Tuesday, April 30, 2013

SandRidge Approves TPG-Axon Board Candidates

SandRidge Energy Inc. – which has faced criticism over its financial decisions and calls for CEO Tom Ward to resign and the board to be replaced – has approved the direct candidates proposed by investment firm TPG-Axon, the company reported Tuesday in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The decision was made in response to Delaware Chancery Court Judge Leo E. Strine Jr.'s ruling that SandRidge's board of directors had violated its fiduciary duty to shareholders by refusing to approve TPG-Axon's slate of director nominees, and barred SandRidge from soliciting consent revocations until TPG-Axon's director nominees were approved.

"This is just the latest in a pattern of this board of putting their own interests ahead of the shareholders – this board simply has no shame," TGP-Axon Founder Dinakar Singh commented in a statement. "This is the second time during out solicitation that this Board has chosen to waste the Company's resources in a useless court battle in a desperate attempt to entrench themselves."

In early February, SandRidge's board decided it would hold off on approving TPG-Axon's director candidates, saying it believed that any change of control event under the Indentures, or legal document issued to lenders describing key terms of a bond offering, during current market conditions was not likely to have material consequences for SandRidge and its stockholders.

When SandRidge's board of directors initially reviewed the potential consequences of TPG-Axon's proposals to replace SandRidge's board of directors, certain potentially significant consequences were identified that could occur under SandRidge's indentures governing its senior notes, the company said in the filing. The company's board found that a change of control would require SandRidge to offer to repurchase its outstanding senior notes under the Indentures, in the absence of advance approval by the incumbent directors of the director candidates proposed by TPG-Axon group.

"The Board continues to oppose the election of the director candidates proposed by TPG-Axon group, believes their election is not in the best interest of the company's stockholders, and recommends that stockholders support the company's existing experienced board of directors," SandRidge said in the filing.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Subsea 7 Scoops Up Petrobras Work Offshore Brazil

Subsea 7 S.A. announced the award of three contracts with a combined value in excess of $300 million from Petrobras.

The scope of work comprises the installation of flexible lines by the Seven Seas, under two lump sum contracts and one day rate contract.

The lump sum contracts encompass the installation of two export flexible Lazy Wave Risers at the Sapinhoa and Lula NE fields in the Santos Pre-Salt Basin in water depths of approximately 6,890 feet (2,100 meters). The day-rate contract encompasses the project management, engineering and installation of Petrobras - supplied flowlines and umbilicals. Operations will commence in 2013.

"We’re proud to be selected by Petrobras to perform these important projects, using our in-depth experience of operating in ultra-deep water. We look forward to supporting Petrobras in future developments," Subsea 7 Senior Vice President for Brazil Victor Bomfim said.

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Norway May Adjust Planning Guidelines for Oil, Gas Projects

Norway May Adjust Planning Guidelines for Oil, Gas Projects

OSLO - Norway will review some oil and gas projects and may change its planning guidelines, the government said Wednesday, after the operator and owner of the unsafe Yme platform agreed to scrap it before it had produced a drop of oil.

The Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy will ask the country's Petroleum Directorate "to review some bigger development projects that recently have or should have entered production," said ministry state secretary Per Rune Henriksen.

The owner of the Yme platform in the North Sea, Dutch oil service company SBM Offshore NV, said Tuesday it would pay operator Talisman Energy Inc. $470 million to remove Yme, located in the southeastern part of the North Sea. The platform was evacuated last summer when cracks were discovered in its structure. This is the first time in Norway a platform is to be scrapped without producing oil.

The dismantling of Yme platform is an untypical case, but it raises critical issues over the safety and planning of oil and gas projects, and also has serious cost implications for the government. Other recent oil and gas projects in Norway have also been hit by delays, cost overruns and quality concerns.

In total, the 24 ongoing oil and gas developments off Norway are estimated to overrun their initial budgets by 49 billion Norwegian kroner ($8.6 billion), according to the 2013 government budget. The lion's share of the overruns are at the Skarv, Valhall and Yme projects, it said.

The government's revised project cost of the BP PLC-operated Valhall field is now NOK46.7 billion, up 85.7% from BP's initial estimate from 2007. And the Yme project cost was estimated at NOK14.1 billion, up 188.4% from the initial estimate, the government said.

In Norway, oil companies can deduct 78% of their investments from their tax base, which means that the government can incur huge losses in the form of lost tax revenue due to overruns. The government said that in the case of the Yme project taxes would be handled by the appropriate authorities, without giving any figures.

"This is a project that up until now has only had losers. The economic losses have been huge for all the involved parties," said Mr. Henriksen.

The Norwegian government said it may change the planning of oil and gas projects to reduce the risk of repeating past mistakes, but didn't specify what changes it was considering. Such a review would also reduce tax revenue losses.

Based on the directorate's review, the ministry "will consider whether adjustments should be made, for instance in the guidelines for plans for development and operation," said Mr. Henriksen.

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Oil Industry Boosts Efforts to Coax More from Shale

Oil Industry Boosts Efforts to Coax More from Shale

The oil industry is increasing spending on research that it hopes will make it cheaper and easier to coax more crude and natural gas from shale formations and deep-sea oil fields, extending and accelerating the U.S. energy boom.

The largest oil-field-service firms--Schlumberger Ltd., Halliburton Co. and Baker Hughes Inc.--raised their research and development budgets by 24% from 2010 to a combined $2.1 billion in 2012. In recent years, these companies, which provide a range of services for energy exploration, have become the primary R&D engines of the oil industry, surpassing spending by oil-and-gas companies such as Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC.

The hunt for new sources of fossil fuels has led energy companies into deeper offshore regions and into dense shale formations, both of which are expensive to develop.

Much of the oil-field companies' research is focused on understanding shale rocks better and developing improved tools to get more oil and gas from these formations. A decade after large-scale exploitation of shales began, the industry is drilling thousands of wells every year in Pennsylvania, Texas, Louisiana, Ohio, Oklahoma and North Dakota, and is testing other shale rocks in California and Mississippi.

Right now, even with horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, new shale wells tap only a small percentage of the oil and gas trapped in small pores in the rock, leaving more than 75% behind.

"From 2004 to 2012, the development of shales was basically, hit it with a big sledgehammer and see what comes out," says Richard Spears, vice president of Spears & Associates, a Tulsa, Okla., firm that tracks oil-field spending. "Now the question is who can do it the best and optimize the process. Shales aren't tube socks, a one-size-fits-all thing," he said, pointing to using fracking techniques of differing scale and intensity in different shale formations.

Drilling improvements could mean that the North American energy boom, which has seen natural-gas production rise by 19% and oil by 37% over the past five years, could get a new boost from better tools.

"We are in the dawn of this new age, so now the whole industry is starting to look at this resource and figure out ways to get as much of the oil and gas out as it can from these locations," says Dan Hill, chairman of the Texas A&M University petroleum-engineering department.

He said that small improvements in hydraulic-fracturing techniques, in which pressurized water, sand and chemicals crack open rocks far below the Earth's surface, could result in significant profits for the oil-field companies and additional energy for global markets. One new technique involves changing the order in which segments of each well are fracked, with an eye toward impacting the surrounding rock in a way that improves yields. Another is changing chemical mixtures to better suit the shale being drilled.

Oil-field-service companies are also researching techniques to improve deep-water exploration and production. Schlumberger, which has been developing new oil-field technology since 1927, recently introduced what it said was one of the largest engineering projects in the company's history. Called IsoMetrix, it is a new tool for using seismic waves to accurately spot oil reservoirs in deep water.

Halliburton spokeswoman Beverly Stafford said the company is focused on helping oil companies get improved access "to new hydrocarbon discoveries and to maximize the value of their existing assets." The company is working on shales and deep-water exploration, along with improving energy recovery from mature oil and gas fields that have been producing fuel for years.

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Crude-Oil Futures Settle Down at $92.52/Barrel

Attempts to push a rally in U.S. crude-oil futures prices into a fifth day faltered Wednesday under the weight of rising inventories and worries over weak demand.

Data that showed U.S. crude oil supply relative to refiner demand climbed to a 21-year high followed a warning by the International Energy Agency, the West's oil-policy watchdog, that the market is facing weaker oil-demand growth and higher supplies.

"The subdued growth rate of oil demand now looks increasingly entrenched in the face of high oil prices and weak economic growth," the IEA said in its monthly global outlook.

That outlook followed a Tuesday report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration which sees only modest growth in oil-demand growth in the world's biggest oil consumer this year after 2012 consumption hit a 16-year low.

EIA's latest weekly oil-inventory data show U.S. refiners trimmed crude-oil processing rates to a two-year low of less than 14 million barrels a day last week, amid maintenance work and operating snags at some facilities. At that same time, rising domestic output and imports lifted stocks by 2.6 million barrels last week, slightly ahead of expectations.

The combination of lower demand and higher supply means current inventories now are sufficient to cover 27.4 days of refiner needs, the highest level since 1992, and compared with the five-year average of less than 24 days of cover.

The data snuffed out an early attempt to push a four-day, 2.3% rally in prices higher for a fifth day.

"The move to push crude up to $93.50 lost momentum," said Gene McGillian, broker and analyst at Tradition Energy. "The fundamentals aren't really particularly strong" enough to justify prices at those levels which were last hit in late February, he said.

Light, sweet crude oil for April delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange settled 2 cents lower, at $92.52 a barrel, after trading in a range of $93.40 to $91.91 a barrel.

April ICE North Sea Brent crude settled $1.13 lower, at $108.52 a barrel, the lowest price since Dec. 17, 2012.

Traders said Brent came under pressure as the EIA data showed oil inventories at Cushing, Okla. fell by 1.5 million barrels last week, the biggest decline since May 2011. Analysts said the large drop at Cushing suggests that Gulf Coast refiners appear to be moving more crude oil out of the terminal hub that is the delivery point for the Nymex contract, most likely by rail, as pipeline outlets are constrained.

Crude exiting Cushing for the Gulf Coast refinery hub would increase competition with imports priced in relation to Brent, the international benchmark, and would put pressure on Brent prices, traders said. Supplies of North Sea crudes have been rising after operational snags were resolved in recent weeks and the IEA said a pipeline agreement between Sudan and South Sudan means more crude could be flowing from that area, increasing supplies by 200,000 barrels a day by year's end.

Despite a fall of nearly 3.6 million barrels in gasoline stockpiles last week, prices of reformulated gasoline blendstock futures were weaker for a third day. Analysts said the decline in inventories likely reflected movement of fuel during the transition from winter-grade to summer-grade fuel that are typical at this time year, rather than signalling stronger demand. The EIA said in its Short-Term Energy Outlook on Tuesday it sees gasoline stunted at a 2012 level over the next two years, as improvements in fuel-mileage standards cut consumption.

April-delivery reformulated gasoline futures were 0.79 cents lower, at $3.1423 a gallon. The contract fell 1.9% in the past three sessions.

April heating oil was 2.42 cents lower, at $2.9242 a gallon, and lost 1.9% over the past four sessions.

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Keppel's $1.2B Contract with Ukraine's Naftogaz Cancelled

Singapore-based Keppel FELS Ltd.'s previously announced $1.2 billion-contract to build two semisubmersibles for Ukrainian state energy firm Naftogaz has been terminated due to certain conditions within contract's timeline not being met.

Keppel, a subsidiary of Keppel Offshore & Marine, announced in December of last year that it would construct two rigs for Naftogaz based on Keppel's proprietary DSS 38D design, which is customized for the harsh weather conditions of the Black Sea.

"Keppel will continue to seek opportunities where we can support Naftogaz in their E&P activities," said Keppel FELS in a statement.

Keppel and Naftogaz did not immediately respond to Rigzone's request for comments.

In September of last year, Naftogaz announced an open contest for the construction of two semisubs, and invited four Ukrainian and 11 international companies to bid on the project. Five additional international companies also expressed interest in bidding on the project, Naftogaz said in a statement last year.

Besides Keppel FELS, Rigas Kugu Buvetava of Latvia, Belize-based Magic Worldwide LTD, and Aida Holding Ltd. of Belize submitted tenders, Naftogaz reported in a Dec. 3 statement.

Geological studies have identified the Pallas area, located in water depths of 1,476 feet to 2,788 feet (450 meters to 850 meters), as a primary target for development with semisubmersibles, Naftogaz said in a statement.

The Pallas area is estimated to hold non-associated gas reserves of approximately 4.2 trillion cubic feet (120 billion cubic meters (Bcm)), liquefied gas reserves of 303.7 Tcf (8.6 Bcm) and oil and gas condensate of 70 million tons. Ukraine's portion of these reserves is 3 Tcf (86 Bcm), 289.5 (8.2 Bcm) and 45 million tons respectively.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Japan to 'Help' With Russian LNG Projects

TOKYO - Liquefied natural gas was on the agenda when the energy ministers of Russia and Japan met on Tuesday, a senior official at Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said.

Japan can help with LNG projects at Vladivostok and Yamal, Russia's Alexander Novak said without elaborating according to METI's Oil and Natural Gas Director Ryo Minami who was present.

Competitive pricing will raise interest from Japanese buyers, Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said according to Mr. Minami. LNG demand in Japan is increasing after the country shifted away from nuclear power.

Russia is looking to sell to new markets because prices in Europe are relatively low. Two Russian companies in February announced plans to export LNG to Asia.

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Aker Wins Contract for Schiehallion Redevelopment

Norwegian oilfield services firm Aker Solutions reported Wednesday that it has secured an approximately $105 million contract with BP to help redevelop one of the UK's largest oilfields.

Aker said its Aberdeen, Scotland operation will manufacture and supply all subsea controls equipment for the Quad 204 project. This is the redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal fields, which are located approximately 100 miles west of the Shetland Islands.

The Schiehallion and Loyal fields are estimated to contain a further 450 million barrels of recoverable oil and the total redevelopment is budgeted to cost some $4.5 billion. Due to the water depth in the area, Schiehallion is entirely reliant on subsea production technology and oil from the field is collected on a floating production, storage and offloading vessel (FPSO).

Alan Brunnen, the head of Aker's subsea business, commented in a statement:

"West of Shetland is an exciting area for oil and gas and we are delighted to continue our successful relationship with BP by playing such a significant role in the continuing development of this project."

The scope of Aker's work includes subsea controls equipment for subsea trees, manifolds and subsea safety isolation valves, as well as controls distribution assemblies. The work will be managed, designed and built by Aker’s subsea controls center of excellence in Aberdeen, with the first deliveries made in the first half of 2014.

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Keppel's $1.2B Contract with Ukraine's Naftogaz Cancelled

Singapore-based Keppel FELS Ltd.'s previously announced $1.2 billion-contract to build two semisubmersibles for Ukrainian state energy firm Naftogaz has been terminated due to certain conditions within contract's timeline not being met.

Keppel, a subsidiary of Keppel Offshore & Marine, announced in December of last year that it would construct two rigs for Naftogaz based on Keppel's proprietary DSS 38D design, which is customized for the harsh weather conditions of the Black Sea.

"Keppel will continue to seek opportunities where we can support Naftogaz in their E&P activities," said Keppel FELS in a statement.

Keppel and Naftogaz did not immediately respond to Rigzone's request for comments.

In September of last year, Naftogaz announced an open contest for the construction of two semisubs, and invited four Ukrainian and 11 international companies to bid on the project. Five additional international companies also expressed interest in bidding on the project, Naftogaz said in a statement last year.

Besides Keppel FELS, Rigas Kugu Buvetava of Latvia, Belize-based Magic Worldwide LTD, and Aida Holding Ltd. of Belize submitted tenders, Naftogaz reported in a Dec. 3 statement.

Geological studies have identified the Pallas area, located in water depths of 1,476 feet to 2,788 feet (450 meters to 850 meters), as a primary target for development with semisubmersibles, Naftogaz said in a statement.

The Pallas area is estimated to hold non-associated gas reserves of approximately 4.2 trillion cubic feet (120 billion cubic meters (Bcm)), liquefied gas reserves of 303.7 Tcf (8.6 Bcm) and oil and gas condensate of 70 million tons. Ukraine's portion of these reserves is 3 Tcf (86 Bcm), 289.5 (8.2 Bcm) and 45 million tons respectively.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Monday, April 29, 2013

Dril-Quip Awarded Supply Contract Offshore Malaysia

Dril-Quip, Inc. announced that Dril-Quip Asia Pacific Pte Ltd, its wholly owned subsidiary, in conjunction with its local representative UMW Petrodril (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd., has been awarded a contract to supply drilling and production equipment and related services to Sabah Shell Petroleum Company Limited for the Shell Malikai TLP project located offshore Malaysia in approximately 1,800 feet of water.

Dril-Quip will provide subsea wellheads, tensioner systems, risers, production trees, injection trees and tieback connectors for the project. Delivery of these systems is expected to begin in 2014.

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Aker Wins Contract for Schiehallion Redevelopment

Norwegian oilfield services firm Aker Solutions reported Wednesday that it has secured an approximately $105 million contract with BP to help redevelop one of the UK's largest oilfields.

Aker said its Aberdeen, Scotland operation will manufacture and supply all subsea controls equipment for the Quad 204 project. This is the redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal fields, which are located approximately 100 miles west of the Shetland Islands.

The Schiehallion and Loyal fields are estimated to contain a further 450 million barrels of recoverable oil and the total redevelopment is budgeted to cost some $4.5 billion. Due to the water depth in the area, Schiehallion is entirely reliant on subsea production technology and oil from the field is collected on a floating production, storage and offloading vessel (FPSO).

Alan Brunnen, the head of Aker's subsea business, commented in a statement:

"West of Shetland is an exciting area for oil and gas and we are delighted to continue our successful relationship with BP by playing such a significant role in the continuing development of this project."

The scope of Aker's work includes subsea controls equipment for subsea trees, manifolds and subsea safety isolation valves, as well as controls distribution assemblies. The work will be managed, designed and built by Aker’s subsea controls center of excellence in Aberdeen, with the first deliveries made in the first half of 2014.

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UK Explorer Cuadrilla Delays Fracking Plans Until 2014

UK Explorer Cuadrilla Delays Fracking Plans Until 2014

LONDON - U.K. shale gas explorer Cuadrilla Resources Ltd. said Wednesday it was delaying its plans to begin hydraulic fracturing at its Bowland shale project in Lancashire, England, to 2014 while it conducts an environmental impact assessment for the site of each exploration well.

Cuadrilla had planned to start hydraulic fracturing, a controversial process used to release natural gas from the rock, this summer. The delay will be a setback for U.K. government ambitions to replicate the North American shale gas revolution that has transformed the U.S. energy market.

"We recognize that within the complex U.K. regulatory framework governing planning this process can prove lengthy but we are determined to spare no effort in meeting our exploration targets in an environmentally and socially sustainable manner," Cuadrilla Chief Executive Francis Egan said.

At the end of last year, the U.K. government lifted a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, as part of plans to stimulate renewed investment in Britain's energy sector and reduce dependence on gas imports as its aging North Sea oil and gas fields start to run dry.

Exploration is still at an early stage in the U.K., making a reliable estimate of the country's reserves difficult. There has been no commercial shale gas production in the U.K. so far.

Cuadrilla said that technical analysis of the Bowland Shale confirms the company's previous estimate that the license area holds at least 200 trillion cubic feet of gas resources.

Cuadrilla, which is the only company using the controversial technology to explore for shale gas onshore in the U.K., halted fracking in May 2011 after two small seismic tremors were detected near their operations.

Cuadrilla is jointly owned by U.S. private-equity firm Riverstone LLC and Australian mining group AJ Lucas and management.

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Offshore Drilling Expenditiure to Top $17B by 2016 in Middle East, Africa

An increase in offshore discoveries is prompting a surge in exploration activity across the Middle East and Africa and driving up the amount spent on drilling, stated the latest report form business intelligence firm GBI Research.

The company's latest oil and gas report forecasts offshore drilling expenditure across the region to climb steadily from $13.56 billion in 2012 to $17.03 billion in 2016. Cumulatively, the total expected spend for this five year period is $77.3 billion, which represents an increase of approximately 22 percent over 2007-2011 total of $63.5 billion.

Drilling outlay is expected to grow across all major nations in the region, with those in West Africa leading in terms of exploration activity. Escalating activity in countries relatively new to the offshore drilling industry, such as Sierra Leone and Liberia, may prove to be future competition for the more established nations of West Africa.

Ghana is expected to emerge as one of the most prominent countries in West Africa for the exploration of oil and gas, with 16 offshore discoveries made between 2008 and 2012 – second only to Angola, where 22 discoveries were made during the same period.

In terms of drilling expenditure, Angola is expected to remain the biggest spender in the region by some margin, over the next few years at least. GBI Research expects drilling expenditure in the Southern African country to continue climbing in the near future, hitting $6.67 billion in 2016. Nigeria and Egypt are forecast to place second and third, with totals of $2.26 billion and $1.52 billion, respectively.

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Dril-Quip Awarded Supply Contract Offshore Malaysia

Dril-Quip, Inc. announced that Dril-Quip Asia Pacific Pte Ltd, its wholly owned subsidiary, in conjunction with its local representative UMW Petrodril (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd., has been awarded a contract to supply drilling and production equipment and related services to Sabah Shell Petroleum Company Limited for the Shell Malikai TLP project located offshore Malaysia in approximately 1,800 feet of water.

Dril-Quip will provide subsea wellheads, tensioner systems, risers, production trees, injection trees and tieback connectors for the project. Delivery of these systems is expected to begin in 2014.

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Edge Completes Second Saskatchewan Well in Spring Campaign

Edge Resources Inc. has finished drilling the second well of the Company's Spring drilling program in Primate, Saskatchewan. The well was successfully drilled and cased without incident and is now being prepared for production.

The horizontal well was drilled into a new formation and cased with a slotted liner in 1,624 feet (495 meters) of horizontal pay. Completion and equipping operations will commence immediately and continue during breakup. The rig was released to an all-weather rack site as Spring break-up conditions would not allow the rig to be moved to another drilling location.

Brad Nichol, President and CEO of Edge commented, "We are very pleased that the drilling of our first horizontal well in a new horizon has gone so smoothly and quickly. I must credit our operations and drilling team who utilized their many years of experience and planned this operation meticulously. With continuous oil shows throughout the entire 495 meters of horizontal leg, we are very keen to start producing this well. Given that breakup is almost upon us, we are taking the extra step of building a permanent road so that the well can produce without interruption throughout break-up."

"We anticipate that successful production testing will support several additional horizontal drilling locations, specifically targeting the new horizon. We certainly have the undeveloped land-base to support a large program and are eager to get started," Nichol added.

The Company has a 100% working interest in 20 sections (12,800 acres) of land in Primate, Saskatchewan.

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Norway May Adjust Planning Guidelines for Oil, Gas Projects

Norway May Adjust Planning Guidelines for Oil, Gas Projects

OSLO - Norway will review some oil and gas projects and may change its planning guidelines, the government said Wednesday, after the operator and owner of the unsafe Yme platform agreed to scrap it before it had produced a drop of oil.

The Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy will ask the country's Petroleum Directorate "to review some bigger development projects that recently have or should have entered production," said ministry state secretary Per Rune Henriksen.

The owner of the Yme platform in the North Sea, Dutch oil service company SBM Offshore NV, said Tuesday it would pay operator Talisman Energy Inc. $470 million to remove Yme, located in the southeastern part of the North Sea. The platform was evacuated last summer when cracks were discovered in its structure. This is the first time in Norway a platform is to be scrapped without producing oil.

The dismantling of Yme platform is an untypical case, but it raises critical issues over the safety and planning of oil and gas projects, and also has serious cost implications for the government. Other recent oil and gas projects in Norway have also been hit by delays, cost overruns and quality concerns.

In total, the 24 ongoing oil and gas developments off Norway are estimated to overrun their initial budgets by 49 billion Norwegian kroner ($8.6 billion), according to the 2013 government budget. The lion's share of the overruns are at the Skarv, Valhall and Yme projects, it said.

The government's revised project cost of the BP PLC-operated Valhall field is now NOK46.7 billion, up 85.7% from BP's initial estimate from 2007. And the Yme project cost was estimated at NOK14.1 billion, up 188.4% from the initial estimate, the government said.

In Norway, oil companies can deduct 78% of their investments from their tax base, which means that the government can incur huge losses in the form of lost tax revenue due to overruns. The government said that in the case of the Yme project taxes would be handled by the appropriate authorities, without giving any figures.

"This is a project that up until now has only had losers. The economic losses have been huge for all the involved parties," said Mr. Henriksen.

The Norwegian government said it may change the planning of oil and gas projects to reduce the risk of repeating past mistakes, but didn't specify what changes it was considering. Such a review would also reduce tax revenue losses.

Based on the directorate's review, the ministry "will consider whether adjustments should be made, for instance in the guidelines for plans for development and operation," said Mr. Henriksen.

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API: TV Ads Show Americans Don't Support Higher Industry Taxes

New TV ads show Americans don't support higher taxes on the oil and natural gas industry, API Executive Vice President Marty Durbin told reporters in a briefing Wednesday morning:

"Starting today, the API is running ads on broadcast and cable channels that feature the unscripted words of everyday Americans who believe higher taxes on energy companies may translate into higher energy costs for consumers. We decided to run the ads to remind Congress that at a time when many families have had to scramble to balance their budgets, asking them to pay more for the energy they need to live their lives is bad policy and frankly bad politics.

"According to a study by Wood Mackenzie a $5 billion per year tax increase would result in a decrease of $233 billion in revenue to federal, state and local governments by 2030. Further, the study estimates that increased investments, as a result of pro-growth and energy development policies, could generate an additional $800 billion in revenue by 2030. That's a $1 trillion difference to government's bottom line.

"If increased revenue is truly the objective [of those proposing to increase taxes on the industry], then allow the oil and natural gas industry to continue to do what it has always done – invest in America's economy by providing good-paying jobs here at home that develop the energy America needs. That's what the American people support and in the long-term the result would be far better for the American economy, for consumers, for our energy security, and for the nation's long-term economic growth."

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Gregorian Govt OKs Mtsare Khevi Pipeline for Frontera

Frontera Resources Corp. announced that it has received approval to proceed with the installation of the 5-mile (8-kilometer) pipeline and related facilities within the Mtsare Khevi field from the Georgian government. As previously announced, equipment required for the gas pipeline has been procured, mobilized, and stacked in the field and in key staging areas. First gas production is now expected within 120 days. The infrastructure will accommodate production from currently shut-in wells, and the Company is targeting production of approximately 2 million cubic feet per day of gas (57,000 cubic meters per day).

The Mtstare Khevi Field is situated within a larger play area of approximately 31 square miles (80 square kilometers) referred to as the Mtsare Khevi Gas Complex and encompasses gas targets found between 984 and 16,404 feet (300 and 5,000 meters) in depth. Based on Frontera's internal estimates, analysis has revealed significant gas potential throughout this area of up to approximately 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas in place (28 billion cubic meters) and up to approximately 700 billion cubic feet of recoverable gas (19.8 billion cubic meters). An integrated geologic study, including data from a number of existing wells within the area such as the V-#18 well, previously referenced in the Company's Jan. 31, 2012 announcement, is currently in progress to better understand and define the extent of this potential throughout the greater Mtsare Khevi Gas Complex.

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Oil Industry Boosts Efforts to Coax More from Shale

Oil Industry Boosts Efforts to Coax More from Shale

The oil industry is increasing spending on research that it hopes will make it cheaper and easier to coax more crude and natural gas from shale formations and deep-sea oil fields, extending and accelerating the U.S. energy boom.

The largest oil-field-service firms--Schlumberger Ltd., Halliburton Co. and Baker Hughes Inc.--raised their research and development budgets by 24% from 2010 to a combined $2.1 billion in 2012. In recent years, these companies, which provide a range of services for energy exploration, have become the primary R&D engines of the oil industry, surpassing spending by oil-and-gas companies such as Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell PLC.

The hunt for new sources of fossil fuels has led energy companies into deeper offshore regions and into dense shale formations, both of which are expensive to develop.

Much of the oil-field companies' research is focused on understanding shale rocks better and developing improved tools to get more oil and gas from these formations. A decade after large-scale exploitation of shales began, the industry is drilling thousands of wells every year in Pennsylvania, Texas, Louisiana, Ohio, Oklahoma and North Dakota, and is testing other shale rocks in California and Mississippi.

Right now, even with horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, new shale wells tap only a small percentage of the oil and gas trapped in small pores in the rock, leaving more than 75% behind.

"From 2004 to 2012, the development of shales was basically, hit it with a big sledgehammer and see what comes out," says Richard Spears, vice president of Spears & Associates, a Tulsa, Okla., firm that tracks oil-field spending. "Now the question is who can do it the best and optimize the process. Shales aren't tube socks, a one-size-fits-all thing," he said, pointing to using fracking techniques of differing scale and intensity in different shale formations.

Drilling improvements could mean that the North American energy boom, which has seen natural-gas production rise by 19% and oil by 37% over the past five years, could get a new boost from better tools.

"We are in the dawn of this new age, so now the whole industry is starting to look at this resource and figure out ways to get as much of the oil and gas out as it can from these locations," says Dan Hill, chairman of the Texas A&M University petroleum-engineering department.

He said that small improvements in hydraulic-fracturing techniques, in which pressurized water, sand and chemicals crack open rocks far below the Earth's surface, could result in significant profits for the oil-field companies and additional energy for global markets. One new technique involves changing the order in which segments of each well are fracked, with an eye toward impacting the surrounding rock in a way that improves yields. Another is changing chemical mixtures to better suit the shale being drilled.

Oil-field-service companies are also researching techniques to improve deep-water exploration and production. Schlumberger, which has been developing new oil-field technology since 1927, recently introduced what it said was one of the largest engineering projects in the company's history. Called IsoMetrix, it is a new tool for using seismic waves to accurately spot oil reservoirs in deep water.

Halliburton spokeswoman Beverly Stafford said the company is focused on helping oil companies get improved access "to new hydrocarbon discoveries and to maximize the value of their existing assets." The company is working on shales and deep-water exploration, along with improving energy recovery from mature oil and gas fields that have been producing fuel for years.

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

SandRidge Approves TPG-Axon Board Candidates

SandRidge Energy Inc. – which has faced criticism over its financial decisions and calls for CEO Tom Ward to resign and the board to be replaced – has approved the direct candidates proposed by investment firm TPG-Axon, the company reported Tuesday in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

The decision was made in response to Delaware Chancery Court Judge Leo E. Strine Jr.'s ruling that SandRidge's board of directors had violated its fiduciary duty to shareholders by refusing to approve TPG-Axon's slate of director nominees, and barred SandRidge from soliciting consent revocations until TPG-Axon's director nominees were approved.

"This is just the latest in a pattern of this board of putting their own interests ahead of the shareholders – this board simply has no shame," TGP-Axon Founder Dinakar Singh commented in a statement. "This is the second time during out solicitation that this Board has chosen to waste the Company's resources in a useless court battle in a desperate attempt to entrench themselves."

In early February, SandRidge's board decided it would hold off on approving TPG-Axon's director candidates, saying it believed that any change of control event under the Indentures, or legal document issued to lenders describing key terms of a bond offering, during current market conditions was not likely to have material consequences for SandRidge and its stockholders.

When SandRidge's board of directors initially reviewed the potential consequences of TPG-Axon's proposals to replace SandRidge's board of directors, certain potentially significant consequences were identified that could occur under SandRidge's indentures governing its senior notes, the company said in the filing. The company's board found that a change of control would require SandRidge to offer to repurchase its outstanding senior notes under the Indentures, in the absence of advance approval by the incumbent directors of the director candidates proposed by TPG-Axon group.

"The Board continues to oppose the election of the director candidates proposed by TPG-Axon group, believes their election is not in the best interest of the company's stockholders, and recommends that stockholders support the company's existing experienced board of directors," SandRidge said in the filing.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Chevron: Asset Freeze in Argentina Embargo Threatens YPF Deal

Chevron Corp.'s said a deal with YPF SA to develop Argentina's shale natural gas deposits is threatened by a $19 billion embargo of the California oil company's assets in the country.

For the first time, Chevron said an Argentine court decision--involving the oil giant's decades-long environmental dispute with Ecuador--could imperil the near-$1 billion deal with Argentina's recently nationalized oil company.

The YPF agreement could be completed only "if we can get the right conditions in place around that embargo," Chevron Chief Executive John Watson said at an investor conference Tuesday. "We have to be able to access that cash."

In December, Chevron and YPF agreed to a preliminary plan to explore the Vaca Muerta shale formation in Neuquen province.

However in February, an Argentine appeals court upheld the freeze on the assets of Chevron's local subsidiary because of a treaty with Ecuador that allows claims in one country to be enforced in the other. Chevron has been fighting a $19 billion judgment in Ecuadorean courts over claims of environmental contamination.

Chevron now says before it can finalize the YPF joint venture--originally expected to happen in mid-April --the embargo must be lifted.

Enrique Bruchou, lead attorney for the Ecuadoreans in Argentina, has valued Chevron's assets in Argentina at $2 billion. The proceeds from Chevron Argentina's oil production, valued at $600 million in 2010, are also subject to the embargo until the legal claim is settled, according to Mr. Bruchou.

The February court order freezes up to 100% of Chevron's capital and dividends in Argentina, all of its stake in a local pipeline operator, 40% of oil sales and 40% of the cash Chevron has or may eventually have in local banks.

Argentina has 774 trillion cubic feet of gas and 23 billion barrels of oil equivalent in Neuquen province, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. But oil and gas production in the nation has plummeted due to a lack of investment, leaving the country dependent on expensive imports.

If the initial exploration joint venture is successful, Chevron and YPF could then invest $15 billion in coming years, according to the two companies.

A YPF spokesman wasn't available to comment.

Monday, YPF Chief Executive Miguel Galuccio said "the commitment exists and if we have to find an economic model different than what was originally planned, the commitment is there," referring to the Chevron deal.

An Ecuadorean court convicted Texaco Inc., which Chevron bought in 2001, of contaminating parts of Ecuador's Amazon region. Chevron denies the accusations, says it is the victim of fraud and continues to fight the charges.

Chevron doesn't have significant assets in Ecuador, so the plaintiffs are trying to freeze the company's assets in other countries to enforce settlement on the judgment. The plaintiffs are pursuing Chevron in Brazil, Canada and Colombia, and have plans to file suits in other countries as well.

Ken Parks contributed to this article.

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Indonesian Minister in Iraq to Snap Up Exxon Field

JAKARTA - An Indonesian minister said Wednesday he was visiting Iraq later on in the day to help state-owned oil and gas company PT Pertamina acquire a stake in an oil block and also secure an additional 65,000 barrels of Basra light crude.

Indonesia's Coordinating Minister for the Economy Hatta Rajasa said Pertamina is eyeing up to a 20% stake in the West Tuba block in Iraq, which is owned by Exxon Mobil Corp.

"Exxon has got a new oil field in another part of Iraq and because of that it has to sell its stake in the West Tuba as required by the regulation set by the government of Iraq," Mr. Rajasa told reporters.

Pertamina has been seeking to buy oil blocks outside Indonesia to help secure its energy supply, but its attempts haven't been very successful.

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YPF Expects to Increase Oil, Gas Production in 2013

BUENOS AIRES - Argentina's largest oil company, state-run YPF SA, expects to increase crude and natural-gas production this year as it ramps up spending on exploration and production, YPF Chief Executive Miguel Galuccio said Tuesday.

Argentine President Cristina Kirchner tapped Mr. Galuccio to run YPF shortly after she nationalized the company last year and charged him with reversing years of declining production. YPF managed to increase oil output 2.2% in 2012, while the decline in natural gas production eased to 2.3%.

Mr. Galuccio expects oil production to rise 4% this year, and gas production to increase about 1%.

"For 2013, the challenge is to move to a growth mode, but not growth at any cost. I intend to preserve the profitability of this company and I will have all the [authority] to delay or eliminate projects if needed," he said in a conference call with analysts.

YPF invested 16.48 billion pesos ($3.25 billion) in its operations last year, an increase of nearly 26% from 2011.

YPF has budgeted about $5 billion in capital expenditures this year, and will need to raise about $500 million in additional financing for its investment plan, Chief Financial Officer Daniel Gonzalez said.

YPF's ambitious investment program is starting to bump up against physical constraints.

The company will likely have to bring in drilling rigs from abroad as it runs out of suitable rigs in Argentina, Mr. Galuccio said.

YPF is staking its future on developing Argentina's vast shale-gas and-shale oil deposits.

The South American nation is thought to be home to the world's third-largest shale-gas reserves after the U.S. and China, with some 774 trillion cubic feet of recoverable gas, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates. Argentina is also thought to have significant quantities of shale oil.

But getting those hydrocarbons out of the ground and to consumers and businesses will require billions of dollars that neither YPF nor Mrs. Kirchner's government have on their own.

Last December, YPF signed a deal with a company linked to Argentina's Bulgheroni family to invest $1.5 billion together over the following two years to develop shale-gas and oil resources.

YPF also announced a preliminary agreement that same month with Chevron Corp. that could see the California-based company and YPF spend about $1 billion to drill 100 wells for unconventional energy in Neuquen Province. Chevron has four months to negotiate the final terms and conditions of that agreement.

However, a court-ordered embargo on the assets of Chevron's local subsidiary, stemming from a decades-old case involving environmental-damage claims in Ecuador, has raised questions about Chevron's ability to invest in Argentina. Chevron has said it will use all legal means available to fight the embargo.

"The Chevron deal is moving ahead as expected," Mr. Galuccio said, adding that there will probably be some changes to last year's agreement.

A Chevron spokesman didn't immediately respond to an email and phone calls seeking comment.

Mrs. Kirchner is seeking outside investment and technical expertise to make Argentina energy self-sufficient once again after years of declining production and reserves turned the country into a net energy importer in 2011.

Last May, she formally expropriated a 51% stake in YPF from Spain's Repsol SA in a dispute over investment. Mrs. Kirchner accused the Spanish company of siphoning capital out of YPF and failing to invest enough in its operations.

Repsol has denied those accusations and is seeking about $10 billion in compensation for its YPF shares.

Critics of the government's energy policies say that price caps and export taxes have discouraged investment in the oil and gas sector.

Last November, the Kirchner administration more than tripled the price that YPF can charge for new natural gas production to $7.50 per million British thermal units.

YPF's shares traded in New York were recently 3.5% higher at $15.29, giving the company a market capitalization of about $6.0 billion.

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Japan to 'Help' With Russian LNG Projects

TOKYO - Liquefied natural gas was on the agenda when the energy ministers of Russia and Japan met on Tuesday, a senior official at Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said.

Japan can help with LNG projects at Vladivostok and Yamal, Russia's Alexander Novak said without elaborating according to METI's Oil and Natural Gas Director Ryo Minami who was present.

Competitive pricing will raise interest from Japanese buyers, Japan's Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Toshimitsu Motegi said according to Mr. Minami. LNG demand in Japan is increasing after the country shifted away from nuclear power.

Russia is looking to sell to new markets because prices in Europe are relatively low. Two Russian companies in February announced plans to export LNG to Asia.

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US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

U.S. oil and gas production will continue to rise through 2040 from 2010 levels as unconventional oil and gas resources and production from the deepwater Gulf of Mexico come online, while U.S. energy consumption is forecast to decline during the same time period, ExxonMobil Corp. reported in its 2013 energy outlook.

U.S. oil and gas production has grown to its highest level in three decades, thanks to technological advances that have allowed the oil and gas industry to access deepwater resources as well as unlock unconventional oil and gas resources such as the Bakken oil play in North Dakota, according to ExxonMobil's energy outlook.

The projected 6 percent decline between 2010 and 2040, or an average .2 percent decline per year, in U.S. energy consumption will occur even as the U.S. population grows an average of .7 percent a year from 2000 through 2040, or 20 percent more people by 2040, and the nation's gross domestic product grows an average 2.3 percent a year during that time period, basically doubling the economic output of the United States, said William Colton, vice president of corporate strategic planning at ExxonMobil, at a Wednesday presentation at Rice University in Houston. The findings of ExxonMobil's first U.S.-focused edition of its energy outlook are "pretty startling", said Colton, and indicate a more efficient use of energy across the board, from transportation to office buildings to industrial applications.

"This is an incredible achievement, a great accomplishment and good for the economy," Colton commented, who noted that the outlook for the United States has never been more positive in terms of geologic and human resources.

Energy demand in countries outside the United States is forecast to grow 35 percent through 2040, mostly driven by population and economic growth in developing countries such as China and India as well as fast-developing countries in Asia Pacific, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America, Colton noted. During the 2010 to 2040 timeframe, the world population will grow to 9 billion and the global economy will double.

"It's really about standard of living – they want safe homes, cars and refrigerators, but all these require energy," said Colton.

Electricity demand will be the single biggest driver of energy in the United States, with 30 percent growth by 2040, followed by the transportation and industrial sectors. An examination of the capital, fuel and operating costs for gas, coal, nuclear, wind and solar shows natural gas and coal as the most economic for power generation. When accounting for a $60/ton cost for carbon dioxide emissions, gas and nuclear become the most cost efficient. While the straight economics on nuclear power look great, facility siting and social issues, particularly in a post-Fukushimu world, mean limited options for nuclear exist.

ExxonMobil forecasts flat demand in the U.S. transportation sector. In the transportation sector, fuel demand for light-duty vehicles will fall even as the number of light-duty vehicles on U.S. roads grow thanks to better fuel economy and smaller size of these vehicles. Meanwhile, fuel demand will grow for heavy-duty vehicles, and full hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius will become more common on U.S. roads, said Colton. Most of the efficiency is being driven by government policy, such as the CAFÉ standards in the United States.

U.S. natural gas production is now at an all-time high thanks to shale boom, and is expected to rise by 45 percent between 2010 and 2040. By 2040, nearly 80 percent of North America gas supplies will be produced from local unconventional resources, according to ExxonMobil. Even with the projected increase in gas production through 2040, North America will continue to have significant gas resources in the ground, an estimated 100 years supply at current consumption rates; this figure could potentially grow at technology advances.

After decades of relatively flat production, North America oil and liquids output is expected to grow by 40 percent from 2010 to 2040. Conventional crude production is expected to decline, while production from unconventional resources is expected to rise, ExxonMobil said in its report. The biggest contributor to unconventional oil production will be from Canadian oil sands, which is expected to produce approximately 4.5 million barrels of oil per day by 2040. A doubling of deepwater production, mostly in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, will be another major contributor in oil production gains.

Even though North America is approaching a time when it produces more energy than it consumes, the region will still benefit from access to the global energy market.

"The value of free trade –whether imports or exports – is a fundamental principle of modern economics, and is critical to U.S. energy security, economic growth and competitiveness in the global marketplace," ExxonMobil said in its U.S. energy outlook.

The combination of steep gains in energy production and modest declines in U.S. consumption – will allow North America to become a net energy exporter by around 2025. The United States' changing role as a net energy exporter also will bring significant benefits to the U.S. economy, including those associated with liquefied natural gas exports, such as increased manufacturing activity, new jobs, lower energy costs for businesses and consumers, and billions in taxes and government revenue, ExxonMobil said in the report.

Reduced U.S. energy consumption also will provide environmental benefits, particularly when combined with the United States' shift away from coal to natural gas. ExxonMobil forecasts U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by 2040 to fall to levels not seen since the 1970s.

Events such as last year's Arab spring and the January terrorist takeover of the In Amenas Algeria gas production plant are examples of some of the geopolitical challenges that oil and gas companies' operating internationally must manage. However, North American regulatory uncertainty, such as whether the Keystone XL pipeline will be approved, also poses a geopolitical risk that should not be discounted, said Kenneth Cohen, vice president of public and government affairs at ExxonMobil.

"The above ground risk equals or exceeds the geologic risk" faced by oil and gas companies operating in the United States, said Cohen.

ExxonMobil welcomes effective, science-based regulations, Colton said, but sees state-based regulations for U.S. onshore shale production as the best solution. The company remains optimistic on the outlook for U.S. shale drilling, despite the 2014 release of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) study next year of hydraulic fracturing's impact on U.S. water supplies. Additionally, nine other government agencies are conducting their own studies into hydraulic fracturing.

ExxonMobil expects to remain active in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GOM), despite its recent divestment of 20 Gulf of Mexico blocks. The amount of resources available in the deepwater GOM represents the equivalent of Saudi Arabia production, Colton said. The company has four important projects underway in the GOM, including Lucius and Hadrian South, which are expected to come online in 2014. ExxonMobil is also pursuing the Hadrian North and Julia projects in the GOM, according to the company's analyst meeting presentation earlier this month.

Despite its lack of success in exploring Poland's shale gas resource potential, the company is well-positioned to explore global shale assets, Colton said, noting that shale exploration outside the United States remains in its early days, meaning it's too early to forecast the outlook for international shale resources.

ExxonMobil's global production forecast does not include methane hydrates, which Japan has recently conducted production tests for and is viewed as the next big thing in the oil and gas industry. Methane hydrates lie on the horizon, but Colton said ExxonMobil researchers are "keenly aware of them."

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Aker Wins Contract for Schiehallion Redevelopment

Norwegian oilfield services firm Aker Solutions reported Wednesday that it has secured an approximately $105 million contract with BP to help redevelop one of the UK's largest oilfields.

Aker said its Aberdeen, Scotland operation will manufacture and supply all subsea controls equipment for the Quad 204 project. This is the redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal fields, which are located approximately 100 miles west of the Shetland Islands.

The Schiehallion and Loyal fields are estimated to contain a further 450 million barrels of recoverable oil and the total redevelopment is budgeted to cost some $4.5 billion. Due to the water depth in the area, Schiehallion is entirely reliant on subsea production technology and oil from the field is collected on a floating production, storage and offloading vessel (FPSO).

Alan Brunnen, the head of Aker's subsea business, commented in a statement:

"West of Shetland is an exciting area for oil and gas and we are delighted to continue our successful relationship with BP by playing such a significant role in the continuing development of this project."

The scope of Aker's work includes subsea controls equipment for subsea trees, manifolds and subsea safety isolation valves, as well as controls distribution assemblies. The work will be managed, designed and built by Aker’s subsea controls center of excellence in Aberdeen, with the first deliveries made in the first half of 2014.

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US Coast Guard: Barge, Pipeline Burn After Crash; Oil Slick Visible

A fire is still burning nearly a full day after a tug pushing a barge crashed into a pipeline in a bayou south of New Orleans Tuesday evening, but the Coast Guard said there is no visible oil in the water.

Earlier Wednesday, the Coast Guard had said a mile-long sheen was visible near the site of the incident, but it now says that was actually ash from the burn of the liquefied gas in the pipeline.

The pipeline fire is now about 30% smaller than it was earlier in the day, the Coast Guard said in a news release.

The barge, which the Coast Guard said is still intact, was carrying 2,215 barrels of oil when the tug crashed into the pipeline in Bayou Perot in Lafourche Parish, about 30 miles south of New Orleans, according to the Coast Guard.

The pipeline, which transports liquefied petroleum gas, is owned by Chevron Corp. and the tug by Settoon Towing LLC, according to the Coast Guard.

A spokesman for Chevron said the company has shut in the pipeline, which connects the Venice, La., gas plant to the pump station in Paradis, La. The company said products are being rerouted to avoid the pipeline, and the company has mobilized emergency crews to help with the response.

The Coast Guard said all crew members were able to exit the tug, though the captain is reported to have suffered second- and third-degree burns.

ES&H, an oil-spill response organization, has deployed thousands of feet of containment boom, a skimmer, and several response vessels, the Coast Guard said. The Coast Guard will fly over the area Wednesday afternoon to assess the damage.

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US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

U.S. oil and gas production will continue to rise through 2040 from 2010 levels as unconventional oil and gas resources and production from the deepwater Gulf of Mexico come online, while U.S. energy consumption is forecast to decline during the same time period, ExxonMobil Corp. reported in its 2013 energy outlook.

U.S. oil and gas production has grown to its highest level in three decades, thanks to technological advances that have allowed the oil and gas industry to access deepwater resources as well as unlock unconventional oil and gas resources such as the Bakken oil play in North Dakota, according to ExxonMobil's energy outlook.

The projected 6 percent decline between 2010 and 2040, or an average .2 percent decline per year, in U.S. energy consumption will occur even as the U.S. population grows an average of .7 percent a year from 2000 through 2040, or 20 percent more people by 2040, and the nation's gross domestic product grows an average 2.3 percent a year during that time period, basically doubling the economic output of the United States, said William Colton, vice president of corporate strategic planning at ExxonMobil, at a Wednesday presentation at Rice University in Houston. The findings of ExxonMobil's first U.S.-focused edition of its energy outlook are "pretty startling", said Colton, and indicate a more efficient use of energy across the board, from transportation to office buildings to industrial applications.

"This is an incredible achievement, a great accomplishment and good for the economy," Colton commented, who noted that the outlook for the United States has never been more positive in terms of geologic and human resources.

Energy demand in countries outside the United States is forecast to grow 35 percent through 2040, mostly driven by population and economic growth in developing countries such as China and India as well as fast-developing countries in Asia Pacific, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America, Colton noted. During the 2010 to 2040 timeframe, the world population will grow to 9 billion and the global economy will double.

"It's really about standard of living – they want safe homes, cars and refrigerators, but all these require energy," said Colton.

Electricity demand will be the single biggest driver of energy in the United States, with 30 percent growth by 2040, followed by the transportation and industrial sectors. An examination of the capital, fuel and operating costs for gas, coal, nuclear, wind and solar shows natural gas and coal as the most economic for power generation. When accounting for a $60/ton cost for carbon dioxide emissions, gas and nuclear become the most cost efficient. While the straight economics on nuclear power look great, facility siting and social issues, particularly in a post-Fukushimu world, mean limited options for nuclear exist.

ExxonMobil forecasts flat demand in the U.S. transportation sector. In the transportation sector, fuel demand for light-duty vehicles will fall even as the number of light-duty vehicles on U.S. roads grow thanks to better fuel economy and smaller size of these vehicles. Meanwhile, fuel demand will grow for heavy-duty vehicles, and full hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius will become more common on U.S. roads, said Colton. Most of the efficiency is being driven by government policy, such as the CAFÉ standards in the United States.

U.S. natural gas production is now at an all-time high thanks to shale boom, and is expected to rise by 45 percent between 2010 and 2040. By 2040, nearly 80 percent of North America gas supplies will be produced from local unconventional resources, according to ExxonMobil. Even with the projected increase in gas production through 2040, North America will continue to have significant gas resources in the ground, an estimated 100 years supply at current consumption rates; this figure could potentially grow at technology advances.

After decades of relatively flat production, North America oil and liquids output is expected to grow by 40 percent from 2010 to 2040. Conventional crude production is expected to decline, while production from unconventional resources is expected to rise, ExxonMobil said in its report. The biggest contributor to unconventional oil production will be from Canadian oil sands, which is expected to produce approximately 4.5 million barrels of oil per day by 2040. A doubling of deepwater production, mostly in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, will be another major contributor in oil production gains.

Even though North America is approaching a time when it produces more energy than it consumes, the region will still benefit from access to the global energy market.

"The value of free trade –whether imports or exports – is a fundamental principle of modern economics, and is critical to U.S. energy security, economic growth and competitiveness in the global marketplace," ExxonMobil said in its U.S. energy outlook.

The combination of steep gains in energy production and modest declines in U.S. consumption – will allow North America to become a net energy exporter by around 2025. The United States' changing role as a net energy exporter also will bring significant benefits to the U.S. economy, including those associated with liquefied natural gas exports, such as increased manufacturing activity, new jobs, lower energy costs for businesses and consumers, and billions in taxes and government revenue, ExxonMobil said in the report.

Reduced U.S. energy consumption also will provide environmental benefits, particularly when combined with the United States' shift away from coal to natural gas. ExxonMobil forecasts U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by 2040 to fall to levels not seen since the 1970s.

Events such as last year's Arab spring and the January terrorist takeover of the In Amenas Algeria gas production plant are examples of some of the geopolitical challenges that oil and gas companies' operating internationally must manage. However, North American regulatory uncertainty, such as whether the Keystone XL pipeline will be approved, also poses a geopolitical risk that should not be discounted, said Kenneth Cohen, vice president of public and government affairs at ExxonMobil.

"The above ground risk equals or exceeds the geologic risk" faced by oil and gas companies operating in the United States, said Cohen.

ExxonMobil welcomes effective, science-based regulations, Colton said, but sees state-based regulations for U.S. onshore shale production as the best solution. The company remains optimistic on the outlook for U.S. shale drilling, despite the 2014 release of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) study next year of hydraulic fracturing's impact on U.S. water supplies. Additionally, nine other government agencies are conducting their own studies into hydraulic fracturing.

ExxonMobil expects to remain active in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GOM), despite its recent divestment of 20 Gulf of Mexico blocks. The amount of resources available in the deepwater GOM represents the equivalent of Saudi Arabia production, Colton said. The company has four important projects underway in the GOM, including Lucius and Hadrian South, which are expected to come online in 2014. ExxonMobil is also pursuing the Hadrian North and Julia projects in the GOM, according to the company's analyst meeting presentation earlier this month.

Despite its lack of success in exploring Poland's shale gas resource potential, the company is well-positioned to explore global shale assets, Colton said, noting that shale exploration outside the United States remains in its early days, meaning it's too early to forecast the outlook for international shale resources.

ExxonMobil's global production forecast does not include methane hydrates, which Japan has recently conducted production tests for and is viewed as the next big thing in the oil and gas industry. Methane hydrates lie on the horizon, but Colton said ExxonMobil researchers are "keenly aware of them."

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

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Oil Explorers Beware: Hackers Are Eying What You Know

Oil Explorers Beware: Hackers Are Eying What You Know

This opinion piece presents the opinions of the author.
It does not necessarily reflect the views of Rigzone.

While most would think that the risks junior oil and gas companies are taking in exploring new frontiers as far away as the remote reaches of Africa are related to government instability and conflict, another risk they face is right at home and lies right beyond their network firewalls.

Cyber security breaches are becoming more common place as the ranks of junior companies swell and take on new exploration venues with a great deal of energy. But at home their firewalls are not safe and hackers are being paid to find out what juicy exploration news is being discussed in their boardrooms.

In Canada—home of some of the most tenacious of these exploration juniors—local media reported late last year that the internal firewall of Telvent Canada Ltd. had been breached by foreign hackers.

These hackers can represent anyone from a competitor to an organized crime group to political and environmental activists. And the information they want can be anything from preliminary exploration results, merger and acquisition talks and expansion plans to geological data and technological information. All of it is valuable. All of it is sellable.

According to Ernst & Young, most oil and gas companies don't have high enough network security standards. This is demonstrated by the rising incidents of external cyber attacks. Some companies in the industry don't even have a formal security framework in place.
Everything changes with everything else, and while exploration is getting both smaller and bigger at the same time, cyber attacks are being more targeted, taking advantage of individuals who use their own electronic devices to connect to their company's network. This is where the biggest weaknesses emerge.

There is an accelerating trend for oil and gas companies to require their employees to use their own mobile devices for work. It's such a trend, in fact, that it even has its own acronym: BYOD, or bring your own device. But because of the security implications this entails, analysts predict that 65% of enterprises will adopt a mobile device management solution in the next five years.

What this means is that they will need a more secure way to handle sensitive information if their employees are using their own devices, storing company information on those devices and linking up to company networks. Lines between personal and corporate data can be very blurry and this is exactly what cyber attackers are targeting.

There are other weak links, too. Smaller oil and gas exploration and production companies often require external assistance to identify opportunities in foreign countries, to network with the right people and to navigate government figures and regulations. The help they enlist creates another chink in the armor as important data is sent back and forth.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Oil-Explorers-Beware-Hackers-Are-Eyeing-What-You-Know.html

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Saturday, April 27, 2013

API: TV Ads Show Americans Don't Support Higher Industry Taxes

New TV ads show Americans don't support higher taxes on the oil and natural gas industry, API Executive Vice President Marty Durbin told reporters in a briefing Wednesday morning:

"Starting today, the API is running ads on broadcast and cable channels that feature the unscripted words of everyday Americans who believe higher taxes on energy companies may translate into higher energy costs for consumers. We decided to run the ads to remind Congress that at a time when many families have had to scramble to balance their budgets, asking them to pay more for the energy they need to live their lives is bad policy and frankly bad politics.

"According to a study by Wood Mackenzie a $5 billion per year tax increase would result in a decrease of $233 billion in revenue to federal, state and local governments by 2030. Further, the study estimates that increased investments, as a result of pro-growth and energy development policies, could generate an additional $800 billion in revenue by 2030. That's a $1 trillion difference to government's bottom line.

"If increased revenue is truly the objective [of those proposing to increase taxes on the industry], then allow the oil and natural gas industry to continue to do what it has always done – invest in America's economy by providing good-paying jobs here at home that develop the energy America needs. That's what the American people support and in the long-term the result would be far better for the American economy, for consumers, for our energy security, and for the nation's long-term economic growth."

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Oil Futures Climb to Two-Week High Ahead of Inventory Data

U.S. crude-oil futures ground higher Tuesday, pushing to a two-week high as investors await government data on U.S. oil supplies.

Light, sweet crude for April delivery settled up 48 cents, or 0.5%, at $92.54 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the fourth-straight session of gains and the highest settlement since Feb. 27.

Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange fell 57 cents to settle at $109.65 a barrel.

Oil prices continued the bounce from lows near $90 a barrel earlier this month. Analysts and traders said they were looking ahead to Wednesday's release of U.S. oil inventories data for signs on whether the rally can be sustained.

U.S. crude-oil stockpiles are expected to rise by 2.4 million barrels in data due 10:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday from the Energy Information Administration, according to a Dow Jones Newswires survey of analysts. If the estimate is correct, oil inventories will be at the highest level ever for this time of year.

The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, will release its own data at 4:30 p.m. EDT Tuesday.

Gasoline stocks are seen falling by 1.2 million barrels in the EIA data, and stocks of distillate, which include heating oil and diesel, are seen falling by 1.9 million barrels.

Oil prices have slumped from highs near $98 a barrel earlier this year amid rising domestic supplies. But improving economic data in recent weeks, including Friday's larger-than-anticipated increase in U.S. employment, have helped halt the decline.

"With overall improving economic data, I'd say there is a slight bias higher, but not that much given that inventories are still as high as they are in the U.S," said Kyle Cooper, managing partner at IAF Advisors in Houston. He added that in weekly EIA data, "Crude inventories are probably going to build again, crude production is still high, crude demand is still low."

Some analysts said this week's recovery appeared to be technically driven after U.S. prices failed to make a renewed push below $90 a barrel, which is a key support level on trading charts.

But market watchers added they were still scratching their heads over the rise, as the fundamentals for the global oil market haven't changed and latest assessments may point to steady, rather than higher prices.

OPEC said in its monthly report that non-OPEC output, led by growth in output from U.S. shale-oil fields, will rise by 1 million barrels a day this year.

The EIA forecast in its short-term energy outlook Tuesday that U.S. crude-oil output will top net imports for the first time in more than 17 years this autumn.

News that more of the world's oil supply is in the hands of producers that wouldn't regularly adjust output to support prices, as the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries often does, would be a stabilizing force for global oil prices, analysts said.

April-delivery reformulated gasoline blendstock futures settled 0.22 cent lower at $3.1502 a gallon. April heating oil settled 2.07 cents lower, at $2.9484 a gallon.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

US Oil, Gas Production to Climb While US Energy Consumption Declines

U.S. oil and gas production will continue to rise through 2040 from 2010 levels as unconventional oil and gas resources and production from the deepwater Gulf of Mexico come online, while U.S. energy consumption is forecast to decline during the same time period, ExxonMobil Corp. reported in its 2013 energy outlook.

U.S. oil and gas production has grown to its highest level in three decades, thanks to technological advances that have allowed the oil and gas industry to access deepwater resources as well as unlock unconventional oil and gas resources such as the Bakken oil play in North Dakota, according to ExxonMobil's energy outlook.

The projected 6 percent decline between 2010 and 2040, or an average .2 percent decline per year, in U.S. energy consumption will occur even as the U.S. population grows an average of .7 percent a year from 2000 through 2040, or 20 percent more people by 2040, and the nation's gross domestic product grows an average 2.3 percent a year during that time period, basically doubling the economic output of the United States, said William Colton, vice president of corporate strategic planning at ExxonMobil, at a Wednesday presentation at Rice University in Houston. The findings of ExxonMobil's first U.S.-focused edition of its energy outlook are "pretty startling", said Colton, and indicate a more efficient use of energy across the board, from transportation to office buildings to industrial applications.

"This is an incredible achievement, a great accomplishment and good for the economy," Colton commented, who noted that the outlook for the United States has never been more positive in terms of geologic and human resources.

Energy demand in countries outside the United States is forecast to grow 35 percent through 2040, mostly driven by population and economic growth in developing countries such as China and India as well as fast-developing countries in Asia Pacific, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America, Colton noted. During the 2010 to 2040 timeframe, the world population will grow to 9 billion and the global economy will double.

"It's really about standard of living – they want safe homes, cars and refrigerators, but all these require energy," said Colton.

Electricity demand will be the single biggest driver of energy in the United States, with 30 percent growth by 2040, followed by the transportation and industrial sectors. An examination of the capital, fuel and operating costs for gas, coal, nuclear, wind and solar shows natural gas and coal as the most economic for power generation. When accounting for a $60/ton cost for carbon dioxide emissions, gas and nuclear become the most cost efficient. While the straight economics on nuclear power look great, facility siting and social issues, particularly in a post-Fukushimu world, mean limited options for nuclear exist.

ExxonMobil forecasts flat demand in the U.S. transportation sector. In the transportation sector, fuel demand for light-duty vehicles will fall even as the number of light-duty vehicles on U.S. roads grow thanks to better fuel economy and smaller size of these vehicles. Meanwhile, fuel demand will grow for heavy-duty vehicles, and full hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius will become more common on U.S. roads, said Colton. Most of the efficiency is being driven by government policy, such as the CAFÉ standards in the United States.

U.S. natural gas production is now at an all-time high thanks to shale boom, and is expected to rise by 45 percent between 2010 and 2040. By 2040, nearly 80 percent of North America gas supplies will be produced from local unconventional resources, according to ExxonMobil. Even with the projected increase in gas production through 2040, North America will continue to have significant gas resources in the ground, an estimated 100 years supply at current consumption rates; this figure could potentially grow at technology advances.

After decades of relatively flat production, North America oil and liquids output is expected to grow by 40 percent from 2010 to 2040. Conventional crude production is expected to decline, while production from unconventional resources is expected to rise, ExxonMobil said in its report. The biggest contributor to unconventional oil production will be from Canadian oil sands, which is expected to produce approximately 4.5 million barrels of oil per day by 2040. A doubling of deepwater production, mostly in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, will be another major contributor in oil production gains.

Even though North America is approaching a time when it produces more energy than it consumes, the region will still benefit from access to the global energy market.

"The value of free trade –whether imports or exports – is a fundamental principle of modern economics, and is critical to U.S. energy security, economic growth and competitiveness in the global marketplace," ExxonMobil said in its U.S. energy outlook.

The combination of steep gains in energy production and modest declines in U.S. consumption – will allow North America to become a net energy exporter by around 2025. The United States' changing role as a net energy exporter also will bring significant benefits to the U.S. economy, including those associated with liquefied natural gas exports, such as increased manufacturing activity, new jobs, lower energy costs for businesses and consumers, and billions in taxes and government revenue, ExxonMobil said in the report.

Reduced U.S. energy consumption also will provide environmental benefits, particularly when combined with the United States' shift away from coal to natural gas. ExxonMobil forecasts U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by 2040 to fall to levels not seen since the 1970s.

Events such as last year's Arab spring and the January terrorist takeover of the In Amenas Algeria gas production plant are examples of some of the geopolitical challenges that oil and gas companies' operating internationally must manage. However, North American regulatory uncertainty, such as whether the Keystone XL pipeline will be approved, also poses a geopolitical risk that should not be discounted, said Kenneth Cohen, vice president of public and government affairs at ExxonMobil.

"The above ground risk equals or exceeds the geologic risk" faced by oil and gas companies operating in the United States, said Cohen.

ExxonMobil welcomes effective, science-based regulations, Colton said, but sees state-based regulations for U.S. onshore shale production as the best solution. The company remains optimistic on the outlook for U.S. shale drilling, despite the 2014 release of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) study next year of hydraulic fracturing's impact on U.S. water supplies. Additionally, nine other government agencies are conducting their own studies into hydraulic fracturing.

ExxonMobil expects to remain active in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GOM), despite its recent divestment of 20 Gulf of Mexico blocks. The amount of resources available in the deepwater GOM represents the equivalent of Saudi Arabia production, Colton said. The company has four important projects underway in the GOM, including Lucius and Hadrian South, which are expected to come online in 2014. ExxonMobil is also pursuing the Hadrian North and Julia projects in the GOM, according to the company's analyst meeting presentation earlier this month.

Despite its lack of success in exploring Poland's shale gas resource potential, the company is well-positioned to explore global shale assets, Colton said, noting that shale exploration outside the United States remains in its early days, meaning it's too early to forecast the outlook for international shale resources.

ExxonMobil's global production forecast does not include methane hydrates, which Japan has recently conducted production tests for and is viewed as the next big thing in the oil and gas industry. Methane hydrates lie on the horizon, but Colton said ExxonMobil researchers are "keenly aware of them."

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here