Tag Archives: oil

Azerbaijan’s oil production rises

OCT. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan produced 31.4m tonnes of oil in the first nine months of the year, around 3% more than had originally been expected, media reported quoting the state oil and gas company. This will be a relief for Azerbaijan’s government which relies on oil for its main revenue.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

S&P drops Kazakh Kashagan

OCT. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – International ratings agency Standard & Poor’s said it will stop including the Kashagan oil field in its economic forecasts for Kazakhstan because of continuous delays in production.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Business comment: Opec, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan

OCT. 23 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — When OPEC calls, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan are unlikely to answer.

OPEC, an organisation for oil exporting countries, is seeking to coordinate a cut in production with non-OPEC countries to lift oil prices.

Acting as a cartel, OPEC can determine production levels in order to control global oil prices. It has done so repeatedly over the past decades.

Strapped for cash and reliant on oil exports, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan are not OPEC members and do not enjoy the same market power as Saudi Arabia or Russia.

Because their action would have little effect on oil prices they are unlikely to play OPEC’s game, according to Daniel Yergin, vice- chairman of the IHS consulting company and one of the most authoritative voices on Caspian energy issues.

“I think they will not cooperate. They (Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan) are typical non-OPEC countries who simply produce at a maximum they can,” Mr Yergin told Reuters.

Lower oil prices and ageing fields have pushed production numbers down in Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan (minus 2% and 3% respectively) and they simply cannot afford to arbitrarily cut back production in concert with OPEC.

The economies of these two Caspian countries are heavily reliant on hard currency revenues from oil exports. They’ll want to keep oil production at a maximum.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

Kazakhstan and Russia agree to explore north Caspian for oil

OCT. 15 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian President Vladimir Putin flew to Astana where he signed a deal with Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev to jointly explore and develop the north Caspian Sea for hydrocarbon reserves.

The deal, signed before a meeting of leaders from the former Soviet Union, came roughly a week after Kazakhstan also hosted Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko. He signed deals with Mr Nazarbayev to increase cooperation in energy and aerospace. The timings of the two leaders’ visits to Astana highlights just how pressured the diplomatic space that Kazakhstan has to operate in is. It needs to keep relations with both Ukraine and Russia, who are locked in a proxy war in eastern Ukraine, sweet.

“We have big plans on joint oil production in the Caspian Sea,” Mr Putin said after signing the deal.

Kazakhstan and Russia also signed a deal for the Russian military to test missiles that would spread debris over a patch of Kazakhstan.

A week earlier, Mr Poroshenko had been in town talking up ties with Kazakhstan. This week, Kazakhstan’s ministry of defence said that it had signed a deal with Ukraine to boost cooperation in aviation.

Mr Nazarbayev has previously touted Kazakhstan as the ideal place for trying to thrash out a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine. There has been no formal move to hand this role to Kazakhstan but but leaders do apparently appear relaxed about flying to Astana in quick succession.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct.16 2015)

 

Stock market: KAZ Minerals, Nostrum, KEGOC

OCT. 9 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — The biggest mover in the stock markets for Central Asia and the South Caucasus was London-listed KAZ Minerals, which gained a staggering 65% since the beginning of October at 145p on Friday. Its performance was in line with most commodity producers which were hit by the Glencore slump last week.

Kazakhstan-focused Nostrum Oil & Gas was stable this week at around 524 pence, after rebounding from a sharp drop last week. Its failed takeover offer for Tethys Petroleum affected its performance in the market.

Polyus Gold continued its roller- coaster to end the week at 198 pence. Polyus has shown a volatility of +/- 3% over the past three weeks.

In local markets, KEGOC, Kazakhstan’s state-owned electricity company became one of the strongest players in KASE, gaining over 25% in the past three weeks. However, because its stocks are denominated in tenge, the value of its assets has not fared as well as it seems. Speculative moves behind the multi-million dollar transactions of the past weeks have turned KEGOC into an appealing investment in a market marred with worsening assets.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

Wood Group to supply facilities at Kazakh oil field

OCT. 7 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Scotland-based Wood Group won a service contract to supply an automated system for crude storage facilities at the Tengiz oil field in Western Kazakhstan. It said the automated system would increase storage capacity. Bechtel, a US-based engineering company, signed the multimillion dollar deal with Wood Group.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

Japan to explore Kazakhstan

OCT. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — State-owned Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation said it will explore Kazakhstan for mineral deposits. Preliminary investigations will be conducted, jointly with Kazakhstan’s state-owned company Kazgeologiya, in 2016. Japan has bought large amounts of oil from Kazakhstan this year.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

 

Graphene Nanochem secures contract in Turkmenistan

OCT. 6 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — London-listed Graphene Nanochem secured a service supply contract with Malaysia’s Scomi Oiltools, for $384,000 to help drill oil wells in Turkmenistan. Graphene Nanochem has been working in Turkmenistan for a few years.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

 

BP stops maintenance in Azerbaijan

OCT. 8 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — BP said it had temporarily stopped planned maintenance work at one of its platforms operating in Azerbaijan’s Azeri-Chirag-Guneshli (ACG) offshore oil field. BP, which operates ACG and holds a 35.8% share in the consortium, had said that its planned maintenance work at the Chirag platform which would shut the platform for 20 days from Sept. 17. It is unclear if the maintenance work has been completed.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

Azerbaijan’s oil output falls in BTC

OCT. 8 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Oil flows through the Baku-Tbilisi- Ceyhan pipeline fell by 1% in the first nine months of 2015 compared to the same period last year, an unnamed source at Azerbaijan’s state-owned energy company SOCAR told Reuters. Oil output in Azerbaijan has been falling over the past few years.

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)