Tag Archives: hydrocarbons

WorleyParsons wins contract in Georgia and Azerbaijan

APRIL 11 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Australia-based WorleyParsons said it won a five-year Engineering, Procurement, Construction Management contract with BP for its operations in Azerbaijan and Georgia. The company will service the BP-operated Sangachal Terminal and pipelines in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. It didn’t say how much the contract was worth.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on  April 15 2016)

Azerbaijan to support oil freeze

APRIL 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan will participate in a meeting of oil producers in Doha and will support the proposal to freeze production at Jan. 2016 levels, Russian media quoted an Azerbaijani government source as saying. The Doha meeting is an opportunity for producers to agree on measures to drive up oil prices. In February, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela agreed to freeze production at Jan. 2016 levels.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

ADB says that Turkmenistan’s TAPI pipeline is ‘doable’

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) said it will support infrastructure projects in Turkmenistan, including the $10b TAPI gas pipeline and also rail and electricity links to neighbouring countries.

Over the next two years, the ADB plans to invest around $1b on construction of railway corridors and the production and supply of electricity.

On TAPI, the pipeline that should, if all goes to plan, pump Turkmen gas to India through Afghanistan and Pakistan by 2019, the ADB delivered a determined, positive endorsement.

“We’re going through some of the toughest territory in Afghanistan, so the challenge is there. There’s no doubt about it,” Sean O’Sullivan, director for Central Asia at the ADB, told Reuters the day after a $200m investment deal was signed for TAPI between its key shareholders — Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India.

“But I am sure it’s doable.”

The ADB has been a staunch defender of the TAPI pipeline, which many analysts have said is too complicated to pull off successfully, and advised the partners on the financing of the $10b project.

Previously, the ADB pulled funding from the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Tajikistan railway link, because of security concerns. Now, by saying that TAPI is “doable”, Mr O’Sullivan is effectively giving the ADB’s endorsement to the project, despite ongoing doubts on security guarantees.

In the meantime, construction work continued on TAPI, with Turkmen officials triumphantly announced that they had finished welding the first kilometre of the pipeline.

The other countries have reportedly started construction work too.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Kazakh oil production to drop

APRIL 13 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – OPEC, a club of oil exporting countries, and the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) said Kazakhstan’s oil output will decline this year. OPEC said Kazakh production will slow by 3.2% to 1.55m barrels/day. The EIA, which uses different parameters in its calculations, said it would fall 1.2% to 1.71m barrels/day.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Georgia charges transit fee

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – After months of negotiations, Georgia and Russia’s Gazprom retained a deal that will give Georgia 10% of Gazprom’s gas throughput to Armenia. The deal was heralded by the Georgian side as a victory. They said that Gazprom had wanted Georgia to charge it a transit fee for hosting a pipeline to Armenia and then pay for its own gas.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Armenia receives gas discount

APRIL 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – A week after agreeing to a price cut for its gas exports to Kyrgyzstan, Russian state-owned Gazprom said it would give Armenia a similar discount for this year’s supplies.

Gazprom’s CEO Alexei Miller and Anatoly Yanovsky, Armenia’s deputy energy minister, signed the agreement after Russian PM Dmitri Medvedev visited Yerevan and discussed the price cut with President Serzh Sargsyan.

Gazprom agreed to give a 9% discount for the gas it pumps to Armenia, the same percentage discount as Kyrgyzstan, lowering the price to $150 per 1,000 cubic metres.

The long-awaited discount, importantly, fell short of Armenian officials’ expectations, having seen Gazprom’s prices to Europe fall by an average of 40% in the past 18 months.

“Any decline in prices is positive, but in this case, a $15 drop cannot be considered a serious help to reducing the prime cost of Armenian goods,” Artsvik Minasyan, minister of economy, said.

Armenian officials had said they hoped to get a 12% discount.

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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)

 

Azerbaijani SOCAR to borrow from IBA

APRIL 5 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR will receive a loan of around $260m from the International Bank of Azerbaijan this year for the modernisation of the Heydar Aliyev oil refinery near Baku, Suleyman Gasimov, SOCAR’s vice president told local media. Last October, SOCAR and IBA agreed to a $1.6b loan that IBA would extend in several periodical tranches.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on  April 8 2016)

Kazakhstan threatens Karachaganak with fine

APRIL 4 2016, ALMATY  (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh government said it was imposing a fine on the consortium operating the Karachaganak gas field in north Kazakhstan, a blow to the companies involved in the project and to corporate governance in the country.

According to Lukoil, one of the companies in the consortium, the fine amounts to $1.6b, potentially the largest-ever penalty imposed on an energy consortium in Kazakhstan.

The Kazakh government has not commented on the size of the fine.

Eni, Shell (through BG), Chevron, Lukoil and state-owned Kazmunaigas are all part of the Karachaganak consortium.

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(News report from Issue No. 275, published on April 8 2016)

 

Azerbaijan- Armenia fighting over N-K threatens Europe’s plans

APRIL 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – For Europe, the fierce fighting this week between Azerbaijani forces and Armenian-backed forces was a reminder that their plan to bring the South Caucasus firmly into its economic sphere is a risky one.

Eight years ago Russia and Georgia fought over the rebel region of South Ossetia. Now Azerbaijan and Armenia are close to all-out war over another sliver of land.

Wedged between these two scruffy, mountainous regions is the trade corridor that Europe relies on to transport goods to and from the Caspian Sea and Asia.

Theodoras Tsakiris, assistant professor for energy, geopolitics, and economics at the University of Nicosia in Cyprus told RFE/RL that two major pipelines pumping oil gas to Europe which lie just north of the conflict zone could be effected.

“A potential conflagration over Nagorno Karabakh is quite likely to affect both of these pipelines,” he said. “They are of critical significance primarily for Azerbaijan, then Turkey and, to a lesser extent, Europe and the global economy.”

European officials have avoided mentioning trade and gas exports from the South Caucasus in their comments on the fighting and have instead focused on calling for a full ceasefire but bureaucrats across Europe’s capitals will be troubled by the conflict.

Central to their plan is to build a network of pipelines stretching from the Caspian Sea across Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey into Europe. Gas from this route, dubbed the Southern Gas Corridor, would start to compete with Russian supplies.

Sections of the pipeline, after all, run only 40km north of the frontlines in Nagorno-Karabakh.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 275, published on April 8 2016)

 

Kazakhstan hits Karachaganak consortium with $2 billion fine

ALMATY, APRIL 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh government has filed a $1.6b fine against the consortium that operates the Karachaganak gas condensate field in northern Kazakhstan, Russian energy company Lukoil said, sparking fears about corporate governance and contract sanctity.

If the fine was enforced it would be, by far, the largest-ever penalty imposed on an energy consortium in Kazakhstan

Lukoil said that the lawsuit concerned changes to the profit scheme of Karachaganak’s production sharing agreement contract.

“Lukoil is involved, along with other Karachaganak consortium members, in a dispute with the Republic of Kazakhstan regarding the calculation of both cost recovery and an equity index in accordance with the Karachaganak production sharing agreement. The share of the total fine Lukoil will have to pay is $214m (15.6b roubles),” the company said in a statement.

Essentially, the fine focuses on when exactly the partners at Karachaganak have earned back their initial investments and how the equity stakes are divided. Once Karachaganak has paid back the initial start-up investment it shifts onto a higher tax regime. The Kazakh government wants this to happen soon, especially as it is trying to battle its way through a sharp economic downturn.

None of the other consortium members have commented. They are Eni (29.25% stake), Shell (29.25% through BG), Chevron (18%), Lukoil (13.5%) and state-owned Kazmunaigas (10%).

Analysts say the fine was consist- ent with the government’s practice of pressuring business ventures.

“Kazakhstan’s government has repeatedly tried to exert pressure on and expand its presence in Karachaganak, which is a profitable project. This fine is in line with the government’s strategy of increasing state shares in profitable projects,” said Nygmet Ibadildin, professor of energy policy at KIMEP University.

In 2012, Kazmunaigas bought its 10% stake in Karachaganak for an undisclosed amount. Shortly after this deal, Kazakhstan dropped a two year long $1.2b tax-back claim against the consortium. Many analysts linked the two issues.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 275, published on  April 8 2016)