Apr 24

UK offshore reserves of shale gas could exceed one thousand trillion cubic feet (tcf), compared to current rates of UK gas consumption of 3.5 tcf a year, or five times the latest estimate of onshore shale gas of 200 trillion cubic feet.

Reserves of 200 tcf would put the UK in the top 20 countries with the highest shale reserves, alongside Brazil, and 1,000 tcf would put Britain in the same league as estimates for China, the United States and Argentina, top dogs in global shale potential.

There are still no reliable figures available for the UK, and some experts doubt preliminary onshore reserve figures by private companies. Also only around 10 to 20 percent of total reserves are currently deemed recoverable.

But experts say that whatever the final recoverable reserve figure is, it is likely to be big enough to make Britain energy self-sufficient.

“There will be a lot more offshore shale gas and oil resources than onshore,” Nigel Smith, subsurface geologist and geophysicist at the British Geological Survey (BGS) said. UK offshore reserves could be five to 10 times as high as onshore, said.

On Tuesday, a UK government report backed the drilling of shale gas onshore after a temporary ban on the controversial extraction technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking.

Britain is well placed for offshore development, with its North Sea oil and gas sector long established.

“We were pioneers in the North Sea with conventional oil and gas and the technology has gone around the world, so why not become one in the unconventional sector,” Smith said.

Offshore geological information is already available, and superior to onshore shale reserves data, he said.

He told the British parliament’s House of Commons shale gas energy and climate change committee that Britain could become energy self-sufficient if it went offshore with its unconventional oil and gas industry.

The parliamentary committee said that “we recommend that DECC encourage the development of the offshore shale gas industry in the UK, working with HM Treasury to explore the impacts of tax breaks to the sector.”

EUROPEAN OFFSHORE SHALE BOOM?

Petroleum engineers say that shale oil and gas reserves of vast potential stretch over different formations across Europe.

“We have potentially huge volumes present in the subsurface – the volumes are mind-blowingly big,” Melvyn Giles, global head of unconventional gas and light tight oil at Shell, said of Europe’s unconventional gas resources.

“The figures appear to suggest the shale resources are so large that the question is not how much is out there, but how much can be retrieved – how much can be economically accessed in an environmentally acceptable way,” he added.

Giles said that although the pace of shale oil and gas development was hugely faster in North America than elsewhere, interest in the industry was building up quickly elsewhere.

“The challenge is being taken on, and there comes a point when this industry will explode out of North America, and in my opinion it will happen when we start to get a few test results showing an economic development outside North America. Just one success will breed interest elsewhere and will help develop these industries outside North America,” he said.

Shale is soft, finely stratified sedimentary rock that formed from consolidated mud or clay.

Hydraulic fracturing is the process of creating small cracks, or fractures, in underground rock formations as much as 7,700 meters below ground level to extract gas (and oil) from shale.

Scientists have known for years that shale and other common forms of rock in Europe held hydrocarbons, but until recently they were ignored as either insignificant or uneconomic.

Energy services company Schlumberger said in a research report that there are large shale gas and oil reserves in the North Sea – along the German, Dutch and Danish coasts – as well as in the Baltic Basin.

Geologists at other leading energy companies spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the dramatically higher estimates, but a consensus of optimism about potential European reserves has grown in the hard-headed commercial sector.

Much of the development in Europe may focus offshore after onshore exploration hit setbacks when France and Bulgaria banned exploration over concerns about ground water pollution. Poland, previously thought to be a European leader, recently slashed its reserves estimates by 90 percent.

An offshore future would avoid many of the legal and regulatory challenges that the industry faces in Europe.

Unlike in the United States, where mineral exploration rights are with the private property holder, most European law gives mineral exploitation rights to governments, which provides a serious obstacle to speedy development of onshore shale.

Legal procedures, bureaucracy and haggling over resource valuations can delay exploration and production indefinitely. In France, political opposition to fracking has brought a stop to development of the Paris shale basin.

Source: Reuters

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Apr 24

 

Global energy majors have placed bids in tenders for two potentially large shale gas fields in Ukraine, Environment and Natural Resources Minister Eduard Stavitsky said on Monday, adding that the government would pick winners in a month.

One contract area, Yuzovska, is located in the eastern Donetsk and Kharkiv regions. The other, Olesska, is in the western Lviv region.

Ukraine’s State Geological Service estimates the reserves of the Yuzovska area at 2 trillion cubic metres and those of Olesska at 0.8 to 1.5 trillion cubic metres.

“Chevron CVX.N> and Eni have bid for Olesska (contract area),” Stavitsky told reporters. “Exxon Mobil , Shell and TNK-BP for Yuzivska.”

“The final decisions (will be announced) no later than 1800 on May 23, 2012,” he said.

According to the U.S. state Energy Information Administration, Ukraine has Europe’s fourth-largest shale gas reserves at 42 trillion cubic feet (1.2 trillion cubic metres), trailing Poland, France and Norway.

The State Geological Service has also said the Yuzovska area would require $250-$300 million in exploration investments, while Olesska would need $150-$200 million. Tender application fees were $1.9 million for Yuzovska and $1.3 million for Olesska.

Energy-hungry Ukraine is keen to launch shale gas production in order to ease its dependence on Russia, which it says is charging an exorbitant price for its gas.

Source: Reuters

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Apr 18

 

A UK government report on Tuesday backed the exploration of shale gas, which has transformed the U.S. energy market, nearly one year after temporarily banning the drilling method because it had triggered two small earthquakes in Britain.

An expert report commissioned by the government said it was safe to resume fracking, in which pressurised water and chemicals are pumped underground to open shale rocks and release trapped gas, but with tighter rules on seismic monitoring and drilling surveys.

“The risk of seismic activity associated with hydraulic fracking operations is small, and the probability of damage is extremely small. We suggest fracking can continue under our recommendations,” one of the report’s authors, the British Geological Society’s Brian Baptie, said at a briefing.

Activists on both sides of the Atlantic have lobbied politicians to ban hydraulic fracturing also on environmental concerns, including the dangers of pollution of ground water and leakage of gas into the atmosphere. The report did not address those concerns.

The energy ministry is inviting public comment on the report’s findings over the next six weeks, after which it will issue its final ruling on the future of UK shale gas exploration.

The experts published their findings after reviewing a series of post-earthquake studies published by Cuadrilla Resources, a UK firm that was forced to halt operations near Blackpool in northwest England after fracking triggered tremors in May 2011.

They also recommended the use of a “traffic light” control system, in which operations are suspended if a red light indicates seismic activity at a threshold of 0.5 or above, well below a level that could cause structural damage on the surface.

The tremors measured near Blackpool last year reached a level of around 2 .

UK engineers welcomed the report’s safety recommendations, and the “traffic light” warning system in particular.

“These proposed precautions are a good example of how to help mitigate the risk of any damage caused by seismic activity as a result of shale gas activity,” Tim Fox, head of energy and environment at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, said in a statement.

While the experts agreed with Cuadrilla’s studies as a whole, they also said there was not enough data to confirm the company’s claim that it was unlikely similar earthquakes would recur.

Environmental group Greenpeace said the support for fracking to go ahead was “bad news”, saying hydraulic fracturing could pose a threat to efforts to diversify away from fossil fuels.

“This would … be a major blow for the British renewable energy industry, which would see investment hijacked by a new dash for gas,” Joss Garman, Greenpeace’s senior energy campaigner, said.

France, which has some of Europe’s largest shale gas reserves, last year banned the use of fracking on worries about environmental damage.

However, shale gas exploration is seen by some as a positive force in the battle against climate change since the gas releases less carbon into the atmosphere than coal when used to produce electricity.

“Provided safety standards are observed, shale gas could unlock significant new infrastructure investments, help meet our carbon reduction goals and create many new jobs around the UK,” a representative of the Confederation of British Industry said in response to the government’s fracking report.

In the UK, Cuadrilla has said its site near Blackpool had 200 trillion cubic feet of gas in place, enough to cover UK demand for generations, although experts have cast doubt on the claims.

In the United States the exploration of shale gas has pushed gas prices to 10-year lows, and companies such as Cheniere Energy are gearing up to export the excess fuel.

British gas prices would also come under increasing pressure if UK shale gas exploration were to take off, a representative of British energy supplier npower wrote on the company’s energy blog.

Source: Reuters

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Apr 12

 

In one of his final acts as Russian Prime Minister, President-elect Vladimir Putin has spoken out on the issue of shale gas exploration – something that poses a potential threat to the Russian economy should Poland become self-sufficient in terms of energy production:

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has urged his country’s gas industry to “rise to the challenge” of shale gas as the United States and some European countries forge ahead with developing the energy source.

US shale gas production may “seriously” restructure supply and demand in the global hydrocarbons market, Putin said yesterday in his final address to the Russian Duma before he takes over as president on 7 May.

Putin said Russia must be prepared for “any external shocks” and “a new wave of technological change” that was “changing the configuration of global markets”.

Source: Canada Free Press

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Apr 11

 

More details and information on numbers have been released following the story that Poland will see significantly increased shale drilling activity in the next 12 months. This from Natural Gas for Europe:

Poland is set to more than double its shale activity in the country this year, up from 22 drilled in the country in 2011.

In addition to 11 wells already drilled this year, information from the Polish Ministry of the Environment says that an additional 39 wells will be completed by the end of this year, the Warsaw Business Journal reports. The additional wells to be drilled will bring the total number of shale wells drilled in the country to 49.

The Ministry expects the figure to keep climbing year-on-year with 248 wells expected to be drilled in the country by 2017.

While Polish firms will be involved with the shale excavation efforts, the majority of wells to be drilled will be executed by foreign companies, including Chevron, Eni, and ExxonMobil. These companies will account for 39 of the wells drilled, with the remaining 11 wells to be completed by Polish companies, including PGNiG and PKN Orlen.

Despite the large foreign presence on the shale market in Poland, domestic companies continue to strengthen their activities on the shale front there.

Last week, Orlen and PGNiG announced that the two companies had begun talks to begin to cooperation across the oil and gas market, particularly in relation to shale exploration and production in Poland.

“It will concern also – maybe mainly – shale gas,” Orlen CEO Jacek Krawiec said. “I`m convinced, that we are approaching a new opening in the cooperation between two companies. I think, that our relations will become better, than ever before.”

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Apr 11

 

The once solid bans on fracking technology to extract shale gas in Bulgaria and France are weakening. Both countries have established committees to examine the technology and practices throughout the EU. The Bulgarian parliament has established an ad-hoc committee to examine EU practices, while the French government will examine the technology and regulations.

The closer look at the technology is not an indication of weakening environmental protection, rather it acknowledges the role shale gas can play in each country’s energy mix.

Exclusion of fracking technology only weakens a country’s energy security. Gas deposits represent an effective source for domestic energy security. Just as gas storage and network interconnectors ballooned to a key security of supply concern after the 2009 Russian-Ukraine gas dispute, shale gas is emerging as another tool in the box of energy security.

In the EU, the contribution domestically tapped shale gas will be limited in each country, so there is no panacea of independence being held in the ground; however, it is not mana we are looking for in the ground – just a little bit for boosting energy security levels, which in a time of crisis can make a significant difference.

Domestically sourced shale gas, provides two elements for security of supply. It provides another source of gas, thus reducing foreign dependence and used as a bargaining chip to reduce pricing of Russian gas. It also boosts overall energy security. Therefore, ignoring the role that shale gas plays in a country’s energy supply is not in the interests of politicians. Gas pricing is an annual concern of politicians.

Also, if a crisis occurs, there will be calls as to why shale gas was not explored and possibly exploited in the past. Providing the right regulatory and business environment becomes an action of self-preservation for smart politicians. Objections of environmentalists can be addressed for the wider public. Politicians will be able to cite other extraction and regulatory practices in other countries to demonstrate the safety of using the technology in their own backyard.

Fracking technology is not in or out in Europe. Most commentators have adjusted and are getting it right. There will be shale gas in Europe, although at mixed levels in different EU countries. It will only be a game changer in so-far that it contributes to overall energy security – at the same level as other diversified energy sourcing. Through an effective regulatory regime shale gas emerges as a useful technology to meet Europe’s growing appetite for a lower carbon fuel. As the extraction technology becomes cleaner, more transparent, and proven, older objections will drop away, and shale gas will emerge as a solid technology.

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Apr 11

 

Unconventional natural gas reserves could have a substantial economic benefit if developed responsibly, a U.S. official said in Poland.

Poland has some of the richest deposits of unconventional gas, including shale, among European countries.

Robert Cekuta, U.S. deputy assistant secretary for energy and business affairs, told a delegation in Warsaw that Washington was convinced unconventional and shale gas reserves meant good things for the global energy outlook.

“Our sense is that there needs to be informed dialogue if we are to get out ahead of potential problems in unconventional gas development,” he said in a statement.

Warsaw estimates it holds as much as 3.3 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, lower than the 187 trillion cubic feet estimated by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

The country, however, said shale gas analysis carried out in conjunction with the U.S. Geological Survey confirmed the country remains in position to become a major energy producer and that more drilling will likely reveal greater reserves.

“However, we also need to bear in mind the important reality that the development of unconventional natural gas, like the development or realization of other industrial or extractive processes, needs to be done carefully with due attention to potential downsides,” said Cekuta.

Source: UPI

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Apr 10

 

Companies including Chevrom Corp., Talisman Energy Inc., and Eni SpA are drilling 14 shale gas exploration wells in Poland, while another 39 are planned for 2012, Rzeczpospolia reported, citing data from the Environment Ministry.

Eighteen wells had been drilled by the end of last month, according to the Warsaw-based daily newspaper.

Source: Bloomberg

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Apr 05

 

UK company IGas says shale gas deposits at its site in north-west England could be more than twice as large as it previously estimated, according to its latest operational update.

The company says that its latest analyses of its well at Ince Marshes could potentially at least double the pre-drilling estimate of 4.6 trillion cubic feet.

Taking the “very encouraging” results, together with indications of similar deposits in neighbouring Bowland Shale, could see the UK’s resources exceed those of elsewhere in Europe.

“The UK government’s announcement about a new gas generation strategy and the support given in the budget to the industry are all signs that UK sourced hydrocarbons are going to play an increasingly important role in the future energy mix of the country,” says Andrew Austin, CEO of IGas.

The company says it is now looking for suitable partners to undertake further drilling and development of shale gas.

“Following a number of enquiries from interested parties, we are now launching a process to engage a suitable farm-in partner to participate in drilling further wells to corroborate these results and to develop our shale resource,” the company said in a statement.

Source: Energy Efficiency News

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Apr 03

 

In a report obtained by Natural Gas Europe, the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy recommends the European Union to support assessing, exploring and developing shale gas reserves in Europe.

The draft motion for a European Parliament Resolution, prepared under supervision of the rapporteur Niki Tzavela (Greek MEP representing Europe of Freedom and Democracy political group), underlines the importance of promoting openness, monitoring and use of best practices.

According to the draft report, gas is a quick and cost-efficient way of reducing reliance on other fossil fuels – especially coal, still extensively used in some member states, including Poland.

By helping to lower greenhouse gas emissions and backing up renewables, gas may become a “bridge fuel”, leading the European Union towards the transformation of the energy system outlined by the Roadmap 2050 initiative.

The draft report also explicitly states that shale gas production will increase security of supply in Europe. The committee observes the growing role of natural gas as the source of energy and the role of shale gas production in ensuring energy security and diversity.

The document, obtained by NGE, notes the impact made by the shale gas boom in the US on global gas market, pays special attention to increasing gas-to-gas competition and underlines strengthening position of customers vis-à-vis gas suppliers.

With a view to taking full advantage of possible shale gas production, it also stresses the importance of interconnected and integrated energy market, calling on the European Commission and member states to enforce requirements of the EU third energy package.

The report states that although various estimates have been made, all of them point to the existence of a large indigenous energy resource in Europe.

The document encourages states to assess and map those resources and asks the European Commission to engage in determining the level of shale gas reserves, by combining results from reports prepared by member states and results from exploration projects.

According to the draft motion, member states should be urged to train labour force, by introducing the necessary skills into their mainstream education and training systems.

Importantly, the report notes the significance of establishing the necessary infrastructure, mentioning not only pipelines, but also roads. It also calls for further research and development into tools and technologies.

In the view of the authors, at the current stage of exploration works, the regulatory framework for licensing in the EU is adequate.

However, they propose to the EU Parliament to call on member states to ensure they put in place all the necessary administrative and monitoring resources for the further development of shale gas, by checking and improving – if necessary – their regulatory frameworks for future commercial scale production.

At the same time, the committee points out, that some member states did not hold public consultations during authorization phase, and it calls governments to provide proper transparency in this aspect.

The document recalls conditions that paved the way to the shale gas boom in the United States and pays special attention to the role of EU-US cooperation.

Comparing conditions for shale gas development in Europe and the United States, the committee observes, that it will certainly take time to build an adequate capacity for the large scale production, because of the lack of a sufficient number of rigs, necessary manpower and well-equipped and experienced service industry in Europe.

Therefore, the committee recommends to the European Parliament to encourage cooperation between European and American companies and to urge the exchange of best practices and information between different level administration in the EU and the US.

The committee observes, that unlike American landowners, European farmers do not own underground resources and thus do not benefit from extraction. Thence, it underlines the necessity for building relationships with locals and calls on shale gas companies to ensure, that communities will benefit from the shale gas development.

The EU Parliament motion would also call for better public information, declare the EU support for creation of portals providing access to wide range of data, and urge companies to provide full information, including disclosure of the chemicals, they intend to use in  fracturing operations.

The draft stresses, that operators should reduce flaring and venting and restore land used.

It also highlights the need for establishing minimum safety standards and organizing inspections, especially during stages of well construction and hydraulic fracturing.

Finally, the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy recalls, that according to the polluter – pays principle, companies would be liable for any damages.

As Natural Gas Europe learned, amongst proposed amendments to the motion, there is an invitation to introducing pressure testing of cement casing, testing of  wells before and during operations, and publication of the sesults of those examinations.

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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