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Bangladesh: Asia's New Energy Superpower?

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Bangladesh: Asia's New Energy Superpower?

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After a favorable UN settlement in June, Bangladesh stumbled upon a wealth of energy. Will investors buy in?

By Jack Detsch
November 14, 2014

Imagine you are a major energy magnate, poring over maps to find the world’s next natural gas superpower. Where would you invest?​

Even though Bangladesh just hit an energy mother lode in July –winning the rights to 20,000 square kilometers of natural gas-rich waters from India in a U.N. territorial arbitration, chances are you probably wouldn’t think of it. To most, the territory still looks like a high-risk investment, given the political tenisions, pervasive poverty, and highly subsidized economy which undermines growth and limits spending on energy infrastructure. Dhaka and Chittagong, swathed in slums, are a world away from the air-conditioned shopping malls of Riyadh, Doha, and Dubai.

Yet, looking the part isn’t everything: Nigeria, Chad, and Venezuela have fared well in oil markets despite endemic poverty and violence; but Bangladesh’s troubles could help explain why investorshaven’t been biting. In fact, quite the opposite; Australia’s Santospulled the plugon Bangladesh’s only offshore gas field last year, citing poor production. With the help of KrisEnergy, a Singaporean company, Santos plans tobegin drillingin shallow waters later this year. PetroBangla, the national oil company,attracted just two biddersin a 2012 auction for offshore drilling rights:India’s Oil & Natural Gas Corporationand Houston-based ConocoPhillips.

Interest in “dispute-free” offshore oil blocks, which PetroBangla opened for auction last April,has proven sparse. Companieshave complainedabout the lack of access to onshore blocks, and the terrible terms for drilling offered by PetroBangla. Earlier this year, Conoco and Russia’s StatOilpaired up to bidon three of Bangladesh’s deepwater oil blocks, 30,000 feet below sea level. Conoco later attempted to win anagreementon two more deepwater blocks. Yet outside of these handful of companies, few are betting on Bangladesh.

It might be a smart time to place a wager. With its new territory, Bangladesh’s natural gas reserves are now estimated at 200 trillion cubic feet, the largest supply in the Asia-Pacific. PetroBanglawill auction off18 new oil and gas blocks by the end of the year. “Assuming Bangladesh could recover all of that, it would make it one of the largest natural gas producers in the world,” says Neil Bhatiya, a Policy Associate at the Century Foundation.

That’s a big if. Robin Mills, head of consulting at Manaar Energy, says there’s no way to be sure what’s there. “We just don’t know whether 100 to 200 trillion cubic feet, or indeed anything at all, will be discovered in the new area.” Bangladesh’s gas reserves areprobable, not proven, so that estimate is a fifty-fifty proposition, based on existing geological and engineering data.

Bangladesh needs a comprehensive plan to survey and derive this energy, but the government lacks basic competencies to drill in deep water, from trained oceanographers to laws that safeguard against spills. Bangladesh’s Petroleum and Exploration Company has doneexperimental gas drilling, but it lacks the money and the energy infrastructure needed to explore the new territory.

Drilling also presents an environmental risk: cabinet secretaries have promised to deploy the government’s few tools to guard against environmental disasters, but they will need to import talent from energy majors to prevent methane leaks into the bay. Bhatiya says that problem can be mitigated using production agreements with Conoco and StatOil to extract the gas safely.

PetroBangla’s chief, Hossain Monsur, echoed that notionin a statementreleased just after the U.N.’s decision in July. But to achieve this, Bangladesh must first make nice with international oil majors, reconciling disputes that Petrobangla has enflamed over the price of gas, which Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has fought tokeep down. “Bangladesh may be willing to fast-track pricing reform if they think it’ll lead to the large-scale extraction of these resources,” Bhatiya says.

In the Bengal Delta, where poverty is pervasive, pricing reform mayprove unpalatable. Families that depend on government subsidies to keep the lights on and put food on the table will not be able to stomach higher bills. If Dhaka pays the bumped-up tab itself, those expenses could wreak more havoc on the belabored economy: boosting inflation, hiking the trade deficit, and chewing up big bites of tax revenue. Energy subsidies alonecost Bangladesh$1.9 billion in 2013, and much of the food subsidy has beenchoked away by corruptionin recent years. By going further into the red to subsidize its poor, Bangladesh would tack onto its budget deficit, a mess that the tax base couldn’t possibly clean up.

With foreign investors clamoring to get involved in the gas industry, and the presence of corruption lurking throughout Bangladesh’s ministries,rated some of the worst in the worldby Transparency International, much of the energy, and revenue won from the U.N. settlement may not get back to the poorest citizens. That means the pain of energy shortages could persist,abetted by corruptionin the state sector, and cause lasting damage. Political instability is also a grave threat:hundreds died in violenceleading up to January’s election, the bloodiest campaign since Bangladesh declared independence in 1971. With Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and the rival Bangladesh National Party still at loggerheads, that tumult could flare up again.

More money begets more problems. Still, Bangladesh’s new territory also puts it in an advantageous position to win concessions from China and India, its two primary benefactors, who are both increasingly hungry for new sources of energy. China has already invested a significant amount of money to build an airport at Cox’s Bazar, just south of Chittagong,a tab that continues to increase. Bangladesh remains a key part of Beijing’s strategy of encircling India with development money, and the infusion of natural gas should reaffirm that status.

Major energy finds in the Bay of Bengal could make a huge difference in pushing the economy forward, sending a rush of foreign investment into the countryand helping growth rebound. “With natural gas consumption expected to grow worldwide, but particularly in the developing countries in South Asia, there is likely to be a strong market for the gas,” Bhatiya notes. Bangladesh’s oil riches are its best opportunity to rise from poverty, creating an equitable distribution of wealth to stabilize the government and the country. Dhaka must seize the moment.

Jack Detsch is a writer, radio journalist, and researcher in the San Francisco Bay Area. He can be found on Twitter @JackDetsch.

Bangladesh: Asia’s New Energy Superpower? | The Diplomat

Good for Bangladesh and good for India.
One thing that must be appreciated that India knew about the reserves in Hariabhanga river region but didn't imposed a " Nine dotted line" on a weak neighbor.


the decision is likely to expand the available space for bilateral diplomacy between India and Bangladesh. Diplomatic rhetoric from both sides has praised and emphasized the fact that both countries were able to come an understanding on this dispute via international arbitration and peaceful methods. ”It is the victory of friendship and a win-win situation for the peoples of Bangladesh and India,” Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Abul Hassan Mahmood Ali told reporters on Tuesday. ”We commend India for its willingness to resolve this matter peacefully by legal means and for its acceptance of the tribunal’s judgment,” Ali further added.

International Court Rules in Favor of Bangladesh on Maritime Dispute With India | The Diplomat
 
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Bangladesh should start exploiting these newly gained sources of energy. They will have a ready market next door!
 
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Our Bangladeshi members love to boast about China, they would have gotten spanked hard if Indians had the same greedy mentality as Chinese. On the contrary we peacefully followed the arbitration on the sea boundaries.
Even then they feel threatened by India (as far as PDF members are concerned), really makes no sense.

P.S. strike of "Energy" from the title :victory1:
 
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It would be interesting to know how much the oil companies have paid the writer to make such an asskissing opinion peace. PetroBangla's terms are quite legit, there's no point in buying our own gas paying more than the international prices. I say just show the middle finger to those companies and build indigenous capabilities to extract the resources. BAPEX has shown great success in exploring and drilling several new gas fields. Moreover, Gazprom has shown interest to form a joint venture with BAPEX to carry out joint explorations in Bangladesh, Russia or any third countries which would also ensure the ToT.

Bangladesh should start exploiting these newly gained sources of energy. They will have a ready market next door!

There's an unofficial ban on export of natural resources. The public opinion is against any export of natural gas, oil or any mineral resources.
 
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If we could export gas, if we have enough to sustain ourself first, than we will make a shed load of money, look at where Bangladesh is, it's the gateway from south asia to south east asia and we can definitely use these countries and build pipelines to them. Exploit it if have it, but make it sustainable.
 
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There's an unofficial ban on export of natural resources. The public opinion is against any export of natural gas, oil or any mineral resources.
If you have gas production that exceeds your requirements, there is no alternative but to export it.
You are also lucky to have energy markets all around you - India and South East Asia. If the Bangladeshi EEZ in BoB has enough resources, it could change the fortunes of your country entirely.
 
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First of all BD needs to get out of the poisonous strangle of BAL and India. Only then major work in the area can be undertaken by national and international companies.
 
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If you have gas production that exceeds your requirements, there is no alternative but to export it.
You are also lucky to have energy markets all around you - India and South East Asia. If the Bangladeshi EEZ in BoB has enough resources, it could change the fortunes of your country entirely.

No, we dont.

Currently BD does not have sufficient gas and extra supply would only help bridge the gap between supply and demand. Also consumption of energy is rising with the growing economy.

Any extra energy resources should be used internally and this will help reduce the foreign exchange required to import oil to run power plants.
 
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