Showing posts with label Mediterranean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mediterranean. Show all posts

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Dana Gas, Eni Receive Blocks in Mediterranean

Dana Gas received a 100 percent working interest in the North El Arish Block 6 concession area in the Nile Delta. This concession is situated in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea that lies in water depths that range in or around 3,281 feet spanning about 736,374 acres.

The concession area has an eight-year exploration period that includes three phases, an initial four-year exploration period and two additional two-year extension periods, the company said in a released statement. A 20-year development lease period will be granted based on an approved commercial discovery.

Dana expects to posses the concession in late 2013 following regulatory approval.

“We are pleased with the outcome of this bid round and look forward to the exploration and development of this very prospective new concession," said Rashid Al-Jarwan, executive director and acting chief executive officer of Dana Gas in a statement. "The award of this concession demonstrates Dana Gas' confidence in Egypt over the long term and the company's desire to optimize its coast investments and maximize the value of its portfolio of opportunities."

The company currently produces gas and associated liquids from 10 fields in the Nile Delta. In 2012, the company produced around 32,200 barrels of oil equivalents per day with hopes of increasing this amount in 2013 as compression facilities were added and new fields were brought online.

Dana also pre-qualified as a non-operator in Lebanon's first offshore licensing round which will open for bids in May. There are 10 deep water exploration blocks that are up for bids and lie in water depths ranging from 4,921 to 8,202 feet.

Furthermore, Eni announced it received a deepwater exploration block, Block 9, which is also situated in the eastern Mediterranean of Egypt.

Through its fully owned affiliate, IEOC, Eni will wholly own and operate the block, which spans 930,352 acres. The block lies in water depths ranging from 4,593 to 5,906 feet.

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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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

As Cyprus Collapses, It's a Race to the Mediterranean Gas Finish Line

Cyprus is preparing for total financial collapse as the European Central Bank turns its back on the island after its parliament rejected a scheme to make Cypriot citizens pay a levy on savings deposits in return for a share in potential gas futures to fund a bailout.

On Wednesday, the Greek-Cypriot government voted against asking its citizens to bank on the future of gas exports by paying a 3-15% levy on bank deposits in return for a stake in potential gas sales. The scheme would have partly funded a $13 billion EU bailout.

It would have been a major gamble that had Cypriots asking how much gas the island actually has and whether it will prove commercially viable any time soon.

In the end, not even the parliament was willing to take the gamble, forcing Cypriots to look elsewhere for cash, hitting up Russia in desperate talks this week, but to no avail.

The bank deposit levy would not have gone down well in Russia, whose citizens use Cypriot banks to store their "offshore" cash. Some of the largest accounts belong to Russians and other foreigners, and the levy scheme would have targeted accounts with over 20,000 euros. So it made sense that Cyprus would then turn to Russia for help, but so far Moscow hasn't put any concrete offers on the table.

Plan A (the levy scheme) has been rejected. Plan B (Russia) has been ineffective. Plan C has yet to reveal itself. And without a Plan C, the banks can't reopen. The minute they open their doors there will be a withdrawal rush that will force their collapse.

In the meantime, cashing in on the island's major gas potential is more urgent than ever—but these are still very early days.

In the end, it's all about gas and the race to the finish line to develop massive Mediterranean discoveries. Cyprus has found itself right in the middle of this geopolitical game in which its gas potential is a tool in a showdown between Russia and the European Union.

The EU favored the Cypriot bank deposit levy but it would have hit at the massive accounts of Russian oligarchs. Without the promise of Levant Basin gas, the EU wouldn't have had the bravado for such a move because Russia holds too much power over Europe's gas supply.

The Greek Cypriot government believes it is sitting on an amazing 60 trillion cubic feet of gas, but these are early days—these aren't proven reserves and commercial viability could be years away. In the best-case scenario, production could feasibly begin in five years.

Exports are even further afield, with some analysts suggesting 2020 as a start date.

In 2011, the first (and only) gas was discovered offshore Cyprus, in Block 12, which is licensed to Houston-based Noble Energy Inc. The block holds an estimated 8 trillion cubic feet of gas.

To date, the Greek Cypriots have awarded licenses for six offshore exploration blocks that could contain up to 40 trillion cubic feet of gas. Aside from Noble, these licenses have gone to Total SA of France and a joint venture between Eni SpA of Italy and Korea Gas Corp.

But the process of exploring, developing, extracting, processing and getting gas to market is a long one. Getting the gas extracted offshore and then pumped onshore could take at least five years and some very expensive infrastructure that does not presently exist. The gas would have to be liquefied so it could be transported by seaborne tankers.

The potential is there: Cyprus' gas discoveries adjoin Israeli territorial waters where the discovery of the massive Leviathan gasfield (425 billion cubic meters or 16 trillion cubic feet) and smaller Tamar gasfield (250 billion cubic meters or 9 trillion cubic feet) have foreign companies in a rush to cash in on this.

There are myriad problems to extracting Cypriot gas—not the least of which is the fact that some of this offshore exploration territory is disputed by Turkey, which has controlled part of the island since 1974.

Gas exploration has taken this dispute to a new level, with Turkey sending in warships to halt drilling in 2011, and threatening to bar foreign companies exploring in Cyprus from any license opportunities in Turkey. The situation is likely to intensify as Noble prepares to begin exploratory drilling later this year in Block 12.

In the meantime, there is no shortage of competition on this arena. Cyprus will have to vie with Israel, Lebanon and Syria—all of which have made offshore gas discoveries of late in the Mediterranean's Levant Basin, which has an estimated total of 122 trillion cubic feet of gas and 1.7 billion barrels of oil.

While Greek Cypriot citizens are not willing to gamble away their savings on gas futures, Russia and the European Union are certainly less hesitant.

This is both a negotiating point for Cyprus and a convenient tool of blackmail for Russia and the EU. Essentially, the bailout is the prop on a stage that will determine who gets control of these assets.

Theoretically, Cyprus could guarantee Russia exploration rights in return for assistance. As much as this is possible, the EU could ease its bailout negotiations if it becomes clear that a Russian bailout of sorts is imminent.

Gas finds in the Mediterranean and particularly across the Levant Basin—home to Israel's Leviathan and Tamar fields—could be the answer to Russian gas hegemony in Europe. The question is: How much does Cyprus count in this equation? A lot.

Though only half of the estimated resources in the Levant Basin, Cyprus' potential 60 trillion cubic feet of gas could equal 40% of the EU's gas supplies and be worth a whopping $400 billion if commercial viability is proven.

Russia is keen to keep Cyprus and Israel from cooperating too much toward the goal of loosening Russia's grip on Europe before Moscow manages to gain a greater share of the Asian market.

Russia is also not keen on Israel's plan to lay an undersea natural gas pipeline to Turkey's south coast to sell its gas from the Leviathan field to Europe. Turkey hasn't agreed to this deal yet, but it is certainly considering it. This is fraught with all kinds of political problems at home, so for now Ankara is keeping it as low profile as possible.

With all of this in mind, Russia is doing its best to get in on the Levant largesse itself. While it's also courting Lebanon and Syria, dating Israel is already in full force. Gazprom has signed a deal with Israel that would give it control of Tamar's gas and access to the Asian market for its liquefied natural gas (LNG). Tamar will probably begin producing already in April at a 1 billion cubic feet/day capacity.

In accordance with this deal, which Israel has yet to approve, Gazprom will provide financial support for the development of the Tamar Floating LNG Project. In return, Gazprom will get exclusive rights to purchase and export Tamar LNG. It is also significant because Tamar is a US-Israeli joint venture—so essentially the plan is to help Russia diversify from the European market.

What does this mean for Cyprus? The chess pieces are still being put on the board, and both fortunately and unfortunately, Cyprus' gas potential will be intricately linked to its bailout potential.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Natural-Gas/Cypriot-Bailout-Linked-to-Gas-Potential.html

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Friday, April 12, 2013

Cyprus: Frontier Exploration in the Eastern Mediterranean

Cyprus: Frontier Exploration in the Eastern Mediterranean

The Republic of Cyprus is hoping it will soon see similar success to Noble Energy's December 2011 discovery of the Aphrodite gas field off the eastern Mediterranean island's southern coast as further exploration activities in Cyprus' Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) are set to take place.

The cash-strapped country – which is suffering from exposure to debt-ridden Greece and is awaiting a financial bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund – is keen to see the development of a hydrocarbon basin in its waters and has recently issued exploration licenses to a handful of major international oil and gas companies.

"The discovery of hydrocarbons (around) Cyprus, in conjunction with those found in the wider Mediterranean region, create new realities and prospects for the country," Cyprus Energy Minister Neoclis Sylikiotis said in a January statement.

Before the end of January, a consortium of Italy's ENI S.p.A. and Korea Gas Corporation (Kogas) signed contracts with the Cypriot government to explore for hydrocarbons in Blocks 2, 3 and 9 within the EEZ. This consortium will see ENI as operator with an 80-percent stake in the blocks, while Kogas will hold the remaining 20 percent.

ENI stated at the time that the award was of "significant importance", with the firm excited about the potential for the eastern Mediterranean's Levantine Basin as an exploration frontier with "giant gas potential".

Then, French major Total S.A. signed an agreement Feb. 6 with Cyprus to drill for oil and gas in two blocks – Blocks 10 and 11 – that extend over a combined area of 2,125 square miles southwest of the island in water depths ranging from 3,280 to 8,200 feet. These blocks are adjacent to Block 12 and its Aphrodite field, which Noble estimates holds up to nine trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of gas.

Of course, Cypriot exploration for hydrocarbons would not be a proper oil and gas story without the territorial disputes that often accompany the whiff of petroleum.

Just as another island territory, the Falklands in the South Atlantic, has been the subject of renewed diplomatic antagonism between Argentina and the UK recently, old tensions are being reawakened in Cyprus.

Drilling for oil in the Falkland Islands helped bring attention once again to the question of its sovereignty, with Argentina's foreign minister declaring that any hydrocarbons there are Argentinian. In the same way, Turkey has barged into the Cypriot oil and gas story, with Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz recently declaring that revenues generated from drilling should be shared between The Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus and the ethnically Greek-dominated Republic of Cyprus.

Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974 which resulted in one quarter of the population of the entire island being expelled from the north, where Greek Cypriots had once made up 80 percent of the population. The island has been partitioned ever since, with only Turkey officially recognizing Northern Cyprus as a country in its own right.

Turkey has threatened that it might take action against any companies involved in drilling for hydrocarbons in the EEZ. But the Cypriot government has made it clear that it has a sovereign right to explore for natural resources on its territory and will continue to do so, while acting in line with international and European Union law.

Despite the Turkish threats, the companies involved in exploring for hydrocarbons are moving ahead with their plans.

Cypriot Energy Minister Sylikiotis recently revealed that Total is expected to begin drilling in its blocks in 2014, with the construction of a terminal beginning in 2015. Meanwhile, Noble Energy has asked for permission from the Cypriot government to present its data from Block 12 to Total, ENI and Australian company Woodside Petroleum Ltd. In December 2012, Woodside bought a 30-percent stake in the Israeli Leviathan field, which borders Block 12.

Noble has stated that Leviathan represents the largest exploration success in the company's history. Discovered in 2010, it holds gross mean resources of 17 Tcf of gas. Noble has a near 40-percent operated working interest in the discovery.

"Noble seems to be in the driving seat with the Leviathan discovery in Israeli waters being next door to the Aphrodite discovery in Cyprus and [it] could even be the same reservoir," Hiren Sanghrajka, CEO of oil and gas consultancy Upstream Advisers, told Rigzone.

"The Israeli discovery could be developed by producing to an onshore LNG plant on Cyprus or through an FLNG development."

During the next three years, up to 10 exploration wells are expected to take place in Cypriot waters. But before then, this year will likely see Total and ENI work out and present plans for how they will acquire seismic data on their newly-purchased blocks.

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.

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.

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