Tag Archives: hydrocarbons

BP plans platform closures in Azerbaijan

MARCH 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – BP plans to close oil production at the West Azeri and Guneshli platforms later this year for routine maintenance work, media reported quoting the company’s head in Azerbaijan. The platforms are part of the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli complex which forms the mainstay of Azerbaijan’s oil output. Closing production at the two platforms will dent output.

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(News report from Issue No. 271, published on March 11 2016)

KBR wins refinery contract in Azerbaijan

MARCH 7 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – US-based engineering company KBR said its joint venture in Azerbaijan had won a project management consulting contract for the Heydar Aliyev oil refinery near Baku. SOCAR, Azerbaijan’s state owned energy company, is a partner in the joint venture with KBR. The companies did not disclose the value of the contract.

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(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Azerbaijan’s Azerkimya signs contract with Technip

MARCH 9 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Technip Italy and Azerkimya signed an agreement for the reconstruction of the Sumgayit ethylene-polyethylene plant, 30km north of Baku. Technip Italy is a subsidiary of France’s Technip, an oil service company, which left Azerbaijan in January. Azerkimya is a wholly-owned subsidiary of SOCAR, Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Italy charges company with corruption at Kazakhstan’s Kashagan

MARCH 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Italian prosecutors charged Dinamo, an energy consortium registered near Milan, with paying millions of euros in bribes to Kazakh officials for a contract to service the giant Kashagan oil field.

The bribes, the prosecutors said, are part of a deep-rooted system of corruption used to win contracts in the oil services sector around the world. So far, ENI, Italy’s biggest energy firm, has not been involved in the legal proceedings, but analysts argue that the investigation might inevitably reach the former operator of Kashagan.

ENI holds a 16.8% stake in the Kashagan consortium of which Kazmunaigas, Exxon Mobil, Shell, Total, CNPC and Inpex are all part.

Italy is one of Kazakhstan’s main trade partners. Kashagan is supposed to start commercial oil production later this year after a three year delay.

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(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Oil workers strike in Kazakhstan

MARCH 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – About 200 people working for the oil services company Techno Trading, which is a sub-contractor for Mangistaumunaigas went on strike. They complained that the company had not paid them their quarterly bonuses. Industrial action is a sensitive issue in western Kazakhstan where police and demonstrators clashed in 2011, killing at least 14 people. Inflation is rising and the value of the tenge has dropped in Kazakhstan, straining worker-employer relations.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 271, published on March 11 2016)

Malaysia buys up field in Kazakhstan

MARCH 7 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Malaysia’s Reach Energy Berhad said it offered $154.9m for a 60% stake in Palaeontol B.V., a Dutch-registered company that operates an onshore block in the Mangistau oblast in Western Kazakhstan. The fields in the block are known as Emir Oil. China’s MIE Holdings Corp owns Palaeontol. According to Reach Energy, the fields holds oil reserves of 10m tonnes.

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(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Greenfields buys field in Azerbaijan

MARCH 6 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a $57.6m deal, Houston-based Greenfields Petroleum agreed to buy the 66% of Bahar Energy, an energy company exploiting the offshore Bahar oilfield, that it didn’t already own from Azerbaijan’s Baghlan Group. Bahar Energy, registered in Dubai, operates the field with Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR. Upon the completion of the $57.6m deal, Greenfields Petroleum will own 100% of Bahar Energy.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Sasol considers project cut in Uzbekistan

MARCH 9 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Due to sustained low oil prices, South Africa’s Sasol is considering dropping its gas-to-liquids project in Uzbekistan. In Uzbekistan, Sasol operates jointly with Malaysia’s Petronas and state-owned Uzbekneftegaz. The project cost stands at around $5.6b. Sasol said it will make a final decision on the project in the first half of the year.

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(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)

 

Oil output to rise in Kazakhstan

MARCH 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan will raise its target annual oil production in 2016 by 5% to 77m tonnes if oil prices remain at around $40/barrel, media quoted energy minister Vladimir Shkolnik as saying. This is important because a rise in both production and price would give government revenues in Kazakhstan a much-needed lift.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 271, published on March 11 2016)

Uzbekistan plans to invest $249m in its giant gas processing plant

MARCH 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Uzbek government wants to invest around $294m to increase production and efficiencies in its gas sector, mainly to boost the Ustyurt chemical plant.

State-owned Uzbekneftegaz co- owns the Ustyurt chemical plant with South Korea’s Lotte Chemicals. The $4.1b project was opened in October and is considered key to Uzbekistan’s future economic plans.

The Uzbek government will directly invest around $236m in the Sharkiy Berdakh gas fields near the Aral Sea to complete the new booster compressor station it is building with Ukrainian firm Sumy. The state-run Fund for Reconstruction and Development will provide an additional $58m through a loan.

Uzbekistan is in the top 15 gas producing countries in the world and sees it as the bedrock of its future economic plans. It’s a gamble, though. Uzbekistan and its partners have committed to large energy projects, with fixed up-front costs, as energy prices continue to bounce along record lows.

If it all goes to plan, the project will be completed in November 2016 and output at the gas fields will be increased by 15% to around 2b cubic metres annually. Improved infrastructure will allow Sharkiy Berdakh to supply the Ustyurt plant, located around 100km away in the remote Karakalpakstan region of western Uzbekistan.

The Ustyurt chemical complex has a processing capacity of 4.5b cubic metres per year. It has been designed to turn Uzbekistan into a gas processing hub for Central Asia and also Russia.

Uzbekistan is also looking to invest in its largest chemical complex, Navoiazot. The government issued a $393m loan last week to extend its nitrogen and ammonia facilities.

The Uzbek government has put 49% of Navoiazot, in central Uzbekistan, up for sale to foreign investors in a recent drive to privatise state assets to raise funds to ward off a worsening economic slowdown.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 271, published on  March 11 2016)