Monday, June 3, 2013

Petrobras: Transport Helicopter Makes Emergency Sea Landing

RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazilian state-run energy giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA on Wednesday said a cargo helicopter operated by Lider Taxi Aereo made an emergency landing at sea after taking off from a production platform off the coast of Brazil.

The three crew members of the Bell 412 helicopter were safe aboard the P-7 platform in Brazil's Campos Basin, where more than 85% of the country's crude oil is produced, Petrobras said. The helicopter, meanwhile, remains floating on the sea surface.

The "controlled" landing took place after the helicopter lifted off from the FPSO Cidade de Rio de Janeiro floating production, storage and offloading vessel, or FPSO, Petrobras said. The helicopter had been on its way to the P-7 platform, which produces oil from the Bicudo field, before the emergency landing, the company added.

Petrobras said it was investigating the cause of the accident, which has been reported to local regulators, the Navy and Air Force.

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Pemex Awards Engineering Contract to Cal Dive

Pemex Exploracion y Producion (PEMEX) awarded Cal Dive International, Inc. an engineering, procurement, installation and commissioning contract for the Abkatun-Pol-Chuc project in the Bay of Campeche. The contract has an estimated value of $63 million and will utilize the company's vessels.

The scope of work consists of engineering, procuring, installing and commissioning 7.5 miles (12 kilometers) of eight-inch subsea pipeline and associated tie-ins to four existing platforms.

The Abkatun, Pol and Chuc reservoir complex, which has been producing light grade oil since the 90s, is located to the southwest in the Bay of Campeche. These three fields account for the largest light oil reserve in the area, producing roughly 305,400 barrels of oil per day in 2009. However, production has decreased by about 50 percent since 1996.

Pemex is looking to increase production by further delineating the field.

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EnQuest Cuts 2013 Production Forecast due to Brent Shutdown

North Sea-focused independent EnQuest reported Wednesday that it has reduced its guidance for production during the whole of 2013 by approximately 1,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), mainly as a result of shutdowns involving the Brent pipeline during the first quarter.

Reporting its results for 2012, EnQuest said that it now expects average production for 2013 to come in at between 22,000 boepd and 27,000 boepd. For 2012, EnQuest reported average production of 22,802 boepd – down 3.8 percent on 2011.

Meanwhile, the firm added that it expects to drill 12 wells during 2013. These will include six production wells, three injection wells and three exploration/appraisal wells.

Capital expenditure for 2013 is expected to be approximately $750 million, with around $350 million invested in EnQuest's Alma/Galia development located on the P1825 license, Block 30/24b, in the UK North Sea. The development is scheduled to begin in 4Q 2013.

$75 million has been earmarked as pre-development expenditure for the North Sea's Kraken development prior to the submission of the project's field development plan. First oil from Kraken is targeted for 2016.

Appraisal wells will be drilled at Cairngorm and Kraken during 2013, while the firm also expects to drill an exploration/appraisal well in the Sabah area, offshore Malaysia.

Oil sector analysts at JPMorgan Cazenove noted that the Alma/Galia and Kraken projects remain on track. "These major projects at the main drivers behind EnQuest's medium term production growth, and they reduce EnQuest's reliance on third party infrastructure," they said.

EnQuest's results for 2012 showed that the firm's proved and probable reserves stood at 128.6 million barrels of oil equivalent at the start of 2013 – an 11-percent increase compared with the start of 2012. Meanwhile, the firm's UK production licenses increased from 22 at the start of 2012 to 39 by the end of the year – with 11 licenses coming from the UK's 27th Licensing Round. 

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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TRC Adopts New Hydraulic Fracturing Water Reuse Rules

The Texas Railroad Commission (TRC) Tuesday adopted new rules to encourage Texas operators to continue their efforts at conserving water used in the hydraulic fracturing process for oil and gas wells, even though hydraulic fracturing and total mining use accounts for less than 1 percent of statewide water use, with irrigation, municipalities and manufacturing making up state’s top three water consumers.

Major changes adopted to the Commission’s water recycling rules include eliminating the need for a Commission recycling permit if operators are recycling fluid on their own leases or transferring their fluids to another operator’s lease for recycling. The changes adopted by the Commission today also clearly identify recycling permit application requirements and reflect existing standard field conditions for recycling permits.

Chairman Barry Smitherman said, "By removing regulatory hurdles, these new amendments will help foster the recycling efforts by oil and gas operators who continue to examine ways to reduce freshwater use when hydraulically fracturing well."

Commissioner David Porter said, "Water use has been a major concern examined by my Eagle Ford Shale Task Force, and I commend our staff for working to streamline our rules to encourage more recycling."

Commissioner Christi Craddick said, "Just as our operators have used technology to bring us into this modern day boom of oil production, they are also using technology to reduce their fresh water use. The changes adopted today will assist in those efforts."

The rule amendment also establishes five categories of commercial recycling permits to reflect industry practices in the field:

On-lease Commercial Solid Oil and Gas Waste Recycling

Off-lease or Centralized Commercial Solid Oil and Gas Waste Recycling

Stationary Commercial Solid Oil and Gas Waste Recycling

Off-lease Commercial Recycling of Fluid; and

Stationary Commercial Recycling of Fluid

The changes to the rule also establish a tiered approach for the reuse of treated fluid, including both authorized reuse of treated fluids in oil and gas operations and provisions for reusing the fluid for other non-oilfield related uses.

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Canada the New 'Land of Opportunity'

Canada the New 'Land of Opportunity'

Canada is being proactive in their recruiting efforts by searching the globe to fill much-needed positions in the oil and gas industry. The rapid expansion of oil sands production has made oil critical to the Canadian economy and with more than $100 billion invested in oil sands over the past 10 years, economic and political power has shifted westward to Alberta. It is estimated that production is connected to 75,000 jobs nationwide, and this number is expected to increase over the next 25 years.

The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers estimates that Canada's current production of 3.2 million barrels of oil a day will reach 6.2 million barrels a day by 2030, with oil sands representing majority of this output. Additionally, it is estimated that $283.4 billion will be spent on the development of new oil sands projects by 2035, noted the Conference Board of Canada. With an increase in production, the demand for skilled employees surges.

Essentially, conventional oil and gas producers need additional workforce to produce a barrel of oil or a cubic foot of gas today compared to 10 years ago. Canada's oil and gas industry will need to fill a minimum of 9,500 jobs by 2015, according to a report released by the Petroleum Human Resources Council of Canada.

Between now and 2015, the country's oil and gas industry is at risk of losing about 3 percent of its overall workforce because of obstinately low natural gas prices, the report "Canada's Oil and Gas Labour Market Outlook 2015" highlighted. Two primary factors, growth in certain operations and age-related attrition across the industry, will offset most job losses and contribute to increased overall hiring needs, the report stated.

"It is a national problem," said Francis McGuire, chief executive officer of Moncton, N.B.-based Major Drilling Group International Inc., to the Globe and Mail. "It is very difficult to attract people. Salaries are very good … but they don't want to be out with the black flies and the snow and the cold and sleeping in camp and being away from home for 21 days at a time."

By 2015, employment in the oil sands sector is projected to increase by 29 percent over 2011 levels, or about 5,850 jobs. The pipeline sector is estimated to add 530 jobs over the same period. And both sectors will need to amp recruiting efforts for turnover and replacing retiring workers. Looking forward, Canadian oil and gas employment is expected to rise to 145,000 jobs by 2035.

"This is a complex labor story," said Cheryl Knight, executive director and CEO of the Petroleum HR Council, in a released statement. "At a granular level, we're seeing high demand for, and reduced supply of, skilled workers in specific occupations, many of which are unique to the oil and gas industry. And employee turnover is the wild card that could have recruiters working to fill hundreds of additional job openings over the next four years."

One of the largest supply chain effects associated with oil sands investment is in the oilfield services industry. For every billion dollars of inflation-adjusted investment, 745 jobs are supported, according to the Conference Board of Canada. Total employment in the oil and gas sector has risen from 57,000 in 2001 to 96,000 in 2011.

Oil and gas well servicers, which include derrick operators, rotary drill operators, service unit operators, drillers, and testers, are the high-demand occupations in Calgary, based on the "Calgary Labour Demand Forecast 2012" report. In 2010, there were an estimated 2,200 oil and gas well servicers in the Calgary labor force, but between that year and 2020, demand for these workers will increase by 40 percent, resulting in the demand for about 3,100 workers in 2020.

And according to current recruitment trends, employers will likely face difficulties recruiting qualified workers for both newly-created jobs and existing positions that become vacant.

A portion, or if needed, a majority of the vacant positions in Calgary may need to be recruited through labor markets outside of Calgary, including international labor markets, noted the report. The Calgary Economic Development (CED) has identified the best cities and regions for recruiting workers in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom and Ireland.

The report noted that the top-recommended cities for recruiting these workers include:

Houston, TexasDallas-Fort Worth, TexasCorpus Christi, TexasLongview-Marshall, TexasOdessa, TexasOklahoma City, Okla.Tulsa, Okla.Bakersfield, Calif.Lafayette, La.Shreveport, La.

Nine of the top 10 recommended U.S. cities for recruitment are located in the states of Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma. Houston offers the largest total labor force with roughly 9,300 workers, followed by Dallas-Fort Worth with 3,000 workers. Furthermore, Longview-Marshall and Odessa, TX as well as Oklahoma City offer a younger oil and gas labor force with high-out migration probability index scores, the report noted.

In addition, oil and gas well servicers in the top-recommended cities could potentially earn higher incomes by relocating to Calgary. The U.S. average salary for oil and gas well servicers was about $48,000 in 2010, while in Calgary, the base pay for these workers averaged at $61,000 per year.

"With the oil sands coming on-stream more and more with every passing year, the draw of people from every sector into oil and gas is going to become stronger and stronger, making it more and more difficult for employers in other parts of the economy to find qualified people," said Richard Truscott, director of provincial affairs in Alberta for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, to the Globe and Mail.

With so many vacant positions in Calgary, more and more Americans are relocating to Canada and dubbing it the "land of opportunity" according to a 2011 report by Citizenship and Immigration Canada. In 2010, Canada welcomed the highest number of legal immigrants in 50 years - about 280,636 permanent residents.

And there are programs in the United States that are targeting Americans to relocate to Canada. Grice Energy, recruiting specialists providing workers for the energy industry, launched a Boots to Energy project, to place veterans into the oil and gas industry. Although the program hasn't placed anyone in Canada, yet, "we are working both with the American State Department and the Canadian Consul General's office to try to lower the barriers of entry that now exist," stated Rick Grice, president of Grice Energy, to Rigzone. The American Chamber of Commerce in Calgary is also involved in this effort.

"Our mission is to connect our returning heroes with energy companies who need and respect them," he added. "If the barriers to immigration are relaxed in order to bring in the labor force needed, the effect must naturally be positive."

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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Shell Gets Clearance for Chinese Shale Project

Shell Gets Clearance for Chinese Shale Project

BEIJING - Royal Dutch Shell PLC said Tuesday it has received approval from the Chinese government for the company's first shale-gas production-sharing contract in China, a significant milestone as the country looks to tap potentially massive unconventional gas reserves and achieve ambitious shale-gas production targets.

Li Lusha, a spokeswoman for Shell, said the Chinese government has approved the Anglo-Dutch company's plan to explore, develop and produce shale gas with partner China National Petroleum Corp. in the Fushun-Yongchuan block in the Sichuan Basin.

Word of the government's approval comes more than a year after Shell and state-oil giant CNPC said they reached a deal in March 2012 to develop the shale reserves. The companies haven't disclosed details of the contract, but the approval suggests authorities in Beijing have developed the regulatory framework needed to spur wider international investment in developing its shale reserves.

China is looking to replicate a boom in North American natural-gas production, which has begun reshaping global energy markets. Chinese companies need international competitors such as Shell to lend technology and operational expertise in extracting the gas trapped in shale rock formations.

Shell Chief Executive Peter Voser said in Beijing on Tuesday that the company is gearing up for what he described as a "significant drilling season in 2013 and in 2014."

Mr. Voser said Shell and CNPC are continuing to explore which drilling locations are best-suited for long-term development and production, and said the company is committed to helping Beijing achieve its shale-gas production targets.

China has set a target of producing some 6.5 billion cubic meters a year of shale gas by 2015 and as much as 100 billion cubic meters a year by 2020, up from virtually zero in 2012. That is a target some analysts have been skeptical the country can achieve.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration has said China has an estimated 1,275 trillion cubic feet, or 36 trillion cubic meters, of technically recoverable shale-gas reserves, more than Canada and the U.S. combined. If extracted, unconventional reserves could help alter China's energy profile, which has become increasingly reliant on imported oil and polluting coal to power its economic growth.

Such massive estimates are sending Shell's international rivals into the market as well. Chevron Corp., for example, has drilled at least one exploratory well in China and has plans for more, but company executives have cited a shortage of infrastructure and geological data as among the reasons it expects slower progress compared with North America.

Soaring gas production in North America has helped lower fuel prices for chemical production and other industrial activity. In also has raised the prospect of liquefied-natural-gas exports from Canada and the U.S. during the coming decade. Mr. Voser reiterated earlier estimates that U.S. exports of LNG might hit 50 million to 60 million tons a year, but said he expects much of the U.S. gas to remain at home to be used as a replacement for coal in power generation and to build up domestic industry.

"I think LNG will be exported out of the United States but I see the volume as being limited," he said. 

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Crude Oil Futures Squeeze Out Gain to Five-Week High

Oil futures eked out a gain Wednesday, setting another five-week high, as traders shrugged off a bigger-than-expected rise in crude-oil inventories.

Light, sweet crude for May delivery settled 24 cents, or 0.3%, higher at $96.58 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest settlement since Feb. 19. Brent crude on ICE Futures Europe settled 33 cents, or 0.3%, higher at $109.69 a barrel.

Crude oil spent most of the day in negative territory after the Energy Information Administration said U.S. oil stockpiles rose 3.3 million barrels last week, above the 700,000-barrel gain projected by analysts in a Dow Jones Newswires survey.

Meanwhile, stockpiles at the key U.S. hub of Cushing, Okla., rose 500,000 barrels, reversing recent declines that had signaled to traders that a supply glut there was drifting.

Still, the gains were muted by a drop in gasoline and distillate stockpiles and an increase in refinery activity, suggesting higher demand from refineries to produce to fuel. Prices scrapped their losses through the afternoon to notch a fourth straight session of gains.

"We've had a couple big days to the upside," said Peter Donovan, vice president at Vantage Trading in New York. "Today's sell-off was pretty meager and maybe guys read into it that this isn't ready to give anything back."

Gasoline stocks fell by 1.6 million barrels last week. Stocks of distillates, including heating oil and diesel, tumbled by 4.5 million barrels. Refinery utilization rose 2.2 percentage points to 85.7% of capacity.

Analysts had expected gasoline stocks to fall just 900,000 barrels and distillate inventories to give up 600,000 barrels. Refinery runs were seen rising a modest 0.3 points.

With Wednesday's gain, Nymex crude prices are up 6.5% so far in March, helped by expectations that a supply glut in the central U.S. had begun to ease and bring U.S. prices back in line with global benchmarks like Brent.

The gap between the two crudes has shrunk to around $13 a barrel, down from more than $23 in February. But Wednesday's reported inventory increase at Cushing--the Nymex delivery point--has undermined expectations that the supply glut was resolved.

"The Brent-[WTI] move continues to be a powerful factor in the market," said Andy Lebow, senior vice president of energy futures at Jefferies Bache.

Front-month April reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, settled 0.49 cent, or 0.2%, higher at $3.1155 a gallon. April heating oil settled 3.41 cents, or 1.2%, higher at $3.1155 a gallon.

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

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