Tag Archives: hydrocarbons

TAP is on target to deliver Azerbaijani gas to Europe

DEC. 23 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) is on target to deliver the first gas from Azerbaijan by 2020 despite protests from locals in Italy who have said that the $5.3b project will destroy ancient landscapes, Walter Peeraer, the TAP chairman, told Reuters. TAP is the final leg of a pipeline system dubbed the Southern Gas Corridor that central Europe is banking on to deliver gas from the Caspian Sea, reducing its reliance on Russia. The main gas supplier for the $40b Southern Gas Corridor is Azerbaijan’s BP-run Shah Deniz II.

— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin

Georgia agrees gas imports from Azerbaijan

JAN 3 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgia will buy almost 100% of its gas supplies from Azerbaijan this year, officials told local media, completing a total switch from Russia-supplied gas. The announcement is, effectively, a continuation of a policy laid out in May last year when Georgia’s then-energy minister Kakha Kaladze said that Georgia would stop buying Russian gas. He had earlier switched the way that Georgia imported Russian gas from a barter deal to a paid-for deal.

— This story was first published on Jan. 5 2018 in issue 356 of The Conway Bulletin

Kazakhstan reduces Kashagan output expectations

SEPT. 22  (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s Kashagan oil field will produce 270,000 barrels of oil per day during the last quarter of the year, Kazmunaigas told Reuters, less than a previous figure of 300,000 – 370,000 barrels suggested by energy minister Kanat Bozumbayev.  Kashagan is the major Caspian Sea oil field that Kazakhstan hopes will propel it into the Premier League of global oil producers.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

SEPT. 18  (The Bulletin) — Switzerland-based oil trader Vitol has extended its so-called cash-for-crude loans to Kazakhstan to $5b, the FT reported. This is an extension of the original $3b deal thrashed out between Kazakh state oil and gas company Kazmunaigas and Vitol in April last year. The deals have come about as Kazakhstan needs to generate cash on forward oil contracts. They have positioned Vitol at the centre of the Kazakh oil system, shipping barrels to Russia and on to Europe.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

BP-led consortium signs deal to extend ACG licence

SEPT. 14 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — A consortium lead by BP signed a deal to extend its operation of the Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG) fields in the Azerbaijani section of the Caspian Sea, an agreement originally dubbed the “Contract of the Century” in 1994.

Under the new deal, BP and its partners will run ACG, Azerbaijan’s biggest producing oil fields, until 2050. The original contract was due to expire in 2024.

Negotiations for a renewed deal had been ongoing all year and despite each side’s frustrations with the other, an agreement had always been likely.

At the signing ceremony in Baku, Bob Dudley, the BP CEO, said: “Over the past 23 years the ‘Contract of the Century’ has truly transformed Azerbaijan, energy supplies to Europe and all of us who have worked so hard to make it a success. Today’s contract is perhaps an even more important milestone in the history of Azerbaijan.”

SOCAR chairman Rovnag Abdullayev was equally exuberant.

“Today is a significant day for Azerbaijan,” he said. “Since the signing of the first PSA in 1994, ACG has benefited from $33bn of investment, producing around 440 million tonnes of oil, and delivering directly more than $125bn of net profit to our country.”

For Azerbaijan, this second operating agreement for ACG is much improved from the original. SOCAR, the Azerbaijan state oil and gas company, increased its stake in the project to 25% from 11.65%. The Azerbaijani government, strapped for cash in the midst of an economic downturn, will also receive a one-off $3.6b payment.

For BP, securing an extension to the agreement was vital. ACG forms a major part of its reserves and income. Its share in the project has been cut to 30.37% from 35.8%. Its partners, other than SOCAR, have also had to agree to an equity cut to secure a new deal on ACG.

Chevron now owns a 9.57% sake, Inpex 9.31%, Statoil 7.2%, ExxonMobil 6.79%, TPAO 5.73%, Itochu has 3.65% and ONGC Videsh holds 2.31%.
Relations between Azerbaijan and the BP-led coalition have become increasingly fraught over the past few years.

Azerbaijan has been frustrated that BP hasn’t been able to stem a drop in production at the site and BP executives have become increasingly exasperated at the negative headlines surrounding Azerbaijan, which has been accused by the West of clamping down on the media and of various corrupt practices.

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhstan wants improved offer from Karachaganak partners

ALMATY/SEPT. 15 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — — Kazakh officials want an improved offer from Shell and ENI to end a long-running dispute over a $1.6b profit sharing claim at the oil and gas Karachaganak project in the north of the country.

They told the Reuters news agency that the Shell-led consortium operating the plant, Kazakhstan’s biggest gas producer, had offered to build a gas processing plant in exchange for dropping the profit sharing claim.

Kazakh Energy Minister Kanat Bozumbayev declined to confirm this but did say that the offer fell short of his expectations.

“We have calculated the value of the offer to Kazakhstan and it does not meet our demands and we have already told that to consortium members,” he said told Reuters.

“We have asked the consortium to offer something in addition.”
Kazakhstan has said that it is owed an additional $1.6b from a profit sharing scheme. The tax authorities have also investigated Karachaganak and some Western commentators have said that they are simply looking to squeeze extra cash out of their partners.

The consortium operating Karachaganak has not commented.
Shell and Italy’s Eni are the field’s operators and largest shareholders with a 29.25% stake each. Chevron (18%), Lukoil (13.5%) and state-owned Kazmunaigas (10%) own the rest.

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhs talk to OPEC about output

SEPT. 7 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh officials are in talks with OPEC to try and arrange a separate output deal that would allow it more flexibility to ramp up output from its Kashagan field, media quoted officials as saying. OPEC has been looking to restrain global oil production to increase prices, a plan that Kazakhstan, which is not an OPEC member, has gone along with. It, though, has said that it needs to extract oil from its giant Kashagan field, which started operations last year, to repay shareholders.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Azerbaijan expecting decision on Absheron soon

SEPT. 14 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijani state oil and gas company SOCAR expects a decision on whether to develop the offshore Absheron gas field to be made by the end of the year, a source a the company told Reuters. Absheron is seen as an important field that should boost Azerbaijan’s reputation as a major gas exporter. It was discovered in 2011 by a consortium lead by France’s Total.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Azerbaijan restarts gas imports from Russia

AUG. 31 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russia’s Gazprom started pumping gas to Armenia again after month-long repairs to the North Caucasus-Transcaucasus pipeline that crosses Georgia were finished. The pipeline had been the only import route for gas into Armenia, although over the past couple of years Armenia has been negotiating gas supply deals with neighbouring Iran.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 342, published on Sept. 7 2017)

Georgian PM flies to Ashgabat for talks

AUG. 30 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgian PM Giorgi Kvirikashvili flew to Ashgabat for talks with Turkmen president Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov that focused on transit cooperation and various energy projects. Turkmenistan has become increasingly vocal about using the Caspian Sea transit route to export gas. Georgia is key stage-post on this route as it hosts pipelines running from Baku and the Black Sea port of Batumi is a major entrance into, and exit from, the region.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 342, published on Sept. 7 2017)