Sunday, March 10, 2013

Caldus Engineering Appoints New MD

UK-based oilfield services firm Caldus Engineering announced Wednesday that it has appointed Brian Green as its new managing director.

Green joins the firm from First Subsea and has more than 35 years' experience in the offshore industry. At Caldus, he will be responsible for developing the offshore market for the firm's integrity management, high-pressure/high-temperature monitoring and control systems and remote 3D seismic monitoring devices.

Caldus specializes in down-hole tools, subsea oil and gas and extreme geothermal engineering. The firm is a subsidiary of Norway's Badger Explorer.

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University of Houston to Develop Energy Initiative

University of Houston (UH) President Renu Khator has named Dow Chair Professor Ramanan Krishnamoorti as a special assistant to the president/chancellor for UH Energy, a collection of the university's preeminent energy research and education programs.

Krishnamoorti will lead UH's efforts to develop a strategic plan for UH Energy involving education and training, research and the expansion of UH's Energy Research Park.

In recent years, UH has identified energy as a key strategic focus for research and teaching. The overall vision for UH Energy and the ERP is to build a premier research and education facility for students and faculty as well as establish a unique environment for the best minds to forge new business approaches to the way energy is created, delivered and used.

UH Energy includes the brightest minds in UH engineering, law, business, natural sciences and technology. These researchers and educators help shape energy policy and forge new business approaches in the energy industry. They also educate the innovators of tomorrow by providing a dynamic environment for students and faculty.

"The UH Energy initiative is an exciting and important mission, given its location in the world's energy capital," Krishnamoorti said. "I will be working on developing a comprehensive strategic plan designed to capitalize on the abundance of energy-related talent and resources here at UH.

"I also will be working on growing our global partnerships with industry in regards to education and research," Krishnamoorti said. "This strategic plan also will involve the development of degree and non-degree programs using online and offsite delivery mechanisms."

Additionally, Krishnamoorti will work closely with the UH Energy Advisory Board, a distinguished panel of global industry leaders to build a vibrant partnership with industry.

For the past four and a half years, Krishnamoorti has been department chair of the UH Cullen College of Engineering's chemical and biomolecular engineering department. He has stepped down as department chair to assume the newly created special assistant's position. Mike Harold, M.D. Anderson Professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, has been named the new department chair.

Krishnamoorti earned his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Princeton University. He joined UH as an assistant professor in 1996 and became a professor in 2005. He also was a visiting researcher at ExxonMobil Chemical Company in 2003 and was UH's associate dean of research for engineering from 2005-2008.

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OPEC Flags Risks to Global Supply Growth

LONDON - The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries Tuesday warned that expectations of growth in non-OPEC oil supply this year, seen as essential to meeting global oil demand in the long term, face significant stumbling blocks.

"A high level of risk is associated with non-OPEC supply forecasts on political, price, economic, weather, environmental and geological factors," the group of major oil producers said in its monthly oil market report.

Non-OPEC supply growth is projected to increase by almost 1 million barrels a day this year, largely due to a boom in production in the U.S.--the result of technology that has made it possible to release large reserves of oil trapped in shale rock.

The output growth in America is a boon to consumers there who already benefit from lower oil prices compared with elsewhere, but for OPEC it has significant implications for the group's historical dominance in the oil market.

In a landmark study last October, the International Energy Agency forecast that by 2020 U.S. oil output could overtake that of OPEC's kingpin, Saudi Arabia. According to the IEA's forecast, the increase in U.S. output will force OPEC members to adapt rapidly to changing trade patterns, and potentially even put them in competition with North American oil exports.

In its report Tuesday, OPEC said it expects demand for its crude to fall by 300,000 barrels a day in 2013 compared with last year.

Although OPEC initially said it wasn't concerned by the shale-oil boom, it has since warned that forecasts of rising U.S. oil production could curtail its own investment in maintaining output.

"If the [IEA] estimates for U.S. production are not met," that "could trigger the possibility of oil shortages and higher prices" as producers could have cut their investment based on these forecasts, OPEC Secretary General Abdalla Salem el-Badri said in an interview in November following the release of the IEA's report.

In its latest report, the group of major oil producers forecast the shale boom in the U.S. would help increase oil production by 520,000 barrels a day this year, giving the U.S. the highest production growth among the non-OPEC countries, but it also played down the positive side of these developments by warning of the challenges facing the industry.

"There are remaining risks associated with the growth forecast on the back of weather, technical, environmental and price factors," the report said. It said that the heavy decline rate associated with the first year of shale oil production from individual wells in the first year was a major factor that could impact growth.

The group projected U.S. production would rise to 10.6 million barrels a day in the fourth quarter from 10.42 million barrels a day in the first quarter of this year.

Overall, OPEC forecast that non-OPEC supply would increase by 940,000 barrels a day this year to 53.9 million barrels a day, driven primarily by growth in the U.S., Canada, Latin America and the Former Soviet Union.

It also highlighted risks to supply growth in Canada, Australia, Latin America and Russia, though the growth projections for these countries pale in comparison to the rapid production increase expected in the U.S.

Data from secondary sources showed that output from OPEC member countries declined in recent months.

Oil production by members of the group fell to its lowest level since October 2011 last month as the price for the group's oil benchmark rose to settle at $109.28 a barrel, its highest monthly average since September 2012.

The decline in production was primarily the result of lower output from Saudi Arabia, Nigeria and Algeria but was offset slightly by higher production from Angola.

Benoit Faucon in London contributed to this article.

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

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Shell to Face Challenges Replacing Damaged Arctic Rigs

Royal Dutch Shell PLC's plans to send its two offshore drilling rigs to Asia for extensive repairs will likely mean the cancellation of its second summer of drilling in the U.S. Arctic Ocean, unless it can find replacements fit to do the work - something that may prove to be a challenge.

Rigs able to operate in harsh Arctic conditions are rare and even if found, would have to be modified and receive U.S. government blessing to operate in a remote and environmentally sensitive area in less than five months.

The likely delay is the latest bump in what has been a tough road to Arctic drilling for the Anglo-Dutch oil giant, underscoring the increasing difficulty big oil companies have in finding large deposits of conventional oil.

If Shell cannot drill this summer, it will have to wait until 2014 to get another shot at finding oil in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, a high-profile and expensive effort that is being closely watched by investors and U.S. regulators.

Moreover, the hiccup is adding fuel to criticism from environmental groups such as Greenpeace, who maintain that the litany of issues Shell has run into during its Arctic drilling campaign shows the company can't drill safely in that region. "Shell made a mess of its operations last year and there's every likelihood it will do the same this year," Greenpeace said in a statement Tuesday.

On Monday, the company said the Kulluk and Noble Discoverer rigs will be moved from Alaskan waters to Asian dry dock facilities. The Kulluk suffered hull and electrical equipment damage when it ran aground 300 miles Southwest of Anchorage while being towed during a storm January 1.

The Discoverer suffered an engine fire and may need to have its entire propulsion system replaced. Both incidents occurred after the drilling season had ended and took place far from the Beaufort and Chukchi seas where the rigs drilled a pair of partial wells last summer.

James West, an analyst with Barclays Capital, said that aside from the Kulluk, there are only two other rigs able to operate in sea-ice conditions - the Orlan and the SDC Drilling Rig - but neither appears to be available. The Orlan is part of drilling and production operations at the massive Exxon Mobil Corp. and OAO Rosneft joint project off Sakhalin Island in Russia.

The SDC, which is owned by SDC Drilling Inc., has been used sporadically over the last decade, most recently by Devon Energy Corp. in 2005 and 2006 for drilling in the Canadian Arctic, according to Don Connelly, technical manager of the rig. But the rig wouldn't be a good replacement for either the Kulluk or the Discoverer, Mr. Connelly said, because it can only operate in 80 feet of water: both of Shell's drilling sites are in 200 feet or more of water.

Built nearly 30 years ago, the Kulluk was designed for seasonal Arctic drilling and to be able to withstand thick ice and forceful waves. Shell spent $292 million over six years to upgrade the rig after buying it in 2005.

Self-propelled drill ships like then Noble Discoverer are easier to find, but will be expensive. Shell pays Noble Corp. about $244,000 a day to lease the Discoverer, said Trey Stolz, managing director of oil services research at Iberia Capital Partners. The day rates for other harsh-climate rigs that would be considered comparable replacements are about $350,000 a day, Mr. Stolz said.

Even if a pair of new rigs was found to do the work they would likely need to undergo modifications for the job, and Shell would have to file amendments to its drilling permits to use the vessels.

The arctic drilling season runs from July 15 to October 31, but can be shortened due to ice conditions. Last year's drilling season was delayed by nearly a month because sea ice had not receded until August.

Shell has spent nearly $5 billion on permits, personnel and equipment over the past six years to assure regulators and native Alaskans that the first drilling in the U.S. Arctic Ocean in more than a decade would be safe and environmentally benign. But the drilling campaign has been marred by problems, as the Noble Discoverer almost ran aground when its anchor dragged in Dutch Harbor, Alaska, and critical oil-spill fighting equipment was damaged during testing.

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

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MEO Grants Eni More Time to Decide on Second Heron Well

MEO Australia revealed Wednesday that it will allow Eni more time to make a decision on whether to drill a second Heron well or withdraw from the NT/P68 permit in the Timor Sea.

The Italian major has until Mar. 1, 2013 to make its decision.

Under the terms of the NT/P68 farm-in agreement dated May. 17, 2011, Eni originally had 60 days from the completion of the Heron South-1 well to decide on the second well or withdrawal.

Heron South-1 was spudded on Aug. 24, 2012. The well reached a total depth of 14,613 feet (4,454 meters). Two gas bearing intervals of 394 feet (120 meters) and 377 feet (115 meters) were intersected by around 427 (130 meters) of shale and silt. Both production tests flowed gas to surface at rates too low to be measured accurately due to a collapsed borehole and cyclone interruptions.

The jackup - ENSCO 109 - used in the drilling of Heron South-1, was released on Dec. 14, 2012.

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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Pacific Energy Reports Initial Production Rate at Niobrara Well

Pacific Energy Development announced that its second horizontal well, the Waves 1H well, located in Weld County, Colorado, has tested at an initial production rate of 528 barrels of oil per day and 588 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) (360 mcfgpd) from the Niobrara "B" Bench target zone. The well is operated by the Company's joint venture partner, Condor Energy Technology LLC (Condor). Condor spud the Waves 1H well Nov. 19, 2012 and drilled to 11,114 feet measured depth (6,200 true vertical foot depth) in eight days. The 4,339 foot lateral section was completed in 18 stages Feb. 1, 2013.

Condor's first horizontal well in Weld County, Colorado, the FFT2H well, tested at an initial production rate of 437 boepd from the Niobrara "B" Bench target zone. This first well was spudded in April 2012 and drilled to a total combined vertical and horizontal depth of 11,307 feet, with completion operations concluding in July 2012.

On November 30, 2012, Condor spudded its third horizontal well, the Logan 2H well, in Weld County, Colorado. Drilling of the well was completed Dec. 8, 2012, to a true vertical depth of approximately 6,150 feet, and a total horizontal length of approximately 6,350 feet in the Niobrara "B" Bench target zone. Condor completed hydraulic fracturing operations on this well in January 2013, and plans to finish completion operations and commence flow testing in mid-February 2013.

Frank C. Ingriselli, the Company's President and CEO commented, "We are pleased to be able to execute on our 2013 development program in the Niobrara formation, and are encouraged that the knowledge we gained from drilling and completing our initial FFT2H well in the Niobrara formation is proving beneficial to us as we seek to drive down our drilling and completion costs, optimize our completion operations, and maximize production and resource recovery."


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Obama 'Will Keep Cutting' O&G Red Tape

Obama 'Will Keep Cutting' O&G Red Tape

In his State of the Union address Tuesday night President Obama pledged to keep cutting red tape in the energy sector and to speed up new oil and gas permits, while also announcing the launch of a new oil and gas sector-funded Energy Security Trust aimed at developing technologies to help wean U.S. vehicles off oil.

President Obama noted that the recent U.S. boom in natural gas had led to cleaner power and greater energy independence.

"That's why my Administration will keep cutting red tape and speeding up new oil and gas permits. But I also want to work with this Congress to encourage the research and technology that helps natural gas burn even cleaner and protects our air and water," Obama said.

American Petroleum Institute (API) President and CEO Jack Gerard welcomed the president's call for more investment in domestic oil and natural gas resources, noting that more development will create jobs and help the United States become an energy superpower.

"President Obama recognized the oil and natural gas industry as a robust economic engine that is investing in American jobs, generating billions of dollars for the government each year, and making our country more energy secure," Gerard commented in a statement Tuesday.

But Gerard noted that 83 percent of federally controlled land and offshore areas in the United States remain off-limits to oil and natural gas development.

To encourage further domestic oil and gas resource development, the president must follow through with implementing a national energy policy, lifting existing restrictions in support of responsible development of our vast energy resources, approving the Keystone XL pipeline, and "standing up against unnecessary and burdensome regulations that chill economic growth."

Energy industry group Western Energy Alliance (WEA) was critical of Obama's address, saying the president was taking credit for the United States' improved energy profile while promising more policies that will continue to counteract his stated goals.

The group also called on Obama to allow the responsible development of oil and gas on federal lands, which would simultaneously create the jobs and energy the nation needs while protecting the environment. WEA President Tim Wigley pointed out that oil and gas companies already deliver 18 percent of U.S. oil and 26 percent of U.S. gas production while disturbing .07 percent of federal lands.

"Time and time again President Obama says the right things publicly when he talks about our nation's energy and economic potential," Wigley commented. "However, while touting the success of increased oil and natural gas production in America, he continues to ignore the fact that those increases are almost exclusively on state and private lands, and that federal lands are not keeping pace."

Barclays Capital views the president's commentary – which included an allusion to an energy trust, support for oil and gas drilling permits, and potential for government-directed investment in modern pipelines and research and development overseen by the Department of Defense and Department of Energy – as positive for further development of the nation's hydrocarbon resources, particularly natural gas due to its low carbon and abundant care, said Barclays analyst James C. West.

The president spent little time discussing geopolitical threats in his speech, underscoring an ambitious second-term domestic agenda and waning public support for foreign intervention.

The president's speech also avoided mention of changes in tax provisions for oil and gas companies such as intangible drilling credits, which Obama has threatened to repeal. The plan to set up an Energy Security Trust to redirect oil and gas revenues into alternatives research "comes as no surprise, given the administration's pre-existing alternative energy focus," according to an analyst research note from TPH Energy Research.

While the president cited low natural gas prices as the reason for lower energy bills, he called for more investment in alternative fuels, including the divertment of oil and gas tax revenues to fund transportation fuel alternatives, said GlobalData's Global Director of Energy Resources and Consulting Matt Jurecky in a Wednesday statement.

Jurecky noted that major issues related to the oil and gas industry such as progressing hydraulic fracturing regulation, approval of the Keystone XL pipeline, and U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, went unmentioned in the address.

"An absence of these issues from the administration's agenda and their lack of priority mean that the private sector will be required to continue leading the charge on replacing crude imports from unfriendly nations, advancing safer drilling of unconventional reservoirs, and creating a mega-industry in natural gas," Jurecky commented.

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JKX Upgrades Elizavetovskoye Reserves

JKX Oil & Gas announced Monday that it has seen an upgrade to the remaining reserves for its Elizavetovskoye field near Poltava, Ukraine. The reserves have been revised upwards to 22 billion cubic feet of gas (3.7 million barrels of oil equivalent) with a further 22 million barrels of net prospective resources in the license.

JKX said the revisions have followed long-term testing of the legacy East Machesvska 53 (M-53) well under a joint production agreement (JPA) between JKX and the well owner and former operator of the field. The reserves revision is based on mapping and material balance data from the M-53 well and other wells on the field.

JKX acquired the Elizavetovskoye license in November 2004 and finalized the JPA for the three legacy wells on the license in late 2011. In April 2012, JKX restored the M-53 well to production and now receives 33 percent of the production from it. It currently flows at 2.7 million cubic feet of gas per day on a restricted choke.

The firm is now proceeding with a five-well development of the license, with the spudding of the first new well scheduled for middle of this year. First gas is anticipated in 4Q 2013.

JKX Chief Executive Dr Paul Davies commented in a statement:

"We are very pleased that the data collected from our joint activity with the Ukrainian state production company has demonstrated both the materiality of the 2P reserves and the significant prospective resources on our Elizavetovskoye licence."

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Can Leak Detection End the Pipeline Impasse?

Pipelines used to be things that were just built without blinking. It is said that there are enough pipelines now in the US to encircle the Earth 25 times with enough left over to also tie a bow around it. Today, getting a pipeline built is not so easy - there are too many environmental concerns and the industry has become highly polarized. But here's one thing that could bring everyone together: pipeline safety technology. And it's something we all want, especially for those who live along the thousands of miles of aging pipeline routes that carry hazardous liquids.

Spawned by research that started in space, remote-sensing technology designed to detect dangerous leaks in pipelines has the potential to provide the neutral ground for decisions to be made and consensus to be formed. The clincher: This technology is not only affordable -it saves money and could eventually save the industry.

In an exclusive interview with Oilprice.com, Adrian Banica, founder and CEO of Synodon - the forerunner in leak detection systems - discusses:

How a technology that started in space has the potential to quell intensifying protestsWhy Keystone XL will eventually be a reality - sooner rather than laterHow remote sensing technology can fingerprint pipeline leaksHow remote sensing technology can find the little leaks before they become big leaks—at no extra costWhy North America's new pipelines aren't the problem and why the focus should be on aging pipelines that are going to experience a lot more leaksHow this technology could bring the industry and environmentalists togetherHow external leak detection can save lives in high-risk areas

James Stafford: Now that pipelines are the hottest topic on the oil and gas scene and have found themselves on the frontline of conflict between environmentalists and the industry, high-tech leak detection systems such as Synodon's remote sensing technology seem to be offering a way out of the chaos. Can you put this into perspective for us?

Adrian Banica: Yes. In North America alone, there are upwards of a million kilometers of transmission pipelines - and this does not even count the gathering and distribution pipelines. What we offer is attractive to both sides in this conflict: environmentalists want it and the industry can afford it.

Methods for inspecting pipelines have existed for many decades. What we're providing is a better way of doing it. Synodon's technology offers an accurate and precise method of oil and gas leak detection. This technology detects small leaks before they become big leaks.

James Stafford: In layman's terms, how does it work?

Adrian Banica: It is relatively simple. Synodon has developed a remote sensing technology that can measure very small ground level concentrations of escaped gas from an aircraft flying overhead. This "realSens" technology is mounted on a helicopter and piloted by GPS over a pipeline.

Think of this gas sensor as a big infrared camera that is particularly adept at detecting very, very small color changes in the infrared spectrum. The color changes that we detect are caused by various gasses that the instrument looks at. Every gas in nature absorbs and colors the infrared light that passes through it in a very specific way. From the shade of the color, we can also infer how much methane or ethane we can see with our instruments. In effect, it's like a color fingerprint of the gas.

James Stafford: Can you give us a sense of how this technology has evolved into what it is today—essentially the potential tool for bringing environmentalists and industry leaders together over the pipeline issue?

Adrian Banica: Yes. It started in space. Back in the 1990s, I was aware of technology being developed for various space programs, including Canada's and NASA's. I was looking for technologies that could solve oil and gas problems, but that were also novel, unique. That is how the whole idea started: It was matching a technology that the Canadian Space Agency funded to develop an instrument that measured carbon monoxide and methane from orbit.

So the idea then was if one can detect methane from space, why couldn't we adapt that technology to detect methane by flying it on a plane? In 2000, I founded Synodon in order to monetize and commercialize this.

James Stafford: How effective are automated leak detection systems?

Adrian Banica: They are typically only able to detect high level leaks above 1% of the pipeline flow. They measure the volume of the product that passes a sensor (flow measurements) and the pressure in the pipeline--if there is a leak the pressure will be lower downstream from it, among other things. However, as a recent report from the Department of Transportation in the US points out, these systems only detect a leak at best about 40% of the time, irrespective of how big a leak is.

It is also important to differentiate between catastrophic leaks and small leaks. For catastrophic leaks, most pipelines use these flow meters which operate 24/7. But smaller leaks can only be detected by performing an above-ground survey either by foot patrol, vehicle or aircraft. The predominant technologies used would be sampling gas sensors, thermal cameras, laser detection or our remote sensing system.

James Stafford: So this remote sensing technology uses a sort of "fingerprinting" to detect leaks, but we understand that it has much more to offer the industry …

Adrian Banica: Yes. The core offering is the technology we developed for natural gas and liquid hydrocarbon leak detection, but there is a basket of services designed to reduce the overall costs for our clients. During our leak detection surveys, we collect a lot of different types of data such as visual images, thermal images and very, very accurate GPS information. We've repackaged all those data sets into new value-added products.

We can provide these extra services without incurring additional costs.

For instance, we could offer some of those services for new construction, in which case it would speed up the process of getting all the information required for the necessary regulatory filings.

The most important thing, as I mentioned earlier, is trying to find small leaks before they become large leaks. All our services and all the data we provide are geared towards preventative maintenance. We sought to add services beyond leak protection because all pipeline operators still need to get their other data sets from somewhere. We are consolidating everything they need in a very cost effective and efficient manner.

James Stafford: A late-2012 study on leak detection by the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) has brought this subject to the forefront. Dr. David Shaw, one of the report's authors, says that pipeline leaks, ruptures, and spill are "systematically causing more and more property damage…in bad years you have $5 billion in damages due to pipeline-related accidents". The logic of the study is that pipleline operators could be spending 10 times more on leak detection given what kind of damages they are being awarded now.

Adrian Banica: Yes, the study makes the most valid point here, and that is that leak detection systems represent a bottom line savings, not an expense. For instance, Dr. Shaw has pointed out that pipeline companies would likely be justified in spending $10 million per year for every 400 miles of pipelines because they are already spending more than that on public property damage.

We have demonstrated that we can detect a leak that is less than 1 liter/min or 380 gallons/day. If our technology was deployed every 30 days and the leak were to happen in the middle of this period (on average), the total spill would be 5,700 gallons (380x15 days), which is 50 times smaller than the standard technology daily leak rate. That's a huge difference.

Another difference is that pipeline operators pay around $12 per hour to have personnel walk the pipeline, and they can only catch leaks that are close enough for them to see.

James Stafford: Could leak detection systems also save lives?

Adrian Banica: Yes. The PHMSA study points out that 44% of these old hazardous liquid pipelines are in High Consequence Areas (HCAs)—which means that peoples' lives are at risk if they blow up. We're talking about 44% of over 170,000 miles of these pipelines. On a public platform, this alone should lend a new urgency to the leak detection debate. The point is that remote—or external—sensors can head off a dangerous leak faster than an internal system.

The challenge then is to convince pipeline operators to adopt external technologies that actually detect leaks rather than relying on the inconsistencies of visual detection, which sooner or later would see the pools of oil, but it might be a while.

James Stafford: Is the market ready for this technology?

Adrian Banica: The market is ready, but not necessarily because of leak detection—it's the overall basket we discussed earlier.
There is a tremendous need in the industry for remote leak detection. But we had to account for budget constraints within our potential clients. We think we've developed a technology that's very capable of providing the information our customers are looking for and doing so at a competitive price they are willing to pay.

We've been operating on the North American market for the last 2.5 years. It's a very large market that has lately been in the eye of the media and the environmentalists. We're talking about over 55 companies in Canada and almost 700 pipeline operators in the US, where some 100 companies operate or control roughly 80% of the pipeline infrastructure. It is also a regulated market, and regulators require operators to perform some level of leak detection surveys.

James Stafford: Will Keystone XL—or the San Bruno pipeline explosion—have any notable impact on the regulatory environment or the market for remote sensing technology?

Adrian Banica: Personally I don't think that either of these will impact the leak detection practices in the industry. Rather, the driver will be the aging pipelines which will continue to have incidents and spills which the public will not accept.

James Stafford: And how is this playing out on the regulatory scene?

Adrian Banica: Congress passed a new law a year ago on this topic. The US regulators have yet to act on new regulations based on this law, but the trend is indeed there. Pipeline companies are concerned about potential upcoming new regulations and are working with the regulators to try and come up with proactive solutions and preempt their moves. There are a lot of discussions going on in the US on this topic right now and the regulator has proposed a set of new rules which are out for comment and discussion in the industry. It is a slow and drawn out process.

James Stafford: Everyone is waiting for the Obama administration to make a decision on Keystone, and while most analysts seem to think it will be given the final green light, the protest movement shows no sign of letting up. How do you see this playing out?

Adrian Banica: With the governor of Nebraska now approving it, I think the administration has no choice and no excuses for not approving it.

James Stafford: Would regulations governing pipeline safety actually boost support for Keystone XL?

Adrian Banica: Personally, I don't think so. The most vocal opposition for Keystone comes from the side of the environmental movement that does not want to see the pipelines build in order to decrease our overall dependence on oil rather than their concern for spills. So it is a philosophical position based on decreasing CO2 emissions rather than one based on spills in the environment which will not be appeased by regulations.

James Stafford: What about any potential regulatory protection leak detection systems could offer pipeline companies?

Adrian Banica: The benefit to our customers is that they can demonstrate due diligence and that they have employed the best techniques available to ensure pipeline integrity. They will be covered if there is any court action or regulatory action. The value of our data in case something does happen could be quite substantial.

There may be small differences in the regulations with the US being somewhat stricter and tighter than the Canadian regulations. So there are a few more incentives for US based customers to use our service.

James Stafford: Protests continue over the Enbridge pipeline in Vancouver, for instance. How could this play out. Could big pipeline players like Enbridge be able to embrace something like your technology to quell some of those protests?

Adrian Banica: This is a good case in point. Yes they absolutely could, and should. I'm very firm on that answer and I think they are looking at it. Enbridge is a customer of ours already in the United States and they're very aware of what we offer and do.

James Stafford: So these are early days for commercial viability?

Adrian Banica: These are very early days, and we have just turned the corner from a science concept into something that is commercially realizable. We spent 2011 and 2012 working very hard to penetrate the industry and to convince clients that this is not a science project anymore—this is a genuine commercially viable technology. We are now starting to see the adoption of our technology and services. So I believe we are at the tipping point and by no means do I think that shareholders have missed the boat.

James Stafford: Adrian, thank you for your time. This has been a very interesting discussion and the topic is one we will be following closely over the coming months. Hopefully we will get a chance to talk later in the year to see if any of the developments discussed have come to pass.

Adrian Banica: Absolutely, I'd be delighted to catch up later in the year.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Interviews/Can-Leak-Detection-End-the-Pipeline-Impasse-Interview-with-Adrian-Banica.html

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