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Saudi Kings of Oil join the shale gas revolution

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Saudi kings of oil join the shale gas revolution
Thursday, April 04, 2013

DUBAI/KHOBAR: Saudi Arabia is unlikely to produce much shale gas this decade, hampered by scarce water and prices fixed far below production costs, but it has the reserves, the desire and the potential to become a shale giant one day.

The world’s biggest oil exporter already has sizeable reserves of conventional gas, but more than half is trapped in oil fields whose production is driven by OPEC oil policy. Increases in output are not expected to keep pace with the economy’s voracious appetite for gas to fuel power, petrochemical and desalination plants.

Inspired by a shale gas surge in the United States, which has transformed it from the world’s largest gas importer to a budding exporter, the kingdom has begun investigating its large unconventional deposits and their potential for fuelling long-term growth for its booming population.

“This is a region that needs to create jobs and opportunities for its people - it is our number one priority - so the prospects presented by gas are good news,” Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi said this week.

Saudi Aramco has more than doubled its proven reserves of conventional gas since 1987, and the start-up of the Karan gas field in 2011 provided a supply boost from a field whose output is not driven by global demand for Saudi crude.

Two more non-associated offshore conventional gas projects should improve gas supplies until around 2017. But with a decade-long search in the Empty Quarter having unearthed no commercially viable conventional gas, Aramco has been mapping unconventional reserves in the hope they will help meet an expected doubling of demand by 2030 in a country that bans gas imports.

In mid-March Naimi gave an estimate of over 600 trillion cubic feet of unconventional gas reserves, more than double its proven conventional reserves. That estimate would put Saudi Arabia fifth in a 32-country shale gas reserves ranking compiled for the US Energy Information Administration. Shale is only a long-term prospect, however. Saudi Aramco, which Naimi has said will drill only around seven shale gas test wells in 2013, is still focused on tapping conventional gas.

“The nature of exploration is to target long-term requirements, typically 10 or 15 years into the future ... The shale gas exploration program is just starting, and it’s an important part of the effort to assess the kingdom’s resources for the future,” Sadad al-Husseini, a former top Aramco executive, said. “This is not a major effort by industry standards ... It will take intense exploration studies and numerous evaluation wells before any assessments can be made in regards to their economics and their ultimate production potential.” Even in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia will not be the first to tap unconventional deposits.

Neighboring Oman is likely to lead the way if it can reach agreement on price with BP (BP.L) for development of a block that the tight-gas specialist says could start commercial production by 2017 and yield up to 30 trillion cubic feet. Yet Aramco is keen to increase gas output, because at it can make $100 a barrel by exporting crude oil, which it sells to Saudi power plants for around $4 a barrel due to a lack of gas.

The company that exports more than $800 million a day of crude oil can afford the costs of developing a shale capability. Unlike prospectors in densely populated Europe, it has vast expanses of empty desert in which to drill and faces none of the environmental protests seen in the United States and Europe.

Price, personnel: Many of the factors that drove the US shale gas production boom - entrepreneurial innovators with access to capital, ample volumes of water and an easily accessible transport grid - are sorely lacking in Saudi Arabia, however.

Low fixed prices for gas across the Gulf, a remnant of decades past when gas was seen as a byproduct of oil fields, have discouraged investment in new production.

Even after rapid innovation in the United States drove down shale production costs from over $13/mmbtu in mid-2008 to around $4 now, are still far in excess of the $0.75/mmbtu fixed gas price in Saudi Arabia.

“You don’t have market forces in the way of price signals, and private actors for these forces to be unleashed in the way that they were in North America,” said Alex Munton, a Middle East energy analyst at Wood Mackenzie in Edinburgh.

“You have state-controlled industry, essentially one operating company and gas prices that make it sub-economic to develop this resource,” he said, adding that it would probably take a decade to see any significant production in the kingdom.

Aramco is currently hiring unconventional specialists for further appraisal work, but expertise may prove hard to come by in the future.

Analysts say the established best practice is to enlist the help of big service companies that have played a role in the US boom. They are hungry for work in other countries, and some have set up development offices in Saudi Arabia. But China, holder of the world’s largest unconventional gas reserves, has already signed production-sharing deals and awarded exploration blocks as it targets production of 6.5 billion cubic meters of shale gas a year by 2015.

Its decision to award most blocks in a recent tender to companies with little experience means those firms could soak up the limited pool of expertise from service companies such as Schlumberger (SLB.N) and Baker Hughes (BHI.N), potentially hampering Saudi shale drilling prospects.

Technology breakthrough needed: The biggest obstacle for Saudi Arabia is probably the lack of water, because fracking entails pumping huge amounts of fresh water to pressure gas out of rock, shale or compacted sands. The US Environmental Protection Agency has estimated the annual water requirement of US frackers at 70-140 billion gallons (265-530 billion liters), equivalent to the amount of water used in a US city of 2.5-5 million people.

Ambitious Saudi plans to build desalination plants, and the nuclear and solar plants to power them, still are unlikely to produce the volumes of water required at a low-enough cost. Saudi Arabia’s prospects will depend on development of a technology that allows Aramco to frack effectively with seawater or with liquefied petroleum gas, and the latter technique is being developed by North American companies.

The creation of Saudi Aramco Energy Ventures (SAEV) in mid-2012 to invest in start-ups and high-growth companies with “technologies of strategic importance” suggests Aramco is preparing to pounce on such developments. “The importance of the US venture community cannot be overstated,” SAEV head Ibrahim Buainain said at the opening of its office in Houston on January 30.

“We see great potential for SAEV to work with start-ups throughout North America to support the development of new technologies,” he added. reuters

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Interesting article.

Saudi ,however, must aid her ideological friends and allies. It's mandatory that Saudi triple her aid to Pakistan. More medicine to Pak ,more weapons so the Indians will have to think not only 10 times but rather 99 times. LoL,more food,and more friendship.
 
Interesting article.

Saudi ,however, must aid her ideological friends and allies. It's mandatory that Saudi triple her aid to Pakistan. More medicine to Pak ,more weapons so the Indians will have to think not only 10 times but rather 99 times. LoL,more food,and more friendship.


Agreed!. I think pakistan needs to further expand its navy (frigates, destroyers, speedboats) esp in the arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman. Pakistan navy also need nuclear capability submarines deployed and ready to hit. Also bases in Oman, Qatar, UAE and Southern Saudi Arabia. Im Sure GCC states wont hesitate twice to fund pakistan military projects/joint ventures. Furthermore, Oil, Gas and other source of armaments (third party role).


:pakistan:
Kz5dX.gif
 
Interesting article.

Saudi ,however, must aid her ideological friends and allies. It's mandatory that Saudi triple her aid to Pakistan. More medicine to Pak ,more weapons so the Indians will have to think not only 10 times but rather 99 times. LoL,more food,and more friendship.


Pak has to stand on its feet.. we shouldnt look out for aid rather it should be trade.
 
Agreed!. I think pakistan needs to further expand its navy (frigates, destroyers, speedboats) esp in the arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman. Pakistan navy also need nuclear capability submarines deployed and ready to hit. Also bases in Oman, Qatar, UAE and Southern Saudi Arabia. Im Sure GCC states wont hesitate twice to fund pakistan military projects/joint ventures. Furthermore, Oil, Gas and other source of armaments (third party role).


:pakistan:
Kz5dX.gif

Pakistan needs more Aircrafts ,a single nuclear Aircraft carrier, and more strategic missles. Actually, Pakistan is buliding its 1st nuclear submrines ,therefore it's not a much big of a concern to us. In addition, A Navy base is being built already in the Arabian Sea,maybe they should go for the Red Sea though.

What troubles me the most is the medical care condition some Pakistanis kids are going through these days.


Pak has to stand on its feet.. we shouldnt look out for aid rather it should be trade.
Sorry if it made you uncomfortable ,but let just call it an economic assistance.
 
Interesting article.

Saudi ,however, must aid her ideological friends and allies. It's mandatory that Saudi triple her aid to Pakistan. More medicine to Pak ,more weapons so the Indians will have to think not only 10 times but rather 99 times. LoL,more food,and more friendship.

Pakistan too has substantial shale reserves,which are still are undergoing exploration. 50% of Pakistan is still untouched inc FATA/WANA region.

Pakistan has great potential in oil, gas sectors

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http://www.defence.pk/forums/econom...akistan-has-51tcf-shale-gas-reserves-eia.html

Pakistan's Vast Shale Gas Deposits

Pakistan Approves Shale Gas Policy

Shale gas extraction policy: ADB advises Pakistan to realise implications on other sectors

Cabinet approves shale gas policy

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Check this conventional reserve. Zin Block gas reserve can fulfill Pakistan's energy needs for 100 years.

Brother,Pakistan isn't poor, we just have moronic sell out leadership.
 
Pakistan needs more Aircrafts ,a single nuclear Aircraft carrier, and more strategic missles. Actually, Pakistan is buliding its 1st nuclear submrines ,therefore it's not a much big of a concern to us. In addition, A Navy base is being built already in the Arabian Sea,maybe they should go for the Red Sea though.

What troubles me the most is the medical care condition some Pakistanis kids are going through these days.

I don't think pakistan needs to build/buy aircraft carrier. expensive and wont serve its purposes unless pakistan is looking into something like f-18 SH. PAF already operates nice birds F-16 and the JF-17 both are heavily equipped. You are right about pakistan Military base in the arabian sea but I don't think they need another base in the red sea as i don't see any strategical reason for that.

your last point. Pakistan needs the leader to overcome its social and economic issues. Its election time now over there so lets hope for change.
 
Pakistan too has substantial shale reserves,which are still are undergoing exploration. 50% of Pakistan is still untouched inc FATA/WANA region.

Brother,Pakistan isn't poor, we just have moronic sell out leadership.


No one says Pakistan is poor. Pakistan has a lot of resource and needs someone to dig for them and there you said it lack of leadership. Why there is no cooperation b/t Aramco and Pakistan Oil companies in this regard anyway?
 
@Aeronaut

Brudder, I'm fully aware of the natural resources Pakistan has ,however the point I was trying to make was with the due current situation some countries should help one another. When Japan was suffering from the aftermath of Tsunami, some micro-states offered their help to it - regardless of the intention I think it donating money or anything else was essential back in the day ,so Japan will evetually stand up. Same goes with China when an earthquake hit the Wester province ,Pakistan helped China.
@Arabian Legend

Pakistan must get more hi-tech equipment to counter India or at least come up with something competitive. The aircraft carrier will be nice too.
 
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@Aeronaut

Brudder, I'm fully aware of the natural resources Pakistan has ,however the point I was trying to make was with the due current situation some countries should help one another. When Japan was suffering from the aftermath of Tsunami, some micro-states offered their help to it - regardless of the intention I think it donating money or anything else was essential back in the day ,so Japan will evetually stand up. Same goes with China when an earthquake hit the Wester province ,Pakistan helped China.
@Arabian Legend

Pakistan must get more hi-tech equipment to counter India or at least come up with something competitive. The aircraft carrier will be nice too.

Instead of buying an AC ...We should build more subs and frigs... hopefully our first nuclear sub and 6-7 subs will arrive soon..
 
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@Yzd Khalifa

OGDCL to further accelerate oil & gas exploration: Masood

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Eni Makes Gas Discovery in Pakistan

Oil & gas sector makes 10 discoveries


Pakistan: Thar coal project ready to kick start

http://www.defence.pk/forums/economy-development/38544-coal-reserves-pakistan.html

Engro to start work on Thar coal project next month

Pakistani scientists' success in producing natural gas from Thar coal



We had a successful underground gasification test at Thar coal reserve to produce LNG out of coal. The reserve is one of the largest in the world, around 175 Billion Tonnes. When the technology,is mature...imagine what can you do with it. It will not run out for a very long time. Produce gas,give large subsidies for industries and agriculture, invite already willing foreign investors.

With a strong visionary leadership, exploiting above reserves as a base for mass industrialization of Pakistan will come true with in 2 decades as Pakistan already is partially industrialized.

Again, what we lack is true leadership not resources.

How many Nuclear ones will you folks have?

Starting with 1 others are conventional AIP subs.
 
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We had a successful underground gasification test at Thar coal reserve to produce LNG out of coal. The reserve is one of the largest in the world, around 175 Billion Tonnes. When the technology,is mature...imagine what can you do with it. It will not run out for a very long time. Produce gas,give large subsidies for industries and agriculture, invite already willing foreign investors.

With a strong visionary leadership, exploiting above reserves as a base for mass industrialization of Pakistan will come true with in 2 decades as Pakistan already is partially industrialized.

Again, what we lack is true leadership not resources.

The Thar Coal Gasification Project is a total failure Sir.

The pilot project was supposed to yield 100MW power by last year but failed to do so. Further plans to produce LNG or diesel have achieved zero success so far.
 
The Thar Coal Gasification Project is a total failure Sir.

The pilot project was supposed to yield 100MW power by last year but failed to do so. Further plans to produce LNG or diesel have achieved zero success so far.

Gasification technology is new and is being tested in many countries with substantial reserves of coal including here in Australia. Dr Samar Mubarik Mand was here on a visit,explaining his model that he developed. They did have partial success,however technology takes time, there are no quick fixes. The more failures you come across the more likely the success becomes. I do have high long term hopes with the thar coal project.
 

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