Mar 05

US know-how could quicken development of shale-gas extraction technologies in Europe, while Poland’s hopes for the technology rise Europe can learn much from the US about how to use its shale-gas sources, according to Halliburton’s ( NYSE: HAL) expert on unconventional resources.

Speaking at the recent  III CE Gas Summit 2010 about whether US shale-gas development could be cloned in Europe, Reinhard Pongratz said that using US know-how could significantly shorten Europe’s learning curve. “If we are more aggressive in trying to deliver US technology to Europe, the development phase can be shorter,” he said. Not all technologies can be copied, but Europe can make much use of the knowledge, he said.

Mr Pongratz was also optimistic about the price of shale gas. “If [extracting shale-gas] can be done economically in the US, we can do it here,” he said.

In early 2009, Realm Energy International Corporation (TSX.V: RLM) began collaborating with Halliburton Consulting on a global evaluation of shale plays with potential for natural gas and oil production with an initial focus on Europe.

The idea of extracting shale gas gained momentum in Poland earlier this year, when Wood MacKenzie experts estimated that the country could be sitting on 1,400 billion cubic meters of shale gas. Other estimates put the amount at as much as 3,000 billion cubic meters.

Poland consumes around 14 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year. If the Wood MacKenzie estimations are correct, shale gas extraction could bring the country gas independence for 100 years, at current consumption rates.

Currently, Poland’s annual gas production from domestic sources equals around 4.1 billion cubic meters. About 70 percent of Poland’s gas for consumption is imported.

“We will know how much shale gas there is in Poland in about four years, when the licenses granted to companies looking for this type of gas in Poland will begin to expire,” said Henryk Jezierski, deputy environment minister and chief national geologist.

The first test drills will begin this year and Mr Jezierski estimates that commercial exploitation of shale gas sources will be possible in 10 to 15 years. In the US, shale gas currently constitutes about 10 percent of gas production, but is expected to reach 50 percent by 2020.

Source: Natural Gas for Europe

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Mar 02

The SMi Group will be presenting Unconventional Gas 2010 on March 15th and 16th in London, England.

Europe’s leading Unconventional Gas conference brings together industry experts and project operators to discuss the drivers, constraints and opportunities for non-conventional operations.

Unconventional gas resources are expected to steer the future of the energy sector in the coming years.  Held at London’s Marriott Hotel Regents Park, SMi’s 3rd Unconventional Gas  conference will be taking a practical look at unconventional gas production challenges, where the pressure is on to reduce costs and still deliver positive results.

Key Topics Include:
•    Common challenges of unconventional gas reservoirs
•    Shale exploration for new entrants in Europe
•    Improving returns on tight gas

Keynote speakers and presenters include representatives of BG Group, Statoil ASARoyal Dutch Shell, GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, and the British Geological Society and Realm Energy International Corp.

SMi is also presenting two associated events at the same venue on March 17th -  Data Acquisition and Exploration Strategies in Unconventional Gas: Enterprise Value Assessment and Critical Elements of Gas Shale Reservoir Characterization.

Source: SMi

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Feb 16

Oil giants and explorers are jumping into the race to search for shale gas potential in Europe and commit to what analysts at Bloomberg are calling a “buoyant market.”

JPMorgan Chase & Co reported this week that Exxon Mobil has secured land in Europe, acquiring shale plays in Germany and Hungary, and has also applied for permits in Poland. Other companies like ConocoPhillips and Chevron are also exploring options in Poland, while Royal Dutch Shell has garnered contracts in Sweden. Other companies such as Vancouver-based Realm Energy have also made recent announcements of their intent to explore Europe’s shale potential (read “Realm Energy Makes Aggressive Play for European Shale Gas Deposits”).

Mark Greenwood, a Sydney-based analyst with JPMorgan, says the success of the US shale plays is driving companies overseas.

“A land-grab has occurred in Europe over the last two years with majors such as Exxon, Conoco, Chevron and Statoil ASA all participating, not willing to miss out as they did in the U.S.,” he says.

The International Energy Agency said in November the world may have an “acute glut” of gas in the next few years because production of so-called unconventional fuel, which includes shale gas, is set to rise 71 percent between 2007 and 2030.

Over the past three years, the development of technology to exploit shale gas and the boom in US shale success has led to major mergers and acquisitions between oil and gas companies, says Bloomberg.

A report by Wood Mackenzie Consultants Ltd. in the UK said overseas investment by national oil companies doubled from 2008 levels to $26 billion and accounted for 44 percent of spending outside North America.

Another analysis of shale gas done by Allen Brooks of Parks, Paton, Hoepfl & Brown anticipates that this unconventional gas is “likely to present a challenge for the market in 2010.”

SOURCES:
Bloomberg: “Exxon, Chevron ‘Land Grab’ for Europe Shale Gas, JPMorgan says”
Business Week: “Mergers in Oil, Gas Seen ‘Buoyant’ in 2010 by Wood Mackenzie”
Gerson Lehrman Group: “Excellent Analysis of Gas Shales Capabilities; Benefits and Problems for 2010”

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Feb 09

Further to the January 26, 2010 news release, Realm Energy International Corporation (“Realm Energy”) (TSX-V:RLM) (www.realmenergy.ca) is pleased to announce negotiations on an additional European shale gas play.

Realm Energy recently entered into direct and exclusive negotiations for petroleum and natural gas rights with a European Government in which the Company has identified a potential large-scale shale gas opportunity.  These lands cover an areal extent of over 182,000 hectares or 450,000 + acres. Consistent with most European countries, consideration for the award of these lands largely comprises a prudent work program over the life of the concessions.  Management is working toward reaching final agreement on these lands in the near future, at which time more detailed information will be disclosed.

Realm Energy is collaborating with Halliburton Consulting (NYSE: HAL) in aggressively evaluating high potential shale deposits throughout Europe and select emerging countries. Founded in 1919, Halliburton is one of the world’s largest providers of products and services to the energy industry. With more than 50,000 employees in approximately 70 countries, the company serves the upstream oil and gas industry throughout the life cycle of the reservoir-from locating hydrocarbons and managing geological data, to drilling and formation evaluation, well construction and completion, and optimizing production through the life of the field.

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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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Feb 01

Realm Energy has applied for oil and gas rights in multiple countries throughout Continental Europe. The applications were filed following a rigorous evaluation of high potential shale deposits throughout the continent and, if successful, will permit Realm Energy to bring North American technological advancements in shale gas and oil extraction to Europe.

Realm Energy is now concentrating on eight discrete sedimentary basins in seven European countries and submitted applications for oil and gas rights that collectively extend over 1.5 million acres of land. Realm Energy received confirmation of receipt from government bodies that its applications are under active consideration.

“After months of rigorous evaluation, confirmation that our applications are under active consideration is an important step toward our goal of acquiring oil and gas rights over significant lands containing high-potential shale formations,” said Craig Steinke, Executive Chairman. “We stand behind our extensive evaluation process and strongly believe that Realm Energy is positioned to maximize the possibility of favorable outcomes from these applications.”

SOURCE:  Scandinavian Oil-Gas Magazine

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Jan 29

The Ukraine unit of EuroGas Inc., New York, acquired three unconventional gas concessions in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas basin and increased activities in the Lublin basin that extends from Poland into western Ukraine.

The acquisition brings to five the number of shale gas and coalbed methane concessions held by EuroGas Ukraine Ltd. in eastern Ukraine under a joint activity agreement with Nadra Luganshchiny Ltd.

The five concessions total 512 sq km, and the largest, Marijewvskogo Poligon, covers 251 sq km. Horizontal drilling is to start this year.

Meanwhile, EuroGas GMBH signed a memorandum of understanding to explore for unconventional gas, such as shale and CBM gas, in the Lublin basin where it was the first foreign company to successfully drill a CBM well in the Ukrainian sector in the late 1990s.

Meanwhile, Realm Energy International Corp., Vancouver, BC, said it applied for oil and gas rights in eight undisclosed basins in seven unidentified European countries where it plans to exploit shale gas on more than 1.5 million acres.

Realm Energy, which is collaborating with Halliburton Consulting to apply North American shale gas technology in Europe, is evaluating other undeveloped shale plays and intends to make more applications in early 2010.

By OGJ editors

SOURCE: OIL & GAS JOURNAL

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Jan 28

New reserves of natural gas found in shale rock are a “big deal” and a “game changer.”  That’s the message today from oil company executives at the World Economic Forum in addressing global concerns about rising dependency on oil and the need to develop cleaner energy to slow climate change.

New extraction methods have opened up large reserves of gas embedded in shale rock in North America. The potential for tapping shale gas reserves in Europe are being explored by companies like Realm Energy.

The surge in gas supplies, combined with new technology, could also reduce the need for oil to fuel the world’s automobiles. Natural gas burns 50 percent cleaner than oil, making it a `greener`fuel choice.

The new shale gas supplies support energy security and energy independence; however, have negative implications for Russia, whose state-controlled company Gazprom provides Europe with about 20 percent of its gas and depends on European sales for the bulk of its profits.

Source: AP

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Jan 28

Though French energy giant Total recently announced a $2.25 billion joint venture with Oklahoma-based Chesapeake Energy Corp., the venture isn’t saying much about the potential for shale gas in France.

This particular deal will see Total invest billions of dollars to acquire 25 per cent of Chesapeake’s Barnett Shale assets – a natural gas field in Texas – rather than staying close to home and exploring the rich resources the European country has to offer.

“There is much shale gas in France,” said Francois Laurant, the man in charge of shale gas at Institut Francais du Petrole. “It has been seeping for centuries around the town of Grenoble in midsoutheastern France. But the disputed areas hold black shale in shallower ground than elsewhere in France like the Paris basin.”

Since late 2008, several companies have been seeking permits to explore shale gas prospects in the southern regions of the country. In August 2009, Toreador was granted a contract for the exploitation of the Paris Basin Oil Shale earning the right to develop 649,000 acres (with an additional 153,000 acres pending approval) where an estimated 65 billion barrels of oil are believed to remain in shale plays.

France’s potential – and, undoubtedly Europe’s potential – was further highlighted when oil giants BP, Shell and Statoil began talks of buying Toreador earlier this month (read: Oil giants BP, Shell and Statoil in talks to buy US-based Toreador Resources) in the interest of acquiring its French shale opportunities.

Shale gas is experiencing an unprecedented boom in the United States, but its popularity is pushing companies and entrepreneurs to look beyond US borders for prime investment opportunities. Recently, Vancouver-based Realm Energy publicly threw its hat into the ring for European exploration, concentrating on eight discrete sedimentary basins in seven European countries and submitted applications for oil and gas rights that collectively extend over 1.5 million acres of land.

SOURCE:
Oil & Gas Journal: “Shale Gas Acreage, European Database Draw Interest”
Rigzone: “Toreador Zeroes is on Paris Basin Oil Shale for Future Developments”
Toreador: “Global Activity – France”
Realm: “Realm Energy Makes Aggressive Play for European Shale Gas Deposits”

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Jan 27

Realm Energy International Corporation (“Realm Energy”) (TSX-V: RLM) (www.realmenergy.ca) is pleased to announce that Mr. W. Gordon Lancaster has joined the Board of Directors of Realm Energy.  Concurrent with Mr. Lancaster’s appointment to the Board, Mr. Stuart Macgregor has resigned as a Director of Realm Energy.

Mr. Lancaster is a Chartered Accountant who has had a distinguished career in executive and board positions.  Mr. Lancaster spent 20 years with Deloitte & Touche, the last five of which were as a partner in the Vancouver office, and following this, he served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of the First City group of companies for 10 years.  In 1992, Mr. Lancaster joined the Vancouver International Airport Authority as Chief Financial Officer until 1998 when he joined Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. as Senior Vice President and CFO.  In August 2000, he joined Power Measurement Inc., a Victoria-based high-tech company; a world leader in the design, development, manufacture and marketing of enterprise energy management systems to energy consumers and suppliers.

In 2004, Mr. Lancaster joined Ivanhoe Energy Inc. as Chief Financial Officer where, until his retirement in November 2009, he was responsible for all financial accounting and reporting, including SEC and Canadian regulatory and public disclosure compliance. Mr. Lancaster was also responsible for corporate finance, including the sale of securities and related prospectus filings, negotiations of bank financings, risk management and treasury and cash management.  During this career, Mr. Lancaster has also served on the Boards of Directors of several public and private entities.

“We are very pleased to have Mr. Lancaster join the Board of Realm Energy,” said Craig Steinke, Executive Chairman. “His wealth of experience, especially in the oil & gas industry, will be an invaluable asset to the company. We look forward to his contributions as Realm Energy actively focuses on continued growth and success in developing European shale gas.”

Steinke continued, “Realm Energy would also like to take this opportunity to thank Mr. Stuart Macgregor for his past support.  While he has resigned as Director, we look forward to an ongoing relationship with him as an active shareholder.”


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