Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Samsung Heavy Cuts First Steel for Ichthys LNG Semisub

Inpex revealed Friday that Ichthys LNG is on track to deliver first gas by year-end 2016, with the first steel cutting of the project’s semisubmersible platform conducted by Samsung Heavy Industries in South Korea Friday.

The 492-foot by 361-foot (150 meter by 110 meter) large central processing facility (CPF) will displace 140,000 tonnes and have a peak gas export rate of 1,657 million standard cubic feet per day, making the semisub platform the largest of its kind.

"This is one of the most exciting parts of the project – the first materialization of what has been many years of hard work; it's when the design comes to life," Inpex's President Director Australia Seiya Ito said in a statement.

The platform's hull will be moored by 28 anchor chains weighing more than 25,000 tonnes, while the project's floating production storage offloading (FPSO) vessel will be moored by an additional 15,000 tonnes of anchor chain.

"The total represents more than the yearly worldwide production of large-scale anchor chains," Inpex noted in its disclosure.

Spain's Vicinay is the sole supplier of anchor chains for the Ichthys liquefied natural gas (LNG) Project.

Earlier in the week, the first steel plates of the FPSO vessel's turret were cut in Singapore.

"This is a momentous week for the Ichthys LNG project as it takes its first big step towards reaching its goal of watching the facilities sail from [South Korea] to Australia in late 2015," Ito remarked.

The development plan for Ichthys includes several subsea wells tied-back to the CPF and the FPSO for condensate. A 528-mile (850-kilometer) subsea pipeline will be constructed to transport the gas to a LNG processing plant in Blaydin Point, Darwin.

Onshore installations consist of two LNG trains with a capacity of 4.2 million tonnes per year each and facilities for the extraction and the export of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and condensate. In addition to its LNG production, the Ichthys project is expected to generate 1.6 million tonnes per year of LPG and 100,000 barrels of condensate a day at peak.

The entire annual production of LNG from Ichthys LNG (8.4 million tons per year) has already been sold for 15 years under oil-linked price contracts, mostly directed to third-party consortiums of Taiwanese and Japanese buyers.

Ichthys is operated by Inpex with a 66.07 percent interest. The remaining stakes are held by Total (30 percent), Tokyo Gas (1.575 percent), Osaka Gas (1.200 percent), Chubu Electric (0.735 percent) and Toho Gas (0.420 percent).

Quintella has reported on the upstream and downstream oil and petrochemicals markets from 2004. Email Quintella at quintella.koh@rigzone.com.

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Crude-Oil Futures Rally Stalls Below $96 a Barrel

NEW YORK--Crude-oil futures prices ended slightly weaker Friday amid mixed economic signals and concerns about refinery maintenance curbing near-term U.S. oil demand.

Traders said disappointing data on U.S. new home sales in December negated the impact of day-earlier figures showing a five-year low in weekly jobless claims. The Commerce Department said home sales dropped by 7.3% from November, to 369,000 homes. That fell short of forecasts for sales of 385,000 homes in the month.

With the shine off the economic picture, the focus shifted to bearish U.S. oil data, which showed refiner demand for crude oil last week was cut dramatically--to a 20-month low--by operating snags and seasonal maintenance. The drop in crude runs of 895,000 barrels a day was the most since September 2008, when Hurricane Ike ravaged Gulf Coast refineries. Crude stocks rose by more than expected in the week, to 363 million barrels, the highest for the week on 30 years of EIA data.

The housing data "took the wind out of the rally," said Gene McGillian, broker and analyst at Tradition Energy, adding that the EIA data also "isn't supportive for a breakout to the upside."

Demand for distillate fuel (diesel/heating oil) in the latest four weeks was the lowest since July 2009, lagging the year-earlier level by 8.2%, the EIA said.

Light, sweet crude oil for March delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange settled 7 cents lower, at $95.88 a barrel, after trading in a range of $95.43 to $96.56 a barrel. After the February contract expired Monday at a four-month high of $96.24 a barrel, front-month crude has failed to settle above $96 a barrel. March crude dropped 16 cents from a week earlier. ICE North Sea Brent crude oil ended unchanged at $113.28 a barrel and carried a premium to Nymex crude of $17.40 a barrel, after topping $20 a month ago.

The market is still puzzling out issues surrounding movement of crude oil on the Seaway pipeline, which moves crude out of storage at Cushing, Okla. to refineries in the key Gulf Coast region. Capacity on the line nearly tripled to 400,000 barrels a day this month and has recently helped lift Nymex prices on the notion that U.S. crude would fetch higher prices in the Gulf, where it would compete with costlier imports.

But the pipeline operator has said flows along the full length of the line have been impacted by maintenance work at a large Texas refinery, and hasn't given precise figure how much oil is now running through the line. Crude oil stocks recently built up to record high levels at Cushing and may take longer to drain, depending on the state of Seaway operations, analysts said.

February-delivery reformulated gasoline settled 1.25 cents higher at $2.8754 a gallon, the highest level since Oct. 12. February heating oil settled lower by 2.96 cents, or 1%, at $3.0568 a gallon, recording the biggest single-day drop since Jan. 15, after prices ended Thursday at their highest level since Oct. 30.

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Brazil's HRT: Namibia Regulators Approve Stake Sale to Galp

RIO DE JANEIRO--Brazilian oil startup HRT Participacoes em Petroleo SA (HRTPY, HRTP3.BR) said late Thursday that Namibia's Mines and Energy Ministry approved the sale of a stake in three offshore blocks to Portugal's Galp Energia (GALP.LB).

In the deal, first announced in November, the two companies said that Galp had acquired a 14% stake in the three exploration blocks in return for covering a portion of drilling costs.

The deal helps clear the way for HRT to start drilling in the highly prospective region off Namibia's coast, which geologists believe could hold an area similar to Brazil's subsalt because the two areas were connected millions of years ago. Billions of barrels of crude oil were discovered under a thick layer of salt in the Atlantic Ocean off Brazil.

"We can confirm we will commence operations in [first-quarter 2013] for our exploratory campaign in Namibia," HRT Chief Executive Marcio Rocha Mello said in a statement. Earlier this month, HRT recently received the drilling rig that will be used to drill exploration wells in the offshore blocks.

Oil-industry consultants DeGolyer and MacNaughton pegged average prospective resources for HRT's offshore acreage in Namibia at 7.4 billion barrels of oil equivalent. Average prospective resources are a preliminary measure used by the industry to indicate oil volumes that could be recovered from undiscovered deposits.

HRT holds operating stakes in 10 blocks and minority shares in two others in the Walvis, Orange and Namibe basins.

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Will New York Join the Fracking Club?

Will New York Join the Fracking Club?

New York. It's where dreams are made, right? Well, not so much for the oil and gas industry. The state has been in a gridlock with the industry and environmentalists holding fast to their opinions about shale development and hydraulic fracturing. So much so, that the state's government has been debating the same issue for more than four years. But time is running out.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has been reviewing the comments and proposed regulation on the revised draft of the Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (SGEIS) and preparing responses that are set for release Feb. 27, 2013.

The department began the public process to develop the draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement (dSGEIS) in 2008 by hosting public scoping sessions in order to issue hydraulic fracturing permits to recover natural gas in the Marcellus and Utica shale plays, which covers most of New York and ranges in depths down to 7,000 feet below the surface.

Since 2008, the department has collaborated with industry experts to analyze information about the proposed operations and the potential adverse impacts of these operations on the environment, as well as carving out criteria and conditions for future permit approvals and other regulatory action.

In September 2009, the state released draft regulations for public review and comment. The draft regulations are set to create a legal framework for implementing the proposed mitigation measures in the revised draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement.

After much public comment in 2010, the DEC revised the draft and made the Preliminary Revised Draft document available in July 2011. Additional information was added and another revision was released Sept. 7, 2011.

This revision, titled the Revised Draft SGEIS, was posted and provided for public comment in November 2011. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation held its fourth and final public hearing, which brought in around 6,000 people.

"The turnout of 6,000 people at the hearings demonstrates how strongly New Yorkers feel about this important issue," said Joe Martens, DEC Commissioner, in a December 2011 statement. "Public input on the draft environment impact statement is an important and insightful part of developing responsible conditions for this activity as well as determining whether it can be safely conducted."

Governor Andrew Cuomo has publicly remained neutral on the issue. Last year he ordered a health review of fracking before finalizing his decision, but the Nov. 29, 2012 health review deadline was missed and delayed, again.

This delay caused the DEC to apply for a 90-day extension, "in order to give New York State Commissioner of Health, Dr. Nirav Shah time to complete his review of the dSGEIS," stated DEC spokeswoman Emily DeSantis in a November 2012 statement.

She added that this extension is necessary in order for DEC to have time to review the doctor's comments.

The public comment period ended Jan. 11, 2013.

This issue has been very controversial, partially due to the state's close proximity to Pennsylvania, where the state has benefitted from fracking.

The Joint Landowners Coalition wrote a letter on Jan. 10, 2013 to the governor saying the latest obstacle is a "breach of faith" in government, said Dan Fitzsimmons, president of the organization overseeing 77,000 New York landowners working with gas companies hoping to receive fair deals.

The governor is getting cold feet in the face of growing opposition, added Fitzsimmons in an interview with Rigzone.

"This situation is taking away the rights from landowners and our mineral rights - and our ability to move forward. If you look at all forms of energy, there are consequences with everything. Nothing is perfect," Fitzsimmons said.

"The health effects of fracking have already been studied extensively, and numerous other states and nations have used the process successfully for years. We only have to look across the southern border into Pennsylvania, to see the economic benefits that gas drilling can bring," Fitzsimmons said.

"It's so frustrating," he lamented, who sees "thriving" businesses in Pennsylvania, and farmers repairing their homes and barns, and buying new tractors. "Natural gas is one of the cleanest products that we have," said Fitzsimmons. "It is what we should be doing."

However, the opposition for allowing this widely-used procedure is growing louder. In January 2013, environmental advocates walked to the governor's office and delivered 50 boxes of what they said were 204,000 anti-drilling comments to the DEC.

Some comments included concern over the proposed Constitution Pipeline, a joint venture between Williams Partners LP and Cabot Oil and Gas Corp., and how the pipeline will hinder the environment and private property.

The 121-mile pipeline will connect natural gas production in northeastern Pennsylvania to the Iroquois Gas Transmission and Tennessee Gas Pipeline systems in Schoharie County, N.Y. The proposed project route will mainly follow Interstate 88 and is designed to transport natural gas that has already been produced in Pennsylvania.

Before the pipeline can be constructed, Constitution Pipeline Company must first obtain a federal Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). The company has requested that FERC initiate a pre-filing environmental review of the proposed pipeline route. Following the pre-filing period, the company will file an application with FERC in the spring of 2013 seeking approval to construct the pipeline.

With more than 10 years of journalism experience, Robin Dupre specializes in the offshore sector of the oil and gas industry. Email Robin at rdupre@rigzone.com.

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BP CEO Says Four BP Staff Most Likely Died In Amenas Attack-E-Mail

LONDON--Four members of BP PLC's (BP) staff have most likely died in the terrorist attack last week on an Algerian gas plant, the company's chief executive said Friday, adding that the U.K. oil giant will learn lessons from the tragedy.

An attack by Islamist militants in Algeria's Sahara on the In Amenas gas plant--run by BP, Statoil ASA (STL.OS) and Algerian state oil company Sonatrach--left at least 37 foreign workers dead. The event highlighted a formidable new threat for oil companies investing in the region.

In an internal e-mail to staff, BP CEO Bob Dudley said "it is now clear that four of our colleagues in all likelihood lost their lives in the attack on the In Amenas joint venture." Over the weekend, he had said the company had feared "the worst" for them.

Using unusually harsh language, Mr. Dudley said the plant was "attacked by murderers on what should have been an ordinary working day. This was an appalling act of evil--a barbarous and pre-meditated criminal attack."

But he insisted BP would help governments investigate the tragedy as well as learn lessons to avoid it being repeated.

"Governments will also be conducting their enquiries. BP will participate fully and share what knowledge and insights we have," Mr. Dudley said. "We will ensure any lessons are applied to prevent such an outrage occurring again."

The e-mail also hinted that the tragedy could hurt staff morale.

"This has been a heavy blow for BP and I can imagine people across the company asking many questions," the CEO said in the e-mail. "I am very clear about where BP goes. We go on."

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Rural Oil Well Could Be Revisited by Energy Company

A vast well of oil near Biscathorpe which was overlooked' by BP in 1987 could be revisited after a company confirmed plans to drill.

Egdon Resources UK Ltd have revealed they have identified an oil-bearing area of sand between one and two metres thick, 2,000 metres under land north east of the village, which could be home to up to 25 million barrels of oil.

The company say they have identified a suitable site to drill and will shortly be submitting a full planning application to Lincolnshire County Council, who confirmed that discussions with Egdon have taken place.

The find could dwarf the nearby Keddington oil field which was taken over by Egdon in 2007, which produces 50 barrels a day and is estimated to house around four million barrels.

Mark Abbott, managing director or Egdon, said: "Egdon are intending to drill an exploration well to test the structure some distance from the original well where we expect this sand to have thickened.

"The processes has been undertaken for the proposed Biscathorpe-2' well and we now believe we have a suitable site identified.

"As part of the process we also undertake pre-application consultation with stakeholders including the planning authority and local people.

"To avoid any doubt, the prospect at Biscathorpe is a conventional oil prospect similar to the significant number previously drilled in the region and I can confirm that no hydraulic fracking' would be undertaken as part of the proposed operations."

Neil McBride, development manager for the county council, said: "We have had discussions with Egdon's consultants but have not yet received a planning application.

"All applications are assessed against the National Planning Policy Framework and the Development Plan, which in this case is the Lincolnshire Minerals Local Plan, and are subject to a consultation and publicity process.

"The consultees in this case will include the district council, parish councils and the Environment Agency."

Copyright 2013 Johnston Press Plc. All Rights Reserved.

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In Amenas: Two Statoil Workers Confirmed Dead

Norway's Statoil reported Friday lunchtime (UK time) that two of its employees missing since the attack by Islamist militants on the In Amenas gas facility in southeastern Algeria have been confirmed as dead.

The two are Tore Bech (58 years old) from Bergen, Norway and Thomas Snekkevik (35 years old) from Austrheim/Bergen, Norway.

Statoil Chief Executive Helge Lund commented in a company statement:

"Our thoughts are first and foremost with the families and close friends who have lost their loved ones in this horrific and senseless attack on innocent people.

"All of us in Statoil share their grief and express our deep sympathy during this difficult time. We are still very concerned about our three colleagues who remain missing."

Three Statoil employees are still missing after the attack on In Amenas, which began on Jan. 16.

Late Tuesday, BP Group Chief Executive said he "feared the worst" for four of its employees who were still unaccounted for. Press reports identified these BP staff  Monday.

Fourteen of the 18 BP employees who were at the In Amenas site at the time of the attack have been confirmed safe.

A former engineer, Jon is an award-winning editor who has covered the technology, engineering and energy sectors since the mid-1990s. Email Jon at jmainwaring@rigzone.com.

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RusPetro to Boost Production with New Heat Exchanger

RusPetro reported Friday that a heat exchange system is expected to come on line on the firm's Krasnoleninsky Arch field, which is located in the Khanty-Mansiysk region of West Siberia.

RusPetro said that the heat exchanger will enable condensate production to increase from a current level of 1,400 barrels of oil per day (bopd) towards 4,000 bopd, bringing total crude and condensate production from around 6,500 bopd to approximately 9,000 bopd.

The firm has updated its development plan and aims to produce average crude and condensate at a rate of 10,000 bopd in 2013, with a targeted exit rate of 13,000 bopd for the year. For the end of 2014 and 2015, it plans exit rates of 20,000 bopd and 31,000 bopd respectively.

RusPetro also announced that it has strengthened its balance sheet. The firm has commenced an offering of senior secured notes, which will be used to repay a senior term loan and for general corporate purposes. It is also proposing to convert Limolines Transport's outstanding shareholder loan into new shares in the company. Most significant, however, has been the establishment of a new revolving credit facility at an initial level of $50 million with Sberbank.

RusPetro Chief Executive Don Wolcott commented in a company statement:

"We are delighted to announce our plans for strengthening of our balance sheet through a range of actions today, including the notes offering, Limolines loan conversion and the new Sberbank facility. These will simplify our capital structure and raise new funds that can be deployed in to the field. Our business is now operating cash flow positive and we believe that our strategic development plan will put the business on a firm trajectory for growth in 2013 and beyond."

Analysts who follow the company at London-based FoxDavies Capital saw the update as positive.

A former engineer, Jon is an award-winning editor who has covered the technology, engineering and energy sectors since the mid-1990s. Email Jon at jmainwaring@rigzone.com.

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Brazil Oil Workers to Stage 24-Hour Warning Strike Monday--Union

RIO DE JANEIRO--A union representing oil workers at Brazil's state-run energy company Petroleo Brasileiro (PBR, PETR4.BR), or Petrobras, said late Friday that workers will stage a 24-hour "warning" strike to protest the company's latest profit-sharing offer, although crude oil output is not expected to be affected.

The National Federation of Oil Workers, or FNP, said its members voted to approve the strike this week. The FNP is an umbrella union representing about half of Petrobras's 80,000 employees. Workers at a sister umbrella union known as the Brazilian Oil Workers Federation, or FUP, will also participate in the strike.

Workers are protesting Petrobras's initial profit-sharing proposal made in December, which was less than half the payment oil workers received last year, said Eduardo Henrique Soares da Costa, a director for the FNP. "This is a 24-hour warning strike to add a little pressure to the negotiations and let Petrobras know that it needs to improve its offer," Mr. da Costa said.

Oil workers will decline to change shifts and halt services at installations across the country, but Mr. da Costa said that production will not be affected by the work action.

Strikes such as the one planned for Monday typically involve slowdowns and work-to-rule actions that have limited affect on Petrobras's operations because of their short duration. The work action, however, comes as Petrobras struggles to boost crude-oil output amid ongoing maintenance at offshore platforms. Petrobras faced a similar 24-hour strike in September during salary negotiations.

Petrobras said it was taking "all administrative and operational measures" to guarantee normal operations on Monday. "Petrobras continues to be open to negotiations with the unions so that all parties can reach an understanding about [the profit-sharing payment]," the company said in an email.

The last major strike at Petrobras took place in July 2008, when oil workers walked off the job for five days to protest work issues and profit-sharing proposals. The strike cost Petrobras about 63,000 barrels of crude oil production per day.

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