracy and military action; risks inherent to shipyard rig construction, repair, maintenance or
enhancement; possible cancellation, suspension or termination of drilling contracts as a result of mechanical
difficulties, performance, customer finances, the decline or the perceived risk of a further decline in oil and/or
natural gas prices, or other reasons, including terminations for convenience (without cause); the outcome of
litigation, legal proceedings, investigations or other claims or contract disputes; governmental regulatory, legislative
and permitting requirements affecting drilling operations; our ability to attract and retain skilled personnel on
commercially reasonable terms; environmental or other liabilities, risks or losses; debt restrictions that may limit our
liquidity and flexibility; our ability to realize the expected benefits from our redomestication and actual contract
commencement dates; cybersecurity risks and threats; and the occurrence or threat of epidemic or pandemic
diseases or any governmental response to such occurrence or threat. In addition to the numerous factors
described above, you should also carefully read and consider “Item 1A. Risk Factors” in Part I and “Item 7.
Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in Part II of our most
recent annual report on Form 10-K, as updated in our subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, which are
available on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov or on the Investor Relations section of our website at
www.enscoplc.com. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular statement, and we
undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, except as required by law.
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3Q15 Highlights
• Record operational utilization
– 99.8% for jackups
– 95.4% for floaters
• ENSCO DS-8 delivered; commences initial contract in mid-
November
• Expense savings targets increased
• ENSCO 8505 contracted in U.S. Gulf
• ENSCO 71 & ENSCO 72 awarded new multi-year contracts in
North Sea
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Agenda
• Current Market Conditions
• Proactive Steps to Address Downturn
• Outlook for Offshore Drilling
– efficiency & cost improvements
– attrition of older rigs
• Maintain and Widen Leadership Position
– #1 in customer satisfaction
– innovation
– efficient/cost-effective driller
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Current Market Conditions
Source: IHS Upstream
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
$50
$60
$ billions
Global exploration spend of 18 largest E&Ps
$29
$41
$58
• Substantial reduction in
E&P capex
• Unprecedented decline in
exploration spending
• Lower rig utilization & day
rates
• Expect 2016 capex to be
lower year over year
• The significant pullback in
spending will affect supply
in the future
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• Drillers
– cutting costs & stacking/retiring rigs
– deferring rig deliveries
– speculators canceling rig orders
• Service companies
– strategic combinations to invest in technological innovations and process
improvements that increase efficiencies and drive out costs
• Customers
– reducing capex
– deferring projects
– early terminations/concessions for existing rig contracts
– re-engineering to increase efficiencies/reduce costs
– testing economics for future programs based on lower costs and
streamlined project management
Market Response
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• Capital Management
• Fleet Restructuring
• Expense Management
• Operational Excellence & Safety
– innovation
– process improvements
Taking Decisive
Steps To Be
Resilient
Through The
Downturn
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• Accessed the debt markets
– $1.25 billion offering in 3Q14
– $1.10 billion offering in 1Q15 to refinance 2016 maturities
• Increased revolver to $2.25 billion and extended to 2019
• Reduced quarterly dividend to improve capital management
flexibility
• Deferred ENSCO DS-10 delivery to 1Q17, delaying ~$300 million
in capex
Proactive Capital Management
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Debt Maturity Profile
$500
$900
$1,500
$625 $700
$2,250
$0
$300
$600
$900
$1,200
$1,500
$1,800
$2,100
$2,400
$2,700
$3,000
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2027 2040
$150$300
2044
Increased Revolving Credit Facility to
$2.25B; extended to 2019
$ millions
$1,025
No debt
maturities
until 2Q19
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Credit Ratings
ESV DO NE RDC RIG ATW PACD ORIG SDRL
BBB BBBBBB- BBB-
BB
BB-
CCC+
CC+ Not Rated
Investment
Grade
Source: Bloomberg composite credit ratings as of December 2015; cash, short-term investments and contracted revenue backlog as of 30
September 2015
• $1.1 billion of cash and short-term investments
• $6.6 billion of contracted revenue backlog
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Declining Capital Expenditures
4Q15 2016 2017 2018
120
475
32530
25
50
50
55
120
55
55
New rig construction Rig enhancements Minor upgrades and improvements
$ millions
$205
$620*
$430*
*Note: Preliminary estimates for 2016, 2017 and 2018; final capex estimates to be determined upon completion of annual budget process and subject
to change based on rig contracting; new rig construction represents contractual commitments plus anticipate capex associated with rig construction;
2016 rig enhancements capex is specific to a mooring upgrade for an additional ENSCO 8500 Series rig, while 2017 and 2018 rig enhancements are
estimates and not earmarked for any specific projects at this time; capex for minor upgrades and improvements are based on the currently active fleet;
year-to-date capital expenditures through 30 September 2015 totaled $1,146 million: $1,132 million of new rig construction, $145 million of rig
enhancements and $169 million of minor upgrades and improvements.
$105*
Updated Outlook as of 11 November 2015
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Fleet Restructuring:
Newbuild Deliveries
2012.75 2013.75 2014.75 2015.75 2016.75 2017.75 2018.75 2019.75
ENSCO DS-7
ENSCO 120
ENSCO 121
ENSCO 122
ENSCO 110
ENSCO DS-8
ENSCO DS-9
ENSCO 123
ENSCO 140
ENSCO 141
ENSCO DS-10
Drillships Premium jackups
2013 2016 20172014 2015 20202018 2019
5 yrs with Total
2 yrs on operating rate*
2 yrs w/ Wintershall
2 yrs with NAM
2+ yrs with Nexen
4 yrs with Total
Delivered &
Contracted
Under
Construction &
Uncontracted
Delivered and On
Operating Rate
3 yrs with NDC
*Note: Customer has terminated contract for its convenience. Per terms of contract for early termination, customer is required to make monthly
payments for two years equal to the operating day rate of approximately $550,000, which may be partially defrayed should Ensco re-contract the rig
within the next two years and/or mitigate certain costs during this time period while the rig is idle and without a contract.
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• 2014 floater upgrades
benefitting 2015 results
– ENSCO 5004
– ENSCO 5006
• ENSCO 8503 mooring
upgrade complete and back
on contract with Stone Energy
• ENSCO 8505 expected to
complete mooring upgrade in
4Q15 before contract with
Marubeni
• 3rd ENSCO 8500 Series
floater to receive mooring
upgrade during 2016
Upgrades to Existing Floaters
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• 20 rigs sold since 2010 generating ~$675 million in
proceeds
– 6 rigs sold since September 2014
• 4 jackups sold for more than $200 million in proceeds during 3Q14,
reducing exposure to Mexico jackup market
• 2 floaters >30 years of age sold for scrap value
• 7 rigs currently held for sale
– 1 jackup in continuing operations
– 4 floaters in discontinued operations
– 2 jackups in discontinued operations
Fleet Restructuring:
Divestitures
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• February 2015
– 9% unit labor cost decrease for offshore workers
– 15% reduction of onshore positions
• $27 million in annualized savings
– full run-rate savings beginning 2Q15
• August 2015
– +6 ppt improvement in offshore unit labor cost savings to 15% compared to 2014
levels; full run-rate savings beginning 1Q16
– 14% incremental reduction of onshore positions
• $30 million additional annualized savings; full run-rate beginning 4Q15
• consolidated business unit reporting structure from five to three, centralizing certain
functions and rationalizing office space
Expense Management Actions
15% reduction in offshore unit labor costs
+
$57 million annual savings in onshore support costs
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• Stacking rigs without near-
term contracting opportunities
reduces daily operating
expenses
• Up-front costs to preserve
cold stacked rigs
– $1 million for jackups
– $5 million for semis
• 8500 Series semis cold
stacking process includes:
– dehumidification
– prevention of hull corrosion
– key equipment preservation
Proactive Rig Stacking
Avg Daily
Operating
Expenses
Warm
Stack
Cold
Stack
Drillship$40k
per day
<$10k
per day(ENSCO DS-1
& DS-2)
Semi$32k
per day
<$10k
per day
Jackup$20k
per day
<$5k
per day
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Improved Expense Outlook
2Q15A 3Q15A 4Q15E
$503 million $434 million
Prior estimate
$450 - 455 million
$415 – $420 million
Prior estimate
$435 - 440 million
Expense reductions more
than offset a projected
increase in rig operating
days v. 3Q15
Contract Drilling Expense
Updated Outlook as of 11 November 2015
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• Proprietary asset
management system
– improve operational
performance by increasing
uptime
– reducing maintenance
costs
– lower lifetime equipment
costs
• Leverages standardization
Innovation During the Downturn
Ensco Asset Management System
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Excellent Safety Performance
Total Recordable
Incident Rate
• Leading-edge safety
management systems
• Enhancing process
safety to drive further
improvements
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 YTD2015
Ensco Industry
Ensco statistics are Year To Date through September 30. The IADC industry statistics are as of Q2 2015.
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Net Income Margin
Largest Offshore Drillers
ESV SDRL NE RIG RDC DO
30%
25%
22%
19%17% 16%
Source: FactSet; sum of trailing eight quarters of net income divided by sum of trailing eight quarters of revenue. FactSet's data is based on
aggregation of information collected from industry equity research analysts and may not be based on GAAP reported financial data; Ensco,
Seadrill, Noble and Transocean adjusted for extraordinary items such as gains and losses on asset disposals, legal settlements and early
termination and arbitration fees.
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High Levels of Customer Satisfaction
Rated #1
• Total Satisfaction
• Health, Safety & Environment
• Technology
• Special Applications
• Deepwater Drilling
• Shelf Wells
• Non-Vertical Wells
• Harsh Environment Wells
• North Sea
• Latin America & Mexico
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Key Points to Remember
1. Deepwater production is 7% of global supply
2. Offshore reserves are a critical part of major E&P portfolios
3. Excessive costs/inefficiencies crept into sector during the $100+ oil
environment
4. Industry is proactively responding to commodity price pressures
5. Breakeven commodity prices for offshore programs are declining
6. Unprecedented decline in E&P exploration spending will create pent up
demand and a future snapback in spending
Outlook for Offshore E&P
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• Shell has stated that deepwater is a key driver of growth
– “Our growth priorities follow two strategic themes: integrated
gas and deepwater. These will provide our medium-term growth
and we expect them to become core engines in the future.”
• Shell’s recent acquisition of BG aligns with the company’s
priorities in deepwater, particularly in Brazil
– “Brazil is an absolutely outstanding upstream province … [and] at
this moment is the most exciting part of the industry.”
– “The potential is absolutely gigantic – there is much more to
come.”
Importance of Deepwater
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Other major E&Ps have made similar comments YTD regarding the
importance of deepwater projects to future growth
– BP: “In order to deliver long-term growth, we will continue to maintain a
disciplined investment approach into three distinctive classes of assets:
deepwater, gas value chains and giant fields. We will continue to
maintain a balanced portfolio of opportunities.”
– Chevron: “New supply will increasingly come from more complex and
remote sources with higher full-cycle development costs [including]
arctic, deepwater, heavy, sour and the like.”
– Total: “A new direction is being taken to carry out deep offshore
operations in even deeper waters … and at greater distances for multi-
phase production transport … which is fully in line with the ambitious
goals of [the company’s] exploration and production [business] and
supports major technology-intensive assets such as Libra in Brazil.”
Importance of Deepwater
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• BP Mad Dog: Phase 2
– Cost estimates reduced to less than $10 billion from previous
estimate of $22 billion
– Project re-engineering through standardization and scope
optimization, coupled with industry deflation, resulted in significantly less
capital required to develop approximately 90% of resources
• Shell Appomattox
– 20% reduction in project costs from supply chain savings, design
improvements, etc.
• Total Block 32
– Capital expenditure estimate reduced by $4 billion to $16 billion
– Optimized project design and contracting strategy
• Statoil
– “Standardization is the new innovation.”
Customers Re-Engineering Projects
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Recent strategic combinations/alliances among service
companies to drive greater efficiencies and lower the breakeven
commodity prices for projects:
• Schlumberger/Cameron – strategic innovation, efficiencies and cost
reductions in deepwater projects; driving down breakeven commodity price
levels
• GE Oil & Gas/McDermott – improve design/planning of offshore oil and gas
field developments
• OneSubsea/Subsea 7 – enhance project delivery, improve recovery and
optimize the cost and efficiency of deepwater subsea developments
• FMC Technologies/Technip – overhaul subsea field operations to drive
efficiencies
• Baker Hughes/Aker Solutions – develop technology for production solutions
that will boost output, increase recovery rates and reduce costs for subsea
fields
• Schlumberger/OneSubsea/Helix – optimize the cost and efficiency of subsea
well intervention systems
Service Sector Response
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• Shallow water well programs have lower breakeven commodity
price points on average than deepwater projects
– less complex drilling requirements, shallower water depths and greater
access to existing infrastructure
• More diverse customer base; shallow water demand a function
of customer- and region-specific factors
– increased rig demand in the Middle East from NOCs
– leases requiring continued drilling in areas like North Sea and West
Africa have stabilized demand as exploration capex has been reduced
– well intervention now more economic in lower day rate environment
– U.S. Gulf of Mexico and Asia Pacific markets are challenged due to
capex reductions and uncontracted newbuild supply, respectively
• Drillers with established operational and safety track records have
an advantage in contracting rigs
– zero newbuilds being built by speculators have been contracted
Jackup Market Dynamics
28Source: IHS-ODS Petrodata as of December 2015; competitive marketed floaters and jackups (independent leg cantilever rigs); ‘contracted’
includes rigs currently under contract or with a future contract
Global Marketed Rig Fleet
Newbuilds
Floaters Jackups
Contracted 208 288
Idle/Other 58 100
Total 266 388
% Contracted 78% 74%
Under Construction 51 111
On Order / Planned 17 4
Total 68 115
% Contracted 50% 7%
ActiveFleet
29 / 43% by SETE Brasil
69 / 60% by Speculators
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Attrition of Older Floaters
• 88% attrition for rigs >35
years of age historically
– 25 rigs >35 years of age
scrapped
• 67% attrition for rigs 30-34
years of age historically
– 12 rigs 30-34 years of age
scrapped
• 7 rigs <30 years of age
scrapped (5 rigs <20 yrs old)
~100 floaters could be retired by year-end 2017 if attrition
continues at similar rates observed over the past 12 months
Scrapped to Date
44 floaters scrapped
since 3Q14
Currently Idle
~30 floaters that are idle
without follow-on work
could be retired
Expiring Contracts
~45 floaters with
contracts expiring before
YE17 without follow-on
work could be retired
• 21 rigs >35 years of age
x 88% attrition rate
~18 scrap candidates
• 15 rigs 30-34 years of age
x 67% attrition rate
~10 scrap candidates
• Floater utilization would
improve to 80% from 72%
if ~30 rigs were scrapped
Source: IHS-ODS Petrodata as of December 2015; ‘retired’ includes scrapped rigs, announced scrapping and rigs converted to non-drilling units;
utilization figures include non-marketed units
• 34 rigs >35 years of age
x 88% attrition rate
~30 scrap candidates
• 19 rigs 30-34 years of age
x 67% attrition rate
~13 scrap candidates
30
Newbuild Floater Order Book
Source: IHS-ODS Petrodata as of December 2015; marketed competitive floaters
68 Total
5
Uncontracted,
On Order
6
Contracted
41%
18%
17
SETE Brasil,
Under
Construction
28
Uncontracted,
Under
Construction
9%
7%
12
SETE Brasil,
On Order
25%
31
Attrition of Older Jackups
• 6 competitive jackups retired
• Between 1Q09 and 2Q14,
another 13 competitive
jackups were retired with an
average age of 30 years
100+ jackups could be retired as expiring contracts and survey costs
lead to the removal of older rigs from drilling supply
Retired to Date
6 competitive
jackups retired
since 3Q14
Currently Idle
72 competitive
jackups >30 years of
age idle
Expiring Contracts
84 jackups >30 years of
age have contracts
expiring before YE17
without follow-on work
• 20 competitive jackups
>30 years old have been
idle for at least one year
• 21 competitive jackups
>30 years old have been
idle for six to 12 months
• 31 competitive jackups
>30 years old have been
idle up to six months
• Jackup utilization would
improve to 84% from 72%
if ~70 rigs were retiredSource: IHS-ODS Petrodata as of December 2015; competitive
jackups are independent leg cantilever rigs, ‘retired’ includes
scrapped rigs, announced scrapping and rigs converted to non-
drilling units; utilization figures include non-marketed units
• ~50% of these rigs are
estimated to require a
major survey for
recertification within one
year of contract expiration
• These surveys could
require significant capital
investment to meet
classification requirements
that may prompt more rig
retirements
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Newbuild Jackup Order Book
Source: IHS-ODS Petrodata as of December 2015; marketed competitive jackups (independent leg cantilever rigs)
115 Total
66
Uncontracted,
Speculators
37
Uncontracted,
Established
Drillers
8
Contracted,
Established
Drillers
32%
7%
57%
4
On Order,
All Uncontracted
4%
Zero rigs being
built by speculators
have been
contracted
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• We have taken proactive capital
management, fleet restructuring and
expense management decisions
• Our liquidity and balance sheet position
gives us resilience and options
• We will invest in innovation and
engineering to grow our leadership
position for the future
• The offshore drilling industry will be
reconfigured by this downturn - newer
entrants and companies with weaker
balance sheets will struggle
Summary
In a very challenged
market our liquidity
and balance sheet
provide resilience
and options
34