Nov 05

JERZY NAWROCKI, head of the Polish Geological Institute – National Research Institute tells “Polish Market” about potential opportunities offered by Poland’s unconventional gas deposits.

Shale gas is becoming an increasingly popular topic and its resources in Poland certainly put this country in the European lead. In recent years the Environment Ministry issued over 70 shale gas prospecting licenses to 40 companies, including world giants like Exxon Mobile. Last spring the managements of the world’s leading oil companies met scientists and government officials in the Polish Geological Institute (PIG) headquarters in Warsaw. Besides purely technical matters they discussed prospecting strategies for the coming years and possible barriers in this respect. So we have a commodity and serious capital. There’s still the question if shale gas prospecting will pay off. It is worth mentioning that PIG was interested in the now-renowned gas-bearing slate even before World War Two and published its first report on it in 1920. Of course, at the time nobody sought raw materials in it, and nobody in Poland or elsewhere was even remotely aware that it contained gas. Nonetheless our archives contain reports on 7,100 deep drillings, beginning in 1935 and continuing through the 1970s until today. Now these materials will be re-analysed with regard to shale gas. This will entail entering hundreds of parameters into specialised computer programmes and subjecting them to highly-advanced statistical processing. I must add that PIG has not yet issued an official report on shale gas resources in Poland. We do not deny estimates made by consulting firms like Wood McKenzie (1.4 bn cu m) or Advanced Res. Int. (3 bn cu m), but we need an analysis of our own based on more extensive data. Our initial estimates will be ready by next spring. We will be assisted by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), with whom we have sealed an agreement on the matter. Under this accord Polish geologists will be trained using American soft- and hardware, then, together with USGS, we will draw up shale gas resource estimates. The first to know the results will be the Environment Ministry. The US side want the Institute to function as a hub institution for shale gas estimates in all of Central and East Europe including Belarus, Romania and Bulgaria. Another very crucial matter we shall take up with USGS concerns the environmental effects of shale gas prospecting. The partnership with USGS is very important as the US is the world leader in obtaining gas from unconventional sources. The announcement of the initial results will be an important phase. These results will be presented at an international conference in Warsaw hosted by us and USGS between April 14 and 16, 2011. This year USGS officials visited us several times. One of the visits concerned landslides and cooperation possibilities in this respect. The last visit took place only a week ago, the talks focused on cooperation in the assessment of Polish shale gas resources. I am proud to say that Donald Gautier, an outstanding specialist in oil and gas resource estimation and head of a team which recently presented a much-discussed estimate of Arctic shale gas resources, was very impressed by research in this field carried on by our Institute. As for exploitation, there are surveys underway in several locations countrywide. The first drilling was carried out in Łebień and Cedry Wielkie by the Canadian company Lane Energy, the Polish oil and gas corporation PGNiG surveyed an earlier drilling in Markowola, Lubelskie province, further surveys are planned along a strip leading to the south-east from Pomerania to the Lubelskie region. PGNiG is also interested in shale gas and plans to join the Geo-Centrum Polska scientific-industrial cluster which we are currently founding. The cluster will consist of three companies: PGNiG, PGE Bełchatów and KGHM, and will be overseen by PIG. (MP)
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Feb 05

E.On expects gas-demand growth in Europe this year, but shale-gas development could fundamentally alter the continent’s market, leaving Gazprom out in the cold

Unconventional gas is shaking up the energy world. That much is true at the corporate level, at least. ExxonMobil’s December take-over of XTO, a big shale-gas player, was the most obvious sign of that. Other independent producers will probably also be gobbled up soon.

But at what point will the world’s conventional gas producers, such as Russia’s Gazprom, begin to worry that their business models are under threat? The shale-gas optimists, such as BP boss Tony Hayward, talk of a “revolution” under way in the energy sector because of the new unconventional resources that are now considered exploitable (including coal-bed methane, which is already causing excitement in Australia, and so-called tight gas).

But there are sceptics. If it ever began developing its own potentially huge unconventional resource, Russia would remain the world’s leading gas producer. Yet Gazprom is cautious. Alexander Medvedev, the head of the company’s export division, told Petroleum Economist in October that many “myths” surrounded shale gas. It would remain expensive to develop, he said, because of the number of wells needed to produce the gas. Stop drilling, he added, and a field’s productivity drops almost instantly.

But as one executive from a shale-gas operator recently told Petroleum Economist, “Gazprom would say that, wouldn’t it?” After all, should the nascent shale-gas drilling in Europe prove half as fruitful as it has in North America, the energy-security anxieties among the continent’s consuming nations will quickly dissipate.

It was only a few years ago that US natural gas production was considered to have peaked and its reserves were thought to be in decline. Developers planned dozens of liquefied natural gas (LNG) receiving terminals to meet the forecast import requirement. The handful that came on line are now scarcely needed – and stand as testaments to the power of technology (in this case the advent of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing) to change markets and the inability of the corporate world to predict “black swan” events.

Gazprom’s export-oriented strategy has relied on its partners in Europe making a cold calculation about their need to co-operate – or risk antagonising the supplier of their most important fuel. It works, so long as Europeans continue to perceive that Russia will remain their dominant supplier of natural gas. Even Gazprom’s difficulties in financing expensive upstream developments support this: give us long-term contracts, the company can argue, because they are vital to future supplies.

For the time being, there is little evidence to question this model, notwithstanding a drop in EU demand last year, because although unconventional gas has changed the dynamics of the North American energy market, drillers in Europe have yet to unearth the same riches in the continent. The earliest results of exploration in countries such as Poland and Austria, where the resource could be large, are only likely later this year.

So the continent’s importers can’t yet start looking beyond the existing paradigm, even if analysts are predicting a global gas glut. Furthermore, the dip in European natural gas demand brought by the recession could be ending. A spokesman for Germany’s E.On says the company does not foresee the “substantial pressure” on supply markets persisting.

“At present the European gas industry is undoubtedly in an oversupply situation,” he said. “This constellation is likely to shape markets for some time to come. However, we do not assume that this high liquidity will last permanently.” Indeed, E.On says improved prospects for economic growth in Europe and Germany mean gas consumption could grow this year. “It seems we have come out of the trough and it will probably not take too long until the present low level of demand is completely overcome.”

In theory, that would put Gazprom and other suppliers back in the driving seat. It would also re-establish the logic for Europe’s drive to build new infrastructure to meet its rising demand. This week, the US special envoy for Eurasian energy, Richard Morningstar, reiterated his government’s support for the Nabucco pipeline, while also pointedly mentioning that “questions have been raised” about Russia’s two rival proposals, South Stream and Nord Stream. Yet Europe needs more gas import infrastructure, he said, to guarantee its security of supply.

Yet all of this sounds dangerously similar to the debate in the US a few years ago about how to ensure more liquidity and greater gas supplies to its market. Yet that was all before the shale “revolution”.

Will things change in Europe? Greg Pytel, an analyst from the Sobieski Institute, a Polish think tank, and the UK’s Royal Institute of International Affairs, predicts that shale-gas development in Europe could render Nord Stream a white elephant. South Stream, he says, “has no prospects”, while Nabucco would make sense “in the other direction” as a “reversible pipeline balancing European gas distribution”.

“A lot of supply from Russia will be replaced by local shale gas production driven by multinationals,” claims Pytel. In the longer term, output from Gazprom projects such as the Shtokman gasfield in the Barents Sea could be destined for the Chinese market, not the European one.

All of this is speculative, because no one has cracked shale gas in Europe yet. But also speculative were the independent firms in the US that blasted open the market with their hydraulic fracturing. Unconventional gas is now drawing the majors to the European upstream. As the battleground for the gas wars of recent years, Europe offers a great prize for shale-gas developers. And if demand in the continent is recovering, as E.On predicts, there are sound financial reasons for the developers to exploit the shale, too.

from Petroleum Econonomist – February 4, 2010

SOURCE:
Petroleum Economist: “Shale gas could alter European market dynamics, as demand rebounds”

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Jan 04

Total SA, Europe’s third-largest oil producer, agreed with Chesapeake Energy Corp. to acquire 25 percent of its upstream Barnett Shale assets.Total will pay $800 million in cash and up to another $1.45 billion by funding 60 percent of Chesapeake’s share of drilling and other costs in a joint venture. The companies said they also intend to acquire additional acreage in the Barnett Shale under the deal, which is still subject to regulatory approval and expected to close by the end of January.

The Total/Chesapeake joint venture is the second major deal in as many months. In December, Exxon Mobil Corp. said it would acquire Fort Worth’s XTO Energy, also a big player in the Barnett Shale, in a deal valued at $41 billion.

Unconventional gas in the U.S. “has been the biggest, most unexpected surprise in the U.S. and global energy,” Exane BNP Paribas analyst Irene Himona wrote in a recent note. Unconventional gas, including so-called tight gas, shale gas, and coalbed methane accounts for around 40% of U.S. gas output, she noted.

Total-Chesapeake deal is another sign of growing interest by the world’s largest oil companies in natural gas as oil resources become more difficult to find. European Giants BP (BP.L) and Statoil (STL.OL) have also entered into deal Chesapeake in the past 18 months. Western companies are also looking closer to home for investments, as barriers to investment in resource-rich countries such as Russia, Saudi Arabia limit their options.

Other Sources: RIGZONE

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