Jan 30

 

Shale gas exploration is risky, according to San Leon Energy’s Director of Exploration John Buggenhagen, who spoke about assessing the prospects for shale development in Poland at Shale Gas World Europe 2011.

“If you came for answers,” he quipped, “you’re going to leave disappointed, because you’re going to leave with more questions. We are in a very early phase of the exploration here in Poland.”

Mr. Buggenhagen said he was a bit irritated with press reports that had written off Poland’s shale gas prospects. “They create fear and panic in the marketplace and that takes away everything we are trying to do in the industry.”

As an example, he showed a quote from the Economist which wrote that the geology was “less favorable” in Poland than in North America.

“Right now we’re in a flux of regulatory, economic, political and investment issues surrounding shale gas. If you read what’s going on in the investment world, because we’re a public company I have to take all this into a balance. And I can’t say it more clearly: Exploration is risky. We just started doing this.”

He continued: “I think everyone needs to ask themselves, how we’re going to get from here to commercial gas production that’s going to change the energy environment in Europe, and here in Poland locally.”

Mr. Buggenhagen explained that San Leon was a small, listed company that had built a tremendous asset base through acquisitions of companies, taking advantage of the tough market conditions. “Through takeovers of two Canadian companies and an Irish one, we’ve amassed one of the largest shale gas portfolios in Europe, and that’s significant because it’s how we’ve gone about doing this that is the first step in where shale gas is going in Poland.”

He said San Leon’s core portfolio started in Poland, that he himself had been looking into opportunities for five years and the key to that was being on the ground.

“Recent acquisitions of Realm Energy have increased our portfolio. We also have almost 2.5 million acres under application in Spain for unconventional gas; we also have significant applications in France; and we are looking at other countries as well including Morocco, where we have a tremendous shale gas position, again limited by some of the political issues.”

When one looked at the resource estimates, according to him, one saw tremendous numbers. “Just net to my company in Poland, we have the potential for more than 40 TCF of recoverable gas – those numbers are scalable throughout our portfolio. This is not just a well or a small field. This is a game changer, for everyone that’s involved here in Poland.”

He showed delegates San Leon’s vast, significant and well diversified positions in Poland, the company’s 14 concessions, spread throughout Poland.

“Where’s the sweet spot, the production center that’s going to fuel the growth that’s going to start this industry up? So we spread our blocks around the basin based on various geologic parameters.”

He reported that in southwest Poland San Leon had 1 million acres of contiguous position in the Permian basin. “We are leading the exploration effort there – actually drilling the first well targeting unconventional gas in the carboniferous section in Poland and hope to be reporting results in the coming months.”

“A quote I like that I heard very recently is ‘Every well that’s drilled in Poland is redefining the stratigraphy, the geology of the Baltic basin and the potential of Poland in general. Modern core, modern logs, modern drilling techniques – this is all new to Poland in terms of exploring for shale.”

Buggenhagen contended the results that San Leon and others were seeing in Poland were very different results from the model. “That’s neither good nor bad, we’re just having to re think the model that started this shale gas boom here in Poland.”

He mentioned that San Leon had become the largest net acreage holder for unconventional gas in Poland, in the Podlasie, Baltic and Carboniferous basins.

“We’re a small company, we use every penny that we have wisely. And we’re very aggressive – that’s a very delicate balance to maintain,” he said.

He noted that fewer than 15 wells had been drilled in Poland and said: “We know there’s shales in these rocks, but can we get the gas out of the ground?”

“After two wells, people have written off the basin,” he explained. The people in this room have invested so much as to not even consider that possibility.”

Providing the US’s Barnett shale and its progression over time as an example, Buggenhagen said, “I think we’re back in 1997, maybe even before that, in Poland, we’ve just started. Here we don’t have the benefit of the conventional production that preceded the unconventional in the Barnett.”

“It took George Mitchell 20 years,” he recalled. “The Bakken was a drilling hazard, people thought it was a crazy idea and now it’s producing.”

Despite an earlier protest before the start of the conference, he noted that Poland was very pro shale gas. “They understand that indigenous energy is better than imports; I can’t think of a dirtier energy resource than coal,” he commented.

He described what he said was “information chaos” surrounding– everyone’s looking at where the investment for the future was going to come from. “It’s important for us to be very open with the public, with the regulators and influence things to make for a positive industry.”

Referring to the demonstration, he said “What happened today is a tool for sorting out the balance, and keeping the industry honest.”

“It’s not going to happen overnight, it’s going to take time,” said Mr. Buggenhagen, who summed up of Poland’s nascent unconventional gas industry. “Look at the history of Poland – 23 years later the country has come very far in a short time, but we have a long way to go as an industry, as operators, contractors and regulators. As an industry it’s incumbent upon all of us in this room to get together to figure out how we can solve these issues.

“It will change the economy and energy balance of Europe and here locally it will change Poland and how it fits into the European Union going forward.”

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Jan 26

 

State-owned oil and gas company PGNIG will work with other state-owned energy producers PGE, Tauron and copper miner KGHM in shale gas exploration in Poland.

The company said it had signed three letters of intent to cooperate with the three domestic heavyweights.

The government said recently it wants state-owned companies to make a ‘strong’ contribution to developing domestic shale gas.

Shale gas could start production in 2014, according to the government.

Poland has the largest deposits in Europe estimated at 5.3 trillion cubic metres and enough to meet domestic gas needs for up to 200 years, according to some projections.

At present Poland relies for its energy supplies mainly from Russia and environmentally unfriendly but domestically mined coal.

The government is becoming increasingly interested in maximimising domestic benefits from shale gas production, hence PGNiG’s and the country’s main oil refiner PKN Orlen’s plans to ramp up cooperation with local players.

The move is important in that it indicates a shift towards greater interlinkage of domestic resources, and possibly away from a reliance on foreign majors.

PGNiG holds 15 such of about 100 shale gas exploration licenses, with global majors such as Chevron and Exxon Mobil also eager to get in on the act.

The three agreements are for exploration in the Wejherowo acreage in northern Poland.

Wejherowo is one of 15 concessions held by PGNiG and believed to be one of the largest, although exact figures have not been released, if they are known at all at this stage.

The three domestic power producers will reportedly be responsible for infrastructure works above ground.

The total investment will be somewhere between 400 million and 500 million zlotys, PGNiG said.

Tauron said it plans to build a gas-fired power plant and plans to work with PGNiG on a 600 megawatt plant at Stalowa Wola. It also plans to build an 800 megawatt plant with KGHM, both fired by shale gas.

Source: theNews.PL

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Jan 24

 

Reuters reports on how a Polish oil company is branching out:

Polish oil company Lotos said on Monday it will start drilling for shale gas in neighbouring Lithuania, and plans to take part in a tender to obtain new licenses later this year.

“We decided to start with the first drilling for shale gas or shale oil, let’s see what is underground,” Pawel Olechnowicz, the president and chief executive of Lotos, told reporters.

“We will make the first tests this year,” he added, declining to specify the timing.

Lotos CEO also said the company obtained approval to drill new wells for conventional oil in Lithuania, speaking after meeting with the Prime Minister Andrius Kubilius.

The Polish government holds a 53 percent stake in Lotos, which controls the biggest Lithuanian oil company Lotos Geonafta, and has 50 percent at another oil company, Minijos Nafta.

“Minijos Nafta will be the first company in Lithuania to explore the shale in Lithuania. We have been working on this for two years already,” Thomas Haselton, the CEO of Minijos Nafta, told Reuters in an email.

“Our specific exploration plans with regard to shale this year are to frac one of our existing wells within the shale zones, probably in the spring, and to drill a new well specifically for shale hydrocarbons in the summer or fall of this year,” he added.

A separate license to explore shale for hydrocarbons is not required in Lithuania, the government officials said, but there could be environmental requirements to be met.

“It is too early to say whether Lithuania will produce and oil or gas from shale, but there is a reasonable chance that hydrocarbons could be produced from shale in the southwestern part of Lithuania,” Haselton said.

Lithuania’s State Geological Service plans to call a tender in spring to issue new licenses to explore for hydrocarbons, including shale gas, at two new fields close at the border with Poland and with Russia’s enclave of Kaliningrad.

The fields cover about 2,000 square km, while already issued licenses cover a territory of about 6,300 square km.

“We are also prepared if there is going to be issued an new run for new concession here in Lithuania… Lotos Geonafta is going to be a partner of that,” Olechnowicz told reporters.

Preliminary estimates show there may be up to 120 billion cubic metres of shale gas reserves in Lithuania, government document has showed.

Neighbouring Poland has issued more than 100 shale gas exploration permits to companies including global majors Chevron and Exxon Mobil, after a U.S. study said Poland could have 5.3 trillion cubic metres of recoverable shale gas, the biggest in Europe.

Source: Reuters

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Jan 20

 

Polish companies with permits to explore for shale gas in the country must intensify drilling to start production of the fuel by 2014 or 2015, Treasury Minister Mikolaj Budzanowski told reporters today.

Polish companies should each drill 12 wells and perform 12 hydraulic fracking operations a year, Budzanowski said.

Poland’s shale gas may be as much as 50 percent cheaper than the Russian gas Poland now receives from the Yamal pipeline, paying more than $500 per 1,000 cubic metres, he said.

Polish utilities should also invest in shale gas exploration as they will be ‘major consumers’ of the fuel that will power new electricity generation units, Budzanowski said.

Source: Bloomberg Business Week

 

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Jan 20

 

The ban on the exploration and production of shale gas in Bulgaria has in no way affected the resolution of the Polish government to pursue the approach in Poland.

This was revealed by the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the Polish National Radio Thursday, a day after the Bulgarian Parliament voted to ban the hydraulic fracturing technique involved in exploring and producing shale gas.

Hydraulic fracturing – or fracking – is widely claimed to be environmentally hazardous, as it involves pumping undisclosed chemicals at exceedingly high pressures deep into the ground. Cases have been documented in which this has severely poisoned ground water.

In June, the Bulgarian government granted US gas giant Chevron a permit to explore for shale gas in a large segment of north-eastern Bulgaria, traditionally one of the country’s most productive agricultural regions.

This has led to a number of protests that culminated when last Saturday thousands came out in Bulgarian capital Sofia, Varna and Dobrich in the north-east, as well as a number of other cities.

Wednesday Bulgarian MPs voted with a large majority to ban for an indefinite time exploration and production of shale gas with hydraulic fracturing, imposing a BGN 100 M penalty for infringement.

“This will not change Poland’s existing position presented to the EU, in which every member state has the sovereign right to define its own position regarding energy resources,” the Polish Foreign Ministry said in a statement Thursday.

Some in Poland feared the country, among the first in Europe to have started exploring for shale gas, might get isolated when Bulgaria became second to ban hydraulic fracturing, following France who did so in 2011.

In Poland, as in Bulgaria, shale gas and oil are advertised as alternatives to imports of Russian energy.

A new Polish geological report says there are indications of large shale oil deposits near Warsaw, Radom (south of Warsaw) and Elblag near the Baltic coast, writes the BBC.

Source: novinite.com

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Jan 12

 

A presentation at the European Unconventional Gas Summit in Poland has shown the real face of unconventional gas exploration – and is encouraging the whole world to take a look:

They were images that did look a little bit destructive, images rarely – if ever – seen at an unconventional gas conference in Europe: a huge land moving “vibrator,” equipment that was leaving a giant furrow on the farmland in its path.

The pictures belonged to Jakub Kostecki, CEO of New Gas Contracting, a provider of sourcing, landman and permitting services to the nascent oil and gas industry in Poland, who showed his pictures from the ground to attendees at the European Unconventional Gas Summit in Krakow, Poland.

“When we get to local communities and say there will be a small footprint left by what we are all doing we have to remember that they will remember this picture,” he explained. “Of course there’s nothing wrong with this as long as there’s a crew right behind the vibe to appraise the damage and another one right behind them to fix it.

He recalled that many of the communities his company worked in had seen screenshots and video of vibrators “lurking in the forests,” an image that had been played over and over on Polish television.

Kostecki explained, “Local communities will have seen these images a couple of months before seismic crews come into the area.”

“If you take the ostrich approach – hiding your head in the sand – that’s not going to work,” he continued. “Some regions of Poland are used to seismic acquisition. Others are not. In places like Ilawa in the north, which has never seen vibes, this needs to be explained to the community. They need to be told what’s going on.”

He said that the visibility of these issues would become higher as activity increased in Poland.

“Most of the acquisition in Poland has been 2D. When the 3D, 3C and VSP work starts there will be a lot more equipment and people on the ground. Next year there will be many more crews and a lot more issues.”

In terms of wellsite permitting, Kostecki said: “We provide landman services, which basically means that we help the operators enter parcels in Poland and put rigs on the ground. O&G operators will encounter serious delays in Poland because their land issues aren’t sorted properly.”

He said his company, New Gas Contracting, was in the process of securing 220,000 permits for one of the 2D programs. In addition to providing landman services and wellsite permitting, NGC was negotiating with local landowners, and gminas, on where to set up rigs.

“Many (O&G companies) go in where it’s easiest to get equipment. Others will look at the plot from a technical standpoint – where the sweetspot is,” he said. “Still others will negotiate until they get the right price.”

Kostecki explained that after 8 September local communities had seen what a well looked like. “The 10 wells already drilled in Poland have made the public aware.”

He noted that because the shale gas industry was made up of majors, supermajors, and small companies from all over using different approaches with different corporate cultures, it affected how each of them interacted with local communities.

He showed a photo of a drilling site which he considered well organized.

“We need to remember that the local authorities are the local population, so you need to tread lightly,” opined Mr. Kostecki, who said that there could be up to 300 wells drilled in Poland by 2013.

“We’re talking about a lot of land, a lot of wells. It will be a huge issue and everybody needs to have a strategy going forward.”

In terms of roads, he said access was a huge issue in Poland. “The road capacity tonnage is way too low and the way we deal with communities affects what kind of exemptions are available. There’s a lot of talk about more federal, more standardized regulation,” he said.

He added, “A lot of traffic is needed to get the seismic, drilling and fracking equipment onto a given piece of property.”

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Jan 06

 

By the end of 2012, around 3,500 residents of small towns and villages within the Pomorskie voivodship will be able to use shale gas to heat their homes, reported Dziennik Gazeta Prawna.

The change will save them around zł.100 to zł.200 per year on their normal fuel costs.

It is estimated that shale gas will be about 20 percent cheaper for consumers than conventional gas imported from Russia.

Although the production of shale gas on an industrial scale is expected to be launched in Poland not earlier than in 2014, Polish oil and gas giant PGNiG wants to start testing production levels at its Lubocin location in the second half of 2012.

Source: Warsaw Business Journal

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Jan 06

 

Countries that have always depended on imported oil and gas, like Chile, Paraguay, Poland or Ukraine, and especially heavy consumers such as the United States and China, could become self-sufficient in natural gas in the near future and even start exporting it.

Shale gas – natural gas extracted from shale rock – may well be several times more abundant than the proven reserves of conventional natural gas on the planet, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). Moreover there are large volumes of natural gas in sandstones, and other non-conventional sources.

But the real news from EIA studies is that shale gas is abundant in territories previously regarded as poor in fossil fuels or dependent on imports: China, the United States and Argentina head the list, but large reserves are also found in South Africa, Australia, Poland, France, Chile, Sweden, Paraguay, Pakistan and India.

“The global energy chessboard is changing, and markets will be realigned. Countries that have never had so much available energy will become self-sufficient, and perhaps even exporters,” Luis Alberto Terrero, head of the Venezuelan Gas Processors Association (AVPG), told IPS.

As gas supplies grow, “fossil fuels may become cheaper, the growth of alternative energies will slow down, and new alliances, investments and trade networks will be established,” Terrero said.

Global proven reserves of conventional gas total 6,608 trillion cubic feet (Tcf), according to statistics from British-based oil giant BP, and the largest deposits are in Russia (1,580 Tcf), Irán (1,045 Tcf), Qatar (894 Tcf) and Saudi Arabia and Turkmenistan (283 Tcf each).

An EIA study published in April 2011 found practically the same volume (6,620 Tcf) of shale gas deemed recoverable in just 32 countries, and the reserves are differently distributed, with China possessing 1,275 Tcf, the United States 862, Argentina 774, Mexico 681, South Africa 485 and Australia 396 Tcf.

Furthermore, some countries long dependent on foreign suppliers would have a huge resource base compared with their consumption: for example France and Poland, which import 98 and 64 percent, respectively, of the gas they consume, are in possession of shale gas reserves estimated at over 180 Tcf each.

In South America, giant oil producer Venezuela is estimated to have only 11 Tcf of shale gas, barely one-twentieth of its conventional gas reserves, while Brazil and Chile, which currently import about half the gas they consume, possess estimated shale gas deposits of 226 and 64 Tcf, respectively.

Paraguay has an estimated 62 Tcf of shale gas, nearly three times the conventional gas reserves of Bolivia, the top exporter of natural gas in South America. Uruguay, which imports all of its oil and gas as it lacks both, has at least 21 Tcf of shale gas.

“So far this century, this is the biggest innovation in energy, in terms of scale and impact,” according to U.S. analyst Daniel Yergin, author of a classic history of the oil industry, “The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power”, who emphasised that one-third of all the gas produced in the United States is already extracted from shale gas reserves.

High volumes of water are used for hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, the method of extracting shale gas, which can also cause seismic activity. Disposal of the waste water may cause pollution of surface and groundwater. Extracting shale gas from a platform with six wells can use 170,000 cubic metres of water.

Therefore exploration for non-conventional gas must go hand-in-hand with technologies to reduce water consumption and the other harmful effects, including destruction of the landscape.

Terrero noted, for example, that exploitation of extra-heavy crude in Venezuela’s Orinoco Belt or under the North Sea used to be regarded as technologically non-viable, yet today production is going full steam ahead, while drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic will proliferate from 2012 onward.

Furthermore, high oil prices of over 100 dollars a barrel encourage operators to explore for, produce and sell not only shale gas but also “tight gas” (trapped in impermeable, non-porous sandstone or other rock formations) as well as shale oil and “tight oil”, similarly locked underground.

“We’re heading toward greater availability of fossil fuels. Oil, gas and coal represent 80 percent of the global energy mix, and will continue to predominate for decades,” Kenneth Ramírez, a professor of geopolitics and energy at the Central University of Venezuela, told IPS.

In 2010, world consumption was 12 billion tonnes of oil-equivalent, including 4.03 billion tonnes of oil (up from 3.57 billion in 2000), 3.56 billion tonnes of coal (2.4 in 2000), 2.86 billion tonnes of gas (2.17), 776 million tonnes of oil-equivalent in hydroelectricity (600), 626 million in nuclear energy (584) and only 159 million in renewable energies (51 million in 2000), according to BP.

In Ramírez’s view, “the abundance and new distribution of reserves of shale gas and other non-conventional fossil fuels will affect predictions about the relationship between energy and the economy, and will have major geopolitical effects.

“An initial effect is that the largest and best discoveries are outside the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC),” which will see its influence on the global energy market diminish in the long run, the expert said.

At the same time, Ramírez said, Russia will embark on the race to consolidate its position as a major global actor on the basis of its energy resources; Canada will emerge as a world oil power; and the United States, its supply secure, could feel freer from the vagaries of Middle East conflicts.

The same could be said for emerging nations of the global South, such as China, India, South Africa and Brazil, which will be able to avail themselves of abundant non-conventional gas.

In Latin America, production in Bolivia or Trinidad and Tobago, or the offshore projects in Venezuela, no longer appears so essential for the long term, while in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila and the southern Argentine province of Neuquén, drilling is under way for the first shale oil and gas extractions.

The big disadvantage of shale gas, despite the industry’s hopes for developing more eco-friendly technologies, is its impact on the environment during production and transport.

The extraction of shale gas requires large quantities of water mixed with sand and chemical additives. The carbon footprint - the amount of carbon dioxide-equivalent greenhouse gases emitted by the process – is much greater than for conventional gas production.

Fracking involves injecting this fluid under pressure into drill holes deep in the earth’s crust, to create fractures in the rock that increase the rate of recovery of shale gas. This process runs the risk of damaging the subsoil, soils, surface and underground water tables, the landscape and communication routes if the arrangements for extracting and transporting the material are defective or mishandled.

More methane, a potent greenhouse gas, is released during shale gas extraction and use than with conventional methods, and this adds to global warming. But so far, environmental concerns have not abated the global thirst for energy resources like those trapped in shale formations.

Source: Inter Press Service

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Jan 03

 

Polish state-linked companies should work together in shale gas exploration, with utilities teaming up with gas monopoly PGNiG and oil refineries PKN Orlen or Lotos, the country’s treasury minister was quoted as saying.

PGE, Tauron, Enea or Energa could later use the non-conventional gas to produce energy, Mikolaj Budzanowski added.

Asked by daily Rzeczpospolita what he would like to see in local shale gas extraction, Budzanowski said: “Joining forces by as many companies controlled by the Polish treasury as possible.”

“It’s thus not only about such companies as Lotos, PKN Orlen or PGNiG, but also the whole energy sector, or generally speaking about using the synergies between producing gas and its usage in the energy sector.”

The minister set a goal for the launch of Polish shale gas production at the turn of 2014 and 2015, with the country planning to use its estimated at 5.3 trillion cubic metres of deposits to wean it off its reliance on Russian energy sources.

Coal-reliant Poland is particularly dependent on Russian gas imports, receiving 10 out of 14 billion cubic metres (bcm) a year from Russia.

Source: Reuters

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Dec 21

 

Davide Calcagni, Vice President of Unconventional at Italy’s oil and gas firm ENI S.p.A. had a number of “good news items” for delegates at the European Unconventional Gas Summit in Krakow, Poland: conventional gas was declining, each government wanted gas to secure electricity production, and a more balanced energy mix and reduction of emissions.

With those factors top of mind, his talk was focused upon future gas demand in Europe and what that meant for the development of unconventionals.

“We know that the demand is growing, but there are many factors that play a role in how the gas market will change in Europe,” he said.

Mr. Calcagni spoke of the EU’s “20/20/20” targets for reductions of 20% of greenhouse gasses and implementation of 20% of renewables by year 2020. He said he thought it would have a great effect in the next decade, especially for demand.

“Sooner or later it will affect all the countries that are leveraging on the production of electricity with coal, because it won’t be suitable for producing electricity.

“Renewable sources are intermittent in the way they are producing,” he added. “Regarding nuclear, we know what’s going on in Japan and at least one third of the nuclear power stations will be shut down. Different sources will fill in for that, which means that gas is likely to play a role in the situation that’s opening up in front of us.”

According to Mr. Calcagni, unconventional gas in Europe would not play the same role of ‘price cooler’ as it had in the US as Europe was much more fragmented.

He recalled, “Since 2004 when we had a peak in conventional gas production from the North Sea it is now quickly declining and opening up a gas demand that is quickly becoming massive. The first answer to that demand is import.

“We don’t feel that even in the latter case, that unconventional gas will represent a solution for European gas demand – probably complementary, but not filling in the gap.”

He said the scenario could be completely different if Europe was looked at on a country level.

“We know that gas import is set to grow,” explained Calcagni. “Europe is already importing 65% of its natural gas and if you look at the projection, it will continue.”

He continued: “In the last three years we’ve had 12 major events drastically changing the scenario. It seems that we are accelerating the changes, making it less predictable and changing the profitability. One thing is clear that Europe will need about 80% of gas imports to meet demand by 2020.”

The competition with Asia, he noted, had had an effect, with Europe paying three times the Henry hub price.

“The fact that there are huge reserves in Norway, Russia, and North Africa is coming back,” said Calcagni. “These governments will need to establish a cash flow very quickly. And LNG is coming back: Qatar is bringing LNG into the European market, and it’s likely to play a significant role.”

It was a competitive scenario, he said, that competition on unconventionals was set to grow.

“That will trigger mergers and acquisitions activity,” he said. “We have impact factors that can influence the evolution of the gas business. It’s important that exploration be successful.

“The advantage is that the time to put a shale gas asset to market is definitely quicker, so this is a positive,” added Calcagni, who touched upon the capability of operators to produce at low costs.

He said the presence of governments to put together a regulatory framework was of utmost importance.

Surveying the situation around Europe, he made his observations.

“Poland is the hotspot, and Germany has potential for CBM. In the UK shale gas is accepted but lacks materiality. Romania has limited activity; Hungary has tight gas but not too much at the moment. In the Scandinavian region it needs to be proved.”

Calcagni said: “Proving it in Poland will make everyone confident about the profitability of shale gas.”

“Shale gas has a high resource potential. It’s important to have access to very large acreages,” he said. “The presence of infrastructure, markets and an efficient supply chain, as well as the existence of a regulatory framework are all crucial.”

Adaptation and innovation, he said, were also important.

“Shale gas projects must be quick lean and effective,” said Calcagni. “It is a capital and operational intensive business, and it’s mandatory to reduce the operational footprint. You have to pre plan this at the early stages. The margins are coming but only if these are in place.”

He said that ENI was ready to learn by doing, and was going very swiftly up the learning curve.

He noted the sustainability challenges in shale gas exploitation, with the need to focus on the acreage with the highest potential.

“It will become only become reality if operators are able to produce at low cost,” Calcagni said. “If these are not proven, the future of shale gas is uncertain.

“The public acceptance, capability and willingness of government in establishing incentive frameworks and competition of conventional gas import and the coal lobby – these are the main factors that are playing against the success,” he said.

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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