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Shale gas/oil draadje

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Olieprijs weer onder 60 dollar
Beleggers blijven bezorgd over Amerikaanse schalie productie.

(ABM FN-Dow Jones)De olieprijs is vrijdag verder gedaald. De maart-future op een vat West Texas Intermediate verloor op een settlement van 59,20 dollar, 3,2 procent. Op weekbasis daalde de olieprijs bijna 10 procent.

Olie werd deze week meegetrokken in de malaise op de financiële markten maar beleggers waren ook bezorgd over de toenemende Amerikaanse schalie productie. Die zorg lijkt terecht want vrijdag bleek uit het wekelijkse voorradenrapport van Baker Hughes dat het aantal actieve olieboorplatforms afgelopen week met 26 is gestegen tot 791.

De olieprijs begon 2018 sterk en wist in januari te stijgen tot het hoogste niveau in zo'n drie jaar. Die winst is inmiddels echter zo goed als vervlogen. Dat komt deels door winstnemingen, volgens analisten van Commerzbank. "De timing valt samen met een oververhitte markt maar ook op fundamenteel niveau lijkt het vanaf hier bergafwaarts te gaan."

Olie profiteerde tot recent van de productieafspraken van de OPEC en het idee dat de Amerikaanse productie hierdoor niet direct sterk zou toenemen. Maar dat is een onterechte verwachting gebleken, volgens vermogensbeheerder Olivier Jakob van Petromatrix. "Amerikaanse olieproducenten hebben gedaan wat verwacht mag worden, en het tempo ven de productie opgevoerd."

Uit een rapport van de de Amerikaanse overheidsdienst EIA bleek eerder deze week dat de productie in de Verenigde Staten dit jaar mer gemiddeld 10,6 miljoen vaten per dag zal toenemen. Eerder werd nog gerekend op 10,3 miljoen vaten.

Door: ABM Financial News.

info@abmfn.nl

Redactie: +31(0)20 26 28 999

Copyright ABM Financial News. All rights reserved

(END) Dow Jones Newswires
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US shale surge sends warning to OPEC - Kemp

Reuters reported that US crude oil production is set to increase by more than 1.2 million barrels per day in 2018 compared with 2017, according to the latest short-term forecasts from the US Energy Information Administration. U.S. crude production will average almost 10.6 million barrels per day (bpd) this year compared with 9.3 million bpd in 2017 (“Short-Term Energy Outlook”, EIA, Feb. 6).

The forecast has been revised sharply higher from less than 10.3 million bpd at the time of the last prediction in January 2018 and 9.9 million bpd in July 2017 (tmsnrt.rs/2EpmSoV).

Unexpectedly rapid growth in U.S. onshore production from the Lower 48 states in recent months has caused the agency to re-benchmark its output numbers going forward.

Crude production from the Lower 48 excluding federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico, mostly from shale, is expected to rise by nearly 1.25 million bpd this year.

Total U.S. liquids production, which includes natural gas liquids, is predicted to rise by 1.7 million bpd in 2018, which is exactly the same as the forecast increase in global liquids consumption. If the forecasts prove correct, U.S. shale producers will capture all or most of the predicted growth in global oil consumption this year.

OPEC QUANDARY
Surging output from shale underscores the growing competitive threat to members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies led by Russia.

Efforts to restrain production under the cooperation framework between OPEC and non-OPEC allies risk back-firing.

The cooperating countries are already conceding market share to the shale producers, in a re-run of the situation before oil prices slumped in 2014.

If production restraint succeeds in drawing down global inventories even further, and pushes Brent significantly above $70 per barrel, the resulting shale surge and slowdown in consumption growth will intensify the danger.

The dilemma between defending prices or protecting market share has been a familiar one for OPEC for the last 40 years, and the organisation has regularly alternated between pursuing these competing priorities.

Saudi-led OPEC focused on defending prices before 2014, then switched to protecting market share between June 2014 and June 2016, before reverting to price defence from December 2016 onwards.

The price defence strategy has worked but is now starting to threaten the organisation’s market share and could become counterproductive if carried too far.

EXIT TIMING
OPEC and its allies need to start planning an exit from their production agreement with the goal of capturing at least some incremental market demand in 2018 and 2019 while preventing another slump in prices.

OPEC is focused on maintaining current production through the end of 2018, although it has promised an interim review at the next ministerial meeting in June.

But maintaining production restraint until the end of the year risks tightening the market too much and inviting another shale surge, which would repeat the events of 2011-2014.

Between 2011 and 2014, OPEC members consistently under-estimated the competitive threat from shale, until it overwhelmed them.

Maintaining output restraint for too long this time around would repeat the same mistakes that led to the subsequent slump.

OPEC and its allies must choose between an early, smooth and controlled adjustment to the cooperation agreement or risk a later and more disorderly one.

Source : Reuters
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'Shell loert op schalietak BHP'

Gepubliceerd op 20 feb 2018 om 13:40 | Views: 1.327

BHP Billiton Plc 16:03
1.487,00 -75,00 (-4,80%)

Royal Dutch Shell A 16:03
25,80 +0,02 (+0,06%)

LONDEN (ANP/BLOOMBERG) - Shell is een voorname kandidaat om de Permian schaliedivisie van BHP Billiton in te lijven. Upstream-directeur Andy Brown van het olie- en gasconcern sprak dinsdag tijdens een bijeenkomst in Londen van een bezitting die voor Shell mogelijk interessant is.

Shell loert actief op onderdelen om zijn schaliedivisie te versterken. Brown noemde schalie nog geen jaar geleden een van de groeimotoren van Shell, samen met projecten in de diepzee. Shell mikt bij dat laatste tegen eind 2020 op een dagelijkse olieproductie van 900.000 vaten. Dat zijn er nu nog 750.000.

Verder zei Brown verbaasd te zijn over de nog altijd sterke vraag van vloeibaar gemaakt aardgas (lng). Vooral in China was de groei volgens hem significant. Shell tekende onlangs een langjarig contract met de nationale oliemaatschappij van Koeweit over de levering van lng. Volgens Brown staat Shell open voor verdere investeringen in lng in dat land.
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Shale bonanza means US oil production at a 50-year high

Three years ago, the US shale oil boom appeared to be over, apparently starved to death when OPEC flooded the market with cheap oil. As prices plummeted from over USD 100 to USD 40 a barrel, shale oil production - the drilling and hydraulic fracturing (fracking) of unconventional oil deposits found in shale formations - quickly became uneconomic.

In just under a year, more than 130 US shale producers, from Pennsylvania to North Dakota, declared bankruptcy, leaving tens of thousands of American oil workers without jobs. But the highly cyclical nature of the energy sector, and a rebound in oil prices to more than $60 a barrel, have helped revive the fortunes of most US shale producers almost as quickly as they stalled.

Last month, the US Energy Information Administration predicted that American oil output would soon surpass 10 million barrels per day (bpd), eclipsing a previous record in 1970 when conventional US oil production peaked.

Next year, the US is on target to outstrip Russia and Saudi Arabia to become the world’s largest oil producer, and will become a net energy exporter within five years, the Paris-based International Energy Agency has forecast.

Adapt to survive
One reason credited with helping the US shale sector quickly reverse its fortunes was the ragged determination of producers. Many of them kept pumping oil despite going bust, while smarter drilling techniques boosted their chances of survival.

Divya Reddy, an energy analyst at the world’s largest political risk consultancy, the Eurasia Group, told DW “US producers made inroads in terms of lowering costs and boosting drilling efficiencies so they were able to focus production on core shale ‘sweet spots’ to prevent a dramatic decline in production during the downturn.”

Reddy said many producers have been able to hedge at USD 55+ a barrel levels which support shale’s continued growth.

The recent oil price rebound was fueled by OPEC agreeing in late 2016 with several non-member states - including Russia - to limit oil supply, to help drain excess inventories and boost prices. That agreement, which remains in place until the end of the year, inadvertently gave American shale a vital shot in the arm.

He said that “If the US shale boom hadn’t occurred, the world would have been living with $100+ oil since 2007,” referring to how oil prices skyrocketed as a result of the financial crisis. He believes the sector’s resurgence “slows down OPEC’s plan to return inventories to normal levels,” and will likely help keep prices in check for now.

Less price volatility
Rapier’s view is backed up by a new report from the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies (OIES), which suggests US shale production will keep oil prices within a tight trading range of USD 60 to USD 75 per barrel for the next few years. Any price rise would boost shale’s fortunes, which would add enough supply to force prices back down, according to OIES’ forecasts.

The Eurasia Group’s Reddy expects that shale will be boosted by “efficiency gains and some consolidation in the sector in the hands of financially stronger companies [that] will put a floor under any possible fallout.”

But she warned that geopolitical shocks could still “cause temporary crude price spikes that can filter down to gasoline prices,” specifically the ongoing political crisis in Venezuela and the potential for US President Donald Trump to reimpose sanctions on Iran.

Rapier, who authored the book “Power Plays: Energy Options in the Age of Peak Oil,” told DW that while it was in the US producers’ interests to keep oil prices fairly constant, “there are thousands of oil companies all making decisions based on a thousand different outlooks.”

He said US oil producers were unlikely to work together to restrain production in the same way as OPEC, and predicted that if oil prices rose to $70 per barrel or above, “you will see a frenzy again in the US, with many producers throwing discipline to the wind.”

How sustainable?
Rising oil demand from a growing global economy will also be a boon to US shale producers. But doubts remain over whether OPEC’s production discipline deal will hold, amid compliance issues from some countries.

“Eventually - probably next year - OPEC will need to consider a phased unwinding of the cuts, which will prove difficult to manage neatly — and without a consequent price dip,” warned Reddy. Once again, any major price fall would weaken the viability of US shale.

Questions remain over whether US shale output levels can be sustained over the medium term, which will allow the US to become truly energy independent. About 50-60 percent of extraction typically takes place in the first year of shale production. Finding abundant areas of shale deposits is tricky and costly, and even within ‘sweet spots,’ much of the oil is uneconomical to extract, meaning production forecasts could be well wide of the mark.

“That’s the big question. If it’s over — the US shale boom — in 3-4 years, then OPEC and Russia will be back in the driver’s seat. But if US production can increase for the next 10 years, it’s going to be tough for OPEC and Russia to control the market,” said Rapier, who is also director of Alternative Fuels Technology at Arizona-based Advanced Green Innovations.

Reddy believes a strengthened shale sector can dominate despite the industry’s recent growing pains and OPEC dominance.

“The big benefit for US shale production is its quick ramp up time, so in a volatile oil market, investment will favor US shale rather than long-cycle investments that could take years rather than months to come on stream,” she told DW.

Source : Stratetic Research Institute
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Shell wil Amerikaanse schalietak uitbreiden - media
Verschuiving focus van aardgas naar olie.

(ABM FN-Dow Jones)Royal Dutch Shell wil zijn schalie-activiteiten in de Verenigde Staten uitbreiden, waarbij de Brits-Nederlandse energiereus in een poging de continuïteit van het bedrijf te waarborgen zich meer wil focussen op olie in plaats van aardgas. Dit meldde Bloomberg dinsdag op basis van commentaar van Greg Guidry, executive vice-president van de divisie EVP Unconventionals.

Daarbij kijkt 's werelds op één na grootste oliemaatschappij naar deals in regio's waar het concern al actief is, zoals het Permian basin in Texas, projecten in het Canadese Montney en Duvernay en Vaca Muerta in Argentinië, aldus Guidry.

Het commentaar van de Shell-man weerspiegelt de groeiende ambitie van energiereuzen als Shell, Exxon en Chevron om te investeren in de schalie-sector, wat een verschuiving markeert van het bedrijfsmodel van de bedrijven, dat zich jarenlang richtten op complexe offshore diepwaterprojecten in afgelegen regio's.

Door: ABM Financial News.

info@abmfn.nl

Redactie: +31(0)20 26 28 999

Copyright ABM Financial News. All rights reserved

(END) Dow Jones Newswires
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Essar to submit shale gas exploration proposal to steering committee

IANS reported that Essar to submit shale gas exploration proposal to steering committee Essar Oil and Gas Exploration and Production Limited is planning to submit an exploration proposal for shale gas from the Raniganj East block in West Bengal to the steering committee of the block by the end of March, an official said in Kolkata. The company official said that with the completion of price discovery process for the coal-bed methane (CBM) gas produced from the Raniganj East block, the exploration company is also expecting to touch the revenue of Rs 600 crore in 2018-19, and also to double that in the next 2-3 years.

CEO Mr Vilas Tawde told reporters "The block has shale gas potential of 7.7 tcf (trillion cubic feet), out of which recoverable is 1.5 tcf. The Simultaneous Exploitation Policy, where licensees for any hydrocarbons can exploit any hydrocarbon resources, is expected soon."

Mr Tawde said that "We are submitting the exploration proposal for shale gas to the steering committee of the (Raniganj East) block by end of March. The steering committee has representatives from the Petroleum Ministry, Directorate of Hydrocarbons, and also from operators."

The company is currently producing over one million cubic meters of gas per day and has so far invested Rs 4,000 crore in its Raniganj project for the production of CBM.

He said that it has so far drilled 350 wells for producing CBM and is expecting to drill another 150 wells in the next few years with an investment of Rs 900 crore to ramp up and balance its CBM production.

Source : IANS
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US shale producers show interest in continuing energy dialogue – Mr Barkindo

The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ meeting with US shale producers and Canadian companies went “very well,” conversations were frank and honest, OPEC Secretary General Mr Mohammed Barkindo told Sputnik. Mr Barkindo “It went very well. What we did last night was to build on that initial outreach and we had a very open, frank and lively conversations on a current state of the cycle and we also compared noted from our experiences during these cycles, how we should proceed going forward. It was a very good talk that further deepened relations between OPEC and the independence. I was very surprised by the high-level of turnout, as well as the interest they have shown in continuing this energy dialogue.”

Mr Barkindo confirmed that “some Canadian companies” were in attendance.

The official said that “This dialogue is going to be continuing beyond the rebalancing of the market, it is a holistic dialogue that covers the entire industry. It is not about prices, not about supply adjustments.”

In response to the high cost of US shale, Saudi Arabia has been selling its massive stockpile of crude oil at rock-bottom prices.

Earlier in the day, OPEC Secretary General Mohammad Barkindo said that OPEC has agreed to reconvene with the US shale producers.

According to UAE Energy Minister Suhail Mazrouei, OPEC is meeting US shale oil producers to discuss and compare forecasts for the oil market, but their participation in production's cuts is out of the question.

?Mr Fatih Birol, the International Energy Agency (IEA) executive director, told Sputnik that OPEC and other participants of the oil production cut deal should consider carefully their next steps, as the United States is set to greatly increase production of shale oil.

According to the latest IEA report, the total production of petroleum and other liquids in the United States will grow to nearly 17 million barrels per day by 2023, from 13.2 million barrels per day in 2017. The United States will thus be the largest global producer.

Source : Sputnik
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Devon Energy announces USD 553 million sale of Barnett Shale assets

Devon Energy Corp. has entered into a definitive agreement to sell the southern portion of its Barnett Shale position for USD 553 million. The transaction is subject to customary terms and conditions and is expected to close in the second quarter of 2018. “Combined with other recent asset sales, divestiture proceeds associated with our 2020 Vision have now reached US$1.0 billion,” said Mr Dave Hager, president and CEO. “In conjunction with this asset sale, and consistent with our strategic plan, we announced today in a separate release that our board has authorized a US$1.0 billion share-repurchase program and a 33 percent increase in Devon’s quarterly cash dividend. We are very confident about Devon’s future and, as market conditions permit, we will continue to pursue opportunities to further increase cash returns to our shareholders.”

Net production from the southern Barnett divestiture assets, which reside primarily in Johnson County, are currently averaging 200 million cubic feet of gas-equivalent per day. Field-level cash flow accompanying these assets, which excludes overhead costs, is expected to be approximately US$100 million in 2018.

The company’s remaining position in the Barnett Shale primarily resides in Denton, Wise and Tarrant counties, with current production of 680 million cubic feet of gas-equivalent per day. This position contains an inventory of approximately 1,500 potential locations, consisting of undrilled inventory and horizontal refrac opportunities.

JP Morgan Securities LLC acted as the financial advisor to Devon on the transaction. Vinson & Elkins LLP acted as legal advisor to Devon.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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US shale is still the key long-term constraint on oil prices - Fitch

The OPEC-plus production cut agreement has improved the near-term outlook for oil prices, but US shale growth and responsiveness should result in a production surplus this year, Fitch Ratings says. We think that this is likely to take prices back below USD60/bbl, and that shale’s ability to meet a significant portion of global demand growth will keep prices in the USD50-60/bbl range over the long term.

We have raised our base-case average price assumptions to USD57.5/bbl (Brent) and USD55/bbl (WTI) for this year and next, an increase of USD5/bbl for 2018 and USD2.5/bbl for 2019. These are also our forecasts for 2020 and beyond. The stronger near-term price outlook reflects the success of OPEC-plus in reducing excess stock, and our expectation that compliance with the agreement will remain fairly strong in 2018.

But upside for prices is constrained as efficiency gains and higher activity continue to drive the growth of U.S. shale production. Our expectation that U.S. oil production, including gas liquids, will rise by at least 1.5-1.7MMbpd in 2018 is based on progress so far, the rising number of drilling rigs and continued efficiency gains. This is likely to result in global oil production exceeding demand this year and oil prices falling back below USD60/bbl. We also think U.S. shale has the capacity to satisfy the largest part of incremental demand for oil at least for the next several years, which will keep prices below USD60/bbl in the longer term.

OPEC-plus compliance should remain fairly strong throughout 2018, primarily driven by Saudi Arabia and Russia continuing to adhere to quotas. However, in the longer term the ability of OPEC to control production and prices is questionable, given the gradual adjustment of participating producers to lower oil prices and their unwillingness to cede market share to U.S. shale producers.

Our revised near-term forecasts are unlikely to have widespread rating implications for oil and gas companies given our “through-the-cycle” rating approach. Higher price assumptions could marginally improve projected credit metrics, but these may be partially offset by higher capex or shareholder returns. However, liquidity pressures for deeply high-yield exploration and production companies, which are an important credit driver, could ease.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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Reliance Industries' arm sells assets in Eagle Ford shale for $100 million


PTI quoted Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) as saying that its subsidiary Reliance Eagleford Upstream Holding LP will sell certain assets in Eagle Ford shale to Sundance Energy Inc for a consideration of USD 100 million (over Rs 650 crore). Reliance Eagleford Upstream Holding LP is a subsidiary of both Reliance Holding USA, Inc and Reliance Industries Ltd.

It said in a statement that Reliance Eagleford Upstream Holding LP has signed a purchase and sale agreement with Sundance Energy Inc to divest its interest in certain acreage, producing wells and related assets in the western portion of its Eagle Ford shale position for approximate consideration of USD 100 million.

The assets being sold are located in Atascosa, La Salle, Live Oak and McMullen Counties, Texas.

The company said that Reliance continues to retain its interest in the remaining Eagle Ford assets that are core to its development priorities. The deal is subject to certain customary adjustments and closing terms and conditions.

The sale is expected to close in the first quarter of FY2018-19.

RIL added that the "transaction is in conjunction with sales made by Pioneer Natural Resources USA Inc and Newpek LLC, the other working interest owners in the Joint Development with Reliance."

Source : PTI
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Trump Trade War - US shale producers warn Chinese tariffs would hit energy exports
Gasoil News - Published on Fri, 22 Jun 2018
]
Reuters reported that China's proposed tariffs on US petroleum imports, part of a mounting trade war between the two countries, would crimp sales to the shale industry's largest customer, adding new pressure on U.S. crude prices, energy executives and analysts said in interviews this week.

China said that it would slap a 25 percent tariff on imports of U.S. crude, natural gas and coal on July 6 if Washington went ahead, as planned, with its own tariffs on Chinese goods that day. Energy would be added for the first time to a burgeoning trade dispute that has hit imports of Chinese metals and solar panels, and exports of U.S. medical equipment and soybeans.

Targeting petroleum puts the Trump administration's "energy dominance" agenda in Beijing's cross-hairs as U.S. shale has grabbed share from Middle East suppliers in Asia.

China is the largest customer for US crude, importing about 363,000 barrels a day in the six months ended in March. Thomson Reuters shipping data shows those exports have increased since, rising to an expected 450,000 bpd in July.

Mr Ron Gasser, vice president at Mammoth Exploration, a west Texas shale producer, said that "It is going to hurt everyone for the short term." While U.S. crude will continue flowing to market even with tariffs, "it'll force you to put your oil somewhere else, and it'll cost you more" to line up other buyers.

US oil exports have steadily grown since the four-decade-old ban on crude exports was lifted at the end of 2015.

China's tariff threat caught US producers off guard because it had been discussing buying more US energy and agricultural products to reduce its USD 375 billion trade surplus with the United States. The levies could boost suppliers of West African crude at the expense of U.S. exports.

Mr Daniel Yergin, vice chairman of consultancy IHS Markit, said as he arrived in Vienna to attend this week's OPEC's International Seminar, The tariffs are "creating a whole new set of uncertainties on top of what's already there."

Recently, OPEC oil ministers will gather to consider sharply increasing the group's production this year, a move advanced forth by Saudi Arabia and Russia. The change is opposed by members Algeria, Iran, Iraq and Venezuela. The United States also recently set new sanctions on Iran's petroleum industry, which is expected to disrupt oil flows.

Mr Yergin said that "The global oil industry didn't really worry or think about trade issues. Now, trade issues are moving really pretty fast up the agenda."

Source : Reuters
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UK government begins consultation on shale gas planning reforms in England

Reuters quoted the British government as saying that it had launched a consultation on proposed reforms to planning regulations for shale gas exploration in England. In May, the government announced measures to speed up planning applications to support development of the country's shale gas industry.

The measures included a proposal for fracking sites to be classified as "nationally significant infrastructure", which would mean approval for planning applications would be done at a national rather than local level.

The government said in a statement the consultation will seek views on whether to designate exploratory drilling for shale gas as a new form of permitted development, meaning that planning consent would not be required.

It added that exploratory drilling for shale deposits are treated separately from full hydraulic shale gas extraction but both will remain subject to strict planning and environmental controls.

Source : Reuters
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BP koopt schalie-activa van BHP
(ABM FN-Dow Jones) BP zal het grootste deel van de Amerikaanse onshore olie- en gasactiviteiten van BHP Billiton kopen voor 10,5 miljard dollar. Dit meldde BP donderdag laat.

Met de overname hoopt het Britse energieconcern na de olieramp in de Golf van Mexico met de Deepwater Horizon zijn activiteiten in de Verenigde Staten opnieuw op te bouwen. Voor BHP Billiton biedt de verkoop de mogelijkheid uit een investering te stappen, die door het energieconcern werd afgedaan als een kostbare en misplaatste investering.

CEO Bob Dudley sprak van een transformerende deal voor de schalie-activiteiten van het bedrijf en een belangrijke stap in de richting van het behalen van de groeistrategie van het BP.

De overname wordt gefinancierd uit het eigen vermogen en past volgens het concern binnen het huidige uitgavenbudget, waarbij 50 procent van de 10,5 miljard dollar wordt betaald bij voltooiing van de overname en 50 procent wordt uitbetaald over een periode een van zes maanden.

De overname van de assets dragen bij aan de winst en kasstroom van BP en verhogen de kasstroomdoelstelling van het concern met 1 miljard dollar tot 14 miljard á 15 miljard dollar per 2021.

De assets zijn goed voor een productie van 190.000 vaten per dag en voegen 4,6 miljard vaten aan ontdekte hulpbronnen toe aan de activa van BP.

De overname genereert geschatte synergieën voor belasting van meer dan 350 miljoen dollar per jaar.

Daarnaast kondigde BP aan om het dividend voor het tweede kwartaal met 2,5 procent te verhogen, wat de eerste verhoging markeert in 15 kwartalen.

Door: ABM Financial News.
info@abmfn.nl
Redactie: +31(0)20 26 28 999

© Copyright ABM Financial News B.V. All rights reserved
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Texas shale could replace Iranian exports in Asian markets – Mr Fielden

Falling Iranian oil exports from US sanctions open the door for US oil and gas producers to fill a void in Asia for a niche oil market. Texas shale is beginning to produce more ultra-light condensate oil and there’s growing demand in Asia, said Mr Sandy Fielden, director of oil and products research at Morningstar, in a new report this week. Iran has served as a major source for condensate in Asia. Condensate is an ultra-light oil used for crude blending, petrochemical feedstock and more. About half of all US condensate production comes from Texas, especially South Texas’ Eagle Ford shale and West Texas’ booming Permian Basin.

Mr Fielden argued “Regardless of how much Iranian condensate remains available for export, the current tight conditions represent an opportunity for US producers to gain valuable market share.”

In addition to the sanctions, Iran also is consuming more of its condensate domestically.

However, he said that US producer must act fast because there’s rising competition from new Australian liquefied natural gas projects that also produce some condensate.

He said that “Time is of the essence for U.S. producers to grab this opportunity, since several competing suppliers are knocking at the same door.”

China, Japan and South Korea all desire large volumes of condensate to use as petrochemical feedstock.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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UK's Cuadrilla to begin fracking on October 13 after injunction dismissed

Reuters quoted Cuadrilla, a British shale gas company, as saying that it would begin fracking a shale gas well at its Lancashire site in Britain on October 13 after a court dismissed an attempt to stop the process. The privately owned company will spend three months fracking two horizontal wells, which involves injecting sand, water and chemicals to split tightly packed shale rock and extract gas.

However, a local resident wanted the fracking suspended to allow for a judicial review of the local council's safety procedures however a High Court judge dismissed the case.

Source : Reuters
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Iran, Venezuela and US shale output to drive oil prices - Fitch Ratings

Fitch Ratings said that Iranian and Venezuelan oil production levels, along with the pace of US shale growth, will drive oil prices in the medium term. Supply constraints at a time of steadily growing demand are leading the Brent price to spike above USD80 per bbl. We rate oil and gas (O&G) producers on a through-the-cycle basis using fairly conservative price assumptions, but there is a potential for a moderate upside revision of these assumptions in the next two months. Upcoming US sanctions against Iran already caused the country’s output to drop by 350 thousand barrels per day (mbpd) in September. We believe at least 1 million barrels per day (mmbpd) may be at risk unless sanction waivers and exemptions remove pressure to cut production further. Venezuelan output in September was 700 mbpd below its OPEC quota as the economic and political crisis continues to cripple the country’s oil industry. We forecast that production declines in Iran and Venezuela may reach 2 mmbpd, or more. This is about the same as our estimate of maximum global spare capacity at the beginning of the year, mostly in OPEC countries and Russia. Prices might come down if OPEC+ producers manage to make up for the lost volumes.

US shale growth could help the oil market revert to a more balanced state in 2019 with prices moderating. However, the very limited spare capacity left in the market is likely to continue to influence prices. We cannot rule out an alternative scenario where oil prices keep rising or stabilise in the USD80-90/bbl range should OPEC and Russia be unable to sustainably offset the production fall.

The pace of US shale growth will be a significant factor in the oil price level. The US Energy Information Administration (EIA) expects US crude production, including natural gas liquids, to grow by around 2 mmbpd in 2018, which should exceed global demand growth. However, infrastructural limitations will continue to limit by how much the US production could grow every year. There are several large pipelines with expected completion dates in 2019 and 2020 that will somewhat elevate constraints.

Oil demand is expected to remain strong in the short term but is more uncertain over the next two to three years. Global economic expansion at the beginning of the year has spurred the demand. However, protectionist US trade policies have now reached the point where they are materially affecting the global growth outlook. High oil prices may also start to weigh on demand.

The credit profiles of deeply high-yield O&G producers are likely to benefit from the current pricing environment. This is due their liquidity positions often being stretched and leverage high, so additional cash flows could remove liquidity pressure and reduce debt loads. Larger integrated producers usually match increased cash flow from higher prices by increasing returns to shareholders, so the impact on their credit standing is more limited.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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CNPC starts shale gas transit station in Sichuan

Reuters reported that China's CNPC started late last week its largest transit station for shale gas in the southwestern province of Sichuan, as the state energy major boosts production of the unconventional gas ahead of the peak winter season. The transit station in Weiyuan is able to supply annual 9 billion cubic metres of gas and connects the Weiyuan shale gas block with the existing pipeline grid.

CNPC said that CNPC is China's largest natural gas producer, making up some 70 per cent of the country's total. It has set a target to raise shale gas output to 12 bcm in 2020, in which the Weiyuan block will contribute 5 bcm.

It said that China's state oil firms have been stepping up drilling at domestic fields to boost production, and raising imports of liquefied natural gas by nearly 50 per cent so far this year versus a year ago to feed robust demand for the fuel.

Source : Reuters
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US shale oil output to hit record high 7.9 million bpd in December 2018 - EIA

According to a monthly government forecast released, US crude oil output from seven major shale basins was expected to hit a record of 7.94 million barrels per day in December. The total oil output from the basins was expected to rise 113,000 bpd, driven largely by increases in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico, where output was forecast to climb by 63,000 bpd to about 3.7 million bpd in December, the US Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration (EIA) said. Output was also expected to rise in each of the other basins, except for the Haynesville, where it would remain unchanged at 43,000 bpd.

However, US natural gas production was projected to increase to a record 75.1 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) in December. That would be up more than 1.0 bcfd over the November forecast and would be the 11th monthly increase in a row. A year ago in December output was just 63.9 bcfd. The EIA projected gas output would increase in all the big shale basins in December.

Output in the Appalachia region, the biggest shale gas play, was set to rise 0.4 bcfd to a record 30.4 bcfd in December. Production in Appalachia was 26.9 bcfd in the same month a year ago.

EIA said that producers drilled 1,577 wells and completed 1,308 in the biggest shale basins in October, leaving total drilled but uncompleted wells up 269 at a record high 8,545, according to data going back to December 2013.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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GEECL to invest USD 2 billion in Raniganj block to tap into shale reserves

London-listed Coal Bed Methane (CBM) producer Great Eastern Energy Corporation (GEECL) announced that it plans to invest USD 2 billion in its Raniganj (South) block to exploit shale reserves. “The investment cycle in the coming 2-3 years will be low. The first half of next year will go in drilling core wells, post which we will drill some pilot production wells and will start working on the field development plan. A cumulative investment of USD 2 billion will be made in the coming 10 years,” Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mr Prashant Modi told ETenergyworld.

The company had earlier this month announced a resource upgrade at its Raniganj (South) block in West Bengal, saying it has found prospective shale resources with a valuation of over USD 2.78 billion.

GEECL said in a statement that “The Company expects to start initial Shale gas exploration work of drilling core wells in the first half of next year. Depending on the results obtained and analysed from the core wells, we thereafter intend to drill an optimum number of pilot production wells. Based on further results obtained and analysed from the pilot production wells, the total investment envisaged for the full development of Shale resources in our block could be in the region of USD 2 billion.”

Mr Modi said that the government’s recent decision of permitting exploration and exploitation of all types of hydrocarbons including shale resources under the existing CBM contracts, prompted the company to explore shale reserves in its blocks.

ARI, an independent petroleum evaluator, has conducted the assessment in accordance with the classification guidelines set out in the Society of Petroleum Engineer's Petroleum Resource Management System.

According to the assessment, the company’s flagship block holds estimated shale resource of 6.63 TCF under a high estimate, 3.51 TCF under best estimate, and 1.40 TCF under low estimate.

GEECL currently produces gas from its flagship Raniganj (South) block in West Bengal, with 9.25 Trillion Cubic Feet (TCF) of Original Gas-in-Place. Also, the Company holds a second licensed area in the Mannargudi block of Tamil Nadu, with 0.98 TCF of Original Gas-in-Place, the Mannargudi block is currently under arbitration with the Government.

Source : Strategic Research Institute
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US oil tanker owners find Solace in Shale as OPEC readies cuts

Bloomberg reported that America’s shale boom could be about to spare the world’s oil tanker owners from a typical OPEC ravaging. The producer group and allies decided on Dec. 7 to restrict output from the start of next year by about 1.2 million barrels a day, adding to deeper cuts two years earlier. Under normal circumstances, that would be a dire turn of events for owners who see cargoes cut almost overnight. But shipping analysts are predicting that, this time, the rise of US shale may well shield shippers.

Mr Frode Morkedal, managing director of equity research at Clarksons Platou, an investment banking unit of the world’s biggest shipbroker, said htat “OPEC+ is reducing their output as US is increasing theirs, hence the overall limited effect for tanker volumes.”

However, if owners do weather the storm, it would underscore the central dilemma facing the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries as it tries to prop up prices: deeper output cuts risk spurring rival production, especially shale. The idea of the tanker industry withstanding heavy reductions in OPEC production would have been almost unthinkable a few years ago, given the group’s vital importance to seaborne trade.

Cuts Covered
Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest exporter, pledged on Dec. 7 that it would pump almost 1 million barrels a day less in January than in November. At the same time, the US just became a net oil exporter for the first time in 75 years.

US production will expand at a rate of 1.18 million barrels a day in 2019, the Energy Information Administration said Wednesday in its monthly outlook. That’s almost exactly the amount that OPEC+ pledged to curb — for the first six months of the year.

Production Surge
As U.S. production surges, ports are racing to build facilities to serve supertankers that normally haul cargoes to Asia. The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the nation’s biggest deepwater facility, began supertanker exports back in February. On Dec. 9, it said it had completed the loading of three very large crude carriers with U.S. domestic crude in the prior seven days.

Increased U.S. exports to Asia mean tankers will need to travel longer distances than when sailing from their usual export ports in the Persian Gulf too, potentially further reducing availability. As well as LOOP, supertankers can load cargoes in the Gulf of Mexico from smaller ships that themselves collected the barrels from export terminals.

Fotis Giannakoulis, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, said in a note “US crude exports are expect to continue to grow rapidly, adding considerable relief from the OPEC cut and increase in vessel supply.”

Oil Tanker Owners Find Solace in Shale as OPEC Readies Cuts
It’s not just shale that’s helping owners. Slowing fleet growth and new fuel rules are further boons. The global fleet hardly grew in the third and fourth quarters, even if capacity will expand at a faster rate next year, according to Clarkson Research. Additionally, the industry is starting to prepare for sulfur-reduction rules set out by the International Maritime Organization, which begin in January 2020. That’s expected to further reduce supply of available ships from early next year as the carriers start going to shipyards to get ready, according to Morgan Stanley.

Not everything is good news for owners. Oil prices have been slumping in part because of questions about demand and amid fears that a U.S.-China trade spat could hinder growth. If that happens, then the tanker market wouldn’t be immune. Giannakoulis says he does still expect OPEC’s curbs to hurt freight rates.

Still, things could be worse. Moerkedal, the Clarkson analyst, expects VLCCs to earn USD 31,000 a day next year, down from USD 34,000 that he was anticipating before the OPEC decision. The lower rates would still be good in historical terms.

Source : Bloomberg
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