Wednesday, 28 August 2013

PIB Stalemate in Nigeria Leads to Exit of Oil Majors

Another two oil majors are said to  be pulling out of their commitment to Nigeria's Olokola LNG project. Both Chevron and Shell have reportedly pulled out of the project. BG Group divested from Okolola LNG four years ago. As both companies held a 19.5% stake in the LNG facility, there is now a 39% stake up for grabs.

Chevron and Shell's stake divestment is attributed to the non-passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill  (PIB) and a lack of commitment on the part of the Nigerian government to pursue the completion of the project.

The Olokola LNG project was initiated in 2005. It is located between Ogun and Ondo states. The MOU and Shareholders Agreement were signed in 2005 and 2007 respectively, FID was taken in 2007, and first production was expected two years later but nothing concrete on the project has been done since then.

The PIB, which is a comprehensive legislation on the Nigerian petroleum industry, that seeks to overhaul the country's petroleum legislation was presented by the Nigerian government to the country's legislature. However, the failure of the legislature to pass same into law has created uncertainties in the country's petroleum sector, with major companies said to have freezed further investment pending the passage of the Bill.

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Fracking Fights Spread Into South Africa

The battle line has been drawn between Environmentalists and the South African government over the latter's desire to allow Royal Dutch Shell Plc carry out shale gas drilling in the South African country, with farmers and conservationists like billionaire Johann Rupert insisting that the land would be spoiled. Also, landowners are lining up against the water-intensive drilling techniques that Europe's biggest oil company intends to use.

The government estimates enough gas can be discovered to generate 1 trillion rand (US$1 billion) of sales within three decades and help bring a country that imports 70% of its crude oil needs closer to supplying its own energy demand.

The drilling would be carried out in the Karoo semi-desert, which is a vast region that covers more than 400,000 square kilometres, around 40% of South Africa's land mass, and has remained virtually undeveloped for hundreds of mullions of years.

Rob Davies, the trade and industry minister, said that the cabinet has agreed to begin shale gas exploration in Karoo before the next year's general elections.

Environmentalists are angered and have promised to fight the decision in court.

Asia receives third shipment of liquid natural gas from Angola LNG

Angolan Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) Company, has sent its third shipment of LNG, which was loaded on the Lobito tanker ship headed for Southeast Asia, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Citing traders from Singapore, the newspaper said that the final destination of the ship was unknown and noted that the first shipment was sent to Brazil and the second to China.

The Angolan LNG project is a consortium of Sonangol, which owns 22.8 percent of the project and the Angolan subsidiaries of Chevron (36.4 percent), Total (13.6 percent), BP (13.6 percent) and ENI (13.6 percent) and processes natural gas for later sale.

It is also one of the biggest investments ever made in the Angolan oil and gas industry - US$10 billion - and has seven tanker ships and three loading docks. The project is intended to prevent natural gas burn-off at Angola's oil fields and provide clean and reliable energy to customers and capitalise on the investment in the project.

Anadarko to Sell Stake to ONGC

Anardarko Petroleum Corporation has signed an agreement to divest 10% of its interest in the Mozambique Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) prospect to ONGC Videsh Ltd, an operating wing of India's Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited. The transaction is priced at US$2.64 billion and will be concluded by late 2013.

The deal is subject to existing preferential rights, governmental approvals and other customary closing conditions. Despite the divestment, Anardako Petroleum will continue to be the majority interest holder and operator in the Mozambique offshore Area 1 field.

The company intends to plough back the sale proceeds to its domestic high-growth drilling opportunities - the Watterberg field, Eagleford Shale, Permain and Powder River basins, as well as the Gulf of Mexico.

Eco Wins Oil Exploration Rights in Namibia

Eco (Atlantic) Oil and Gas Ltd has received final approval from Namibia's Ministry of Mines and Energy for the inclusion of all oil and gas rights on its Skeleton Coast Licence number 31, which is a transition license that is both onshore Huab Basin and extends offshore Walvis Basin.

The license, which the company has named 'Daniel', covers Blocks 2114, 2013B, and 2014B. The license originally covered only CBM and shale rights but now will include all petroleum. It has an offshore section extending into Walvis Basin which the company has recently evaluated for oil prospectivity.

Caracal Energy Close to First Oil in Chad

Caracal Energy, the Canadian operator in Chad, is looking forward to exporting up to 14,000 barrels of oil per day from its Badila field in Chad before the end of 2013, the company says in a release.

The company is making progress towards producing into the export line from Chad to Cameroon, with an initial shipment of 468,000 barrels of line fill contribution for the partners Glencore, SHT and Caracal, after which it can accumulate oil for sale.

Caracal Energy completed the Badila Production facility in the second quarter of 2013. This included the tie-in of the first two production wells Badila-1 and Badila-2. The 14,000 barrel per day will initially come from production in these two. The third development well, Badila-3, is yet to be hooked up.

Caracal says that the Inland Transportation Authorization (ITA) has been granted and PetroChad Transportation Inc. (PCT) will be shipping and measuring oil shipments into the Export Transportation System through custody transfer metering.

Friday, 16 August 2013

Cameroon Officially Takes Over Bakassi from Nigeria

It has been five years in the making but Cameroon has finally taken full sovereignty over the Bakassi Peninsula. The Peninsula was ceded by Nigeria in 2008 after an International Court of Justice ruling, ending years of border skirmishes between the two countries.

2013 brought an end to the five - year UN-backed transition period. This period exempted residents in the area, many of them Nigerian fishermen, from paying tax, but now the Nigerians must apply for residency permit or take on Cameroonian citizenship if they choose to remain in their homes and pay taxes. 

There are roughly 300,000 people who live in the Bakassi Peninsula, with about 90% of those being Nigerian.

Exodus of Oil Majors from Egypt as Violence Escalates

An exodus of major oil companies from Egypt has commenced as the death toll from clashes between police and supporters of the country's ousted president exceeded 600 last night.

Shell said it was closing its offices in the crisis-hit North African country as chaos reigned on the streets.

BG Group, whose offshore liquified natural gas (LNG) operations in Egypt account for about a fifth of its total production, has already pulled out more than 100 workers. Meanwhile, BP and Aberdeen based Dana Petroleum said they were monitoring their operations closely as bloodshed continued.

The crisis is also impacting on the oil price, which in turn, could push up petrol prices in the coming weeks. Brent Crude is heading towards a 2013 high and topped $111 dollars yesterday.

Egypt's Suez Canal, an important supply route for Middle East oil, is expected to be disrupted by a curfew imposed to curb violence. Security problems are also disrupting supplies in Nigeria, Libya and Iraq.

Thursday, 15 August 2013

Inga Hydropower Project in DRC - Sustainable Energy for Millions

The Congo River, one of the most powerful rivers in Africa, has a very high hydropower potential that could contribute significantly to the needs of the continent. Currently, only the Inga site of the river is being harnessed for hydropower generation, with an installed capacity of only 1775 MW compared with Inga's potential of 40,000 MW.

The African Development Bank (ADB) has been an active partner in rehabilitating Inga 1 and laying the groundwork for Grand Inga, implemented between 1993 and 1997, with African Development Foundation (ADF) funding.

ADF-11 has invested US$ 15 million to finance project preparation work leading to feasibility analysis for Inga 3 project, the first phase of Grand Inga. The Bank is providing active counsel and assistance to the Democratic Republic of Congo government. It led a DFI coordination process. Without its intervention, the project would have stalled.

ADF-12 made a technical assistance grant of $US 37 million for feasibility studies to realize the potential for 4,800 MW of Inga 3 which will be an investment of US$ 10 million. The Inga is a Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) priority project.

ADF-13 is expected to play a crucial role in realization of the project.

Nigerian Editors To Discuss Country's Over-dependence on Oil

Nigerian editors would be discussing the country's over-dependence on oil with a view to bringing up suggestions on how the country could be salvaged from such precarious state. This would be the crux of the 9th All Nigerian Editors Conference (ANEC) slated for Asaba from the 21st - 24th of August, 2013.

According to a statement signed by ANEC's General Secretary, Mr Isaac Ighure, the theme of the four-day conference would be 'Nigeria Beyond Oil: Role of the Editor'. The conference would be chaired by a former Governor of one of Nigerian states, and would see Africa's richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote delivering a keynote address.

AFRICAN PETROLEUM BOARD RESTRUCTURE AND ASX LISTING

Further to its announcement dated 28 June 2013, African Petroleum Corporation Limited (NSX: AOQ) (“African Petroleum” or the “Company”) advises that it is continuing to proceed with seeking a listing on the official list of the Australian Securities Exchange (“ASX”).
As part of the listing on ASX, and conditional on proceeding with the listing application, the Board of the Company will be restructured and comprise the following:
Charles Matthews – Independent Non-Executive Chairman;
Karl Thompson – Chief Executive Officer and Executive Director;
Mark Ashurst – Chief Financial Officer and Executive Director;
Gibril Bangura – Non-Executive Director;
Jeffrey Couch – Independent Non-Executive Director;
Gordon Grieve – Independent Non-Executive Director;
David King – Independent Non-Executive Director;
James Smith – Independent Non-Executive Director; and
Anthony Wilson – Independent Non-Executive Director.

Mr Frank Timis will resign as Non-Executive Chairman of the Company and assume the role of president of the Executive Committee of the Company which is a committee formed to support and advise the Board, implement Board strategy and to exercise the executive powers of the Company.
Further details of the experience of the proposed Board is set out in the annexure to this Announcement.
Admission to ASX is subject to the Company satisfying the relevant ASX listing requirements. Subject to ASX admission being granted, the Company would then de-list from NSX. The Company will keep shareholders informed of further developments.
In addition, further to the release of the Company’s quarterly statement for the three months ended 30 June 2013, the Board is pleased to announce that USD$10.5 million has been released from restricted cash to unrestricted cash. As a consequence, as at 12 August 2013, the Company’s unrestricted cash amounts to US$20.0 million.

Japan and Kenya to Join Forces in Exploration


Reports from the Japanese Economy, Trade and Industry ministry states that Japan and Kenya will undertake joint exploration of hydrocarbon resources in the East African Country. Minister Toshimitsu Motegi confirmed with the Kenyan government that the two countries will jointly undertake oil exploration in the southwestern part of Kenya. This is subsequent to an agreement entered in April 2012 between Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (JOGMEC), Japan's National Oil Company (NOC) and the National Oil Corporation of Kenya (NOCK), Kenya's NOC.

Motegi met Deputy President William Ruto in Nairobi and told Kyodo News that "it is important for Japan to secure oil interests" in Kenya eventually.

Exploration is expected to be undertaken through the fall of 2014. Japan has been requesting for Japanese companies to be given concessions for exploration in the country.

AGOCO Board Change Leads to Protest in Libya

The replacement of the entire management board of Arabian Gulf Oil Company (AGOCO) has exposed deep splits in the workforce and management of Libya's oil sector and led to further interruptions in production. Rival groups of unions have issued statements greeting or condemning the management change, which comes after months of operational failures at the company. Output from Agoco, which is one of the main fully state-owned producers of crude, has suffered because of a lack of power capacity as its main fields in the east of Libya and also periodic protests at the Marsa al-Harigah export terminal at Tobruk.

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Eni Agrees to Pay Mozambican Tax Bill

Italian firm Eni has agreed to pay up the $400 million in sales tax to the Mozambican government on the sale of a portion of its stake in Offshore Area 4 to Chinese firm CNPC. Eni's sale of nearly 30% of its Mozambican subsidiary to CNPC gives CNPC a 20% stake in its lucrative Area 4 offshore gas field. The Italian firm is still the operator of Area 4 with a 50% stake.

Eni said it had also agreed to build a 75 mw power plant in Mozambique's northern Cab Delgado province, near where it its massive natural gas discoveries were made. It estimates the plant will cost around $75 million to construct.

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

A Looming Downstream Boom, Not In Refining

Assembling the political will and investment resources to build a refinery in Africa is a daunting task
By Neil Fleming, courtesy of the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies

Led by booming economies like that of Côte d’Ivoire, Mozambique and Ethio­pia, sub-Saharan Africa’s oil demand is set to jump by 50 percent in the next decade, outstripping growth in the rest of the world by a factor of around four to one.

That’s the forecast from downstream African consulting specialists CITAC, who predict African oil demand will hit 5.1 MMBOPD in 2023, up from 3.4MMBOPD in 2012. By 2020, demand is set to be some 4.5 MMBOPD, with West and Central African demand growing the fastest (44 percent), and North Africa likely to grow by 26 percent.
But while such demand growth signals perhaps that Africa’s troubled economies may at long last be boarding the emerg­ing markets train, it carries with it a significant burden: much of the additional refined products are likely to need to be imported.
The shortfall in oil products in Africa is set almost to double by 2020. The continent has been a net importer since 2007, but the situation is likely to become rather more extreme over the next seven years, according to CITAC’s annual Oil Refining in Sub-Saharan Africa study. The shortfall, taking into account all products except LPG, is expected to jump from 31.5 million tonnes/year (700,000 BOPD) in 2012 to around 60 million tonnes/year (1.32 MMBOPD) in 2020. And despite North Africa’s self-sufficiency in refining, and its ongoing exports of jet/kerosene, the continent overall has already seen its clean products shortfall grow six-fold from 8.5 million tonnes in 2001 to 52 million tonnes in 2011. This will increase by a further estimated 33 million tonnes by 2020, reaching 85 million tonnes per year (1.84 MMBOPD).
Why? Put bluntly, it’s a very hard task to assemble the political will and investment resources to build a refinery in Africa right now.
Only 56 refineries have ever been built on the continent. Fourteen of those have closed, and two have merged at Port Harcourt in Nigeria. Africa overall has a refining capacity (on paper) of 3.2 MMBOPD, but 2012 refinery output was only some 2.4 MMBOPD, 61 percent of which came from North African operations – product that is unlikely to wind up south of the Sahara. More than half the balance (58 percent) comes from South Africa’s four crude oil refineries, which between them generate some 530,000 BOPD of products.
By contrast Nigeria, which has name­plate refining capacity of 445,000 BOPD, produced only 95,300 BOPD of products in 2012, and has for years been heavily dependent on imports of products from Europe.
The continent’s governments are keenly aware of the issues they face. Not only is there a large shortfall in capacity, but much of the capacity that does exist is in grave need of upgrading. World Bank and other studies on air quality have concluded around $10–15 billion needs to be invested in improving oil products standards alone, to reverse dangerous declines in air quality in many African cities. This is before a single barrel of new capacity is added.
Then there’s the fact that most of Africa’s refineries are also too small to compete on the international stage: most world-class plants as of 2013 are at least 200,000 BOPD in size. Port Harcourt, at 210,000 BOPD, is Africa’s only offering above this size, with South Africa’s SAPREF running it a close second at 180,000BOPD. Such plants are dwarfed, however, by complexes like India’s Jam­nagar complex, with its 1.24MMBOPD of capacity. Even without building new refineries, therefore, there is theoretically a case for enlarging the existing ones.
These three factors – outright shortfall, low quality output, and lack of scale – have been responsible for African governments (mostly) making over one hundred announcements of proposed new refineries or refinery expansions in Africa.
But there is a giant gap between aspiration and reality, between what a government hopes for and what the commercial world is prepared to invest in, particularly at a time when the refining industry globally is challenged in a way it has rarely been in the past. There are plenty of other lower risk infrastructure projects, even in Africa. Significantly, the past seven years have seen a large-scale exit from African downstream markets by major oil companies, with Chevron, BP, and Shell selling substantial parts of their distribution and marketing empires outside South Africa to local companies, in particular Malaysian-owned Engen, and to trading houses such as Vitol and Trafigura. France’s TOTAL is the sole major left operating on a large scale across the continent, and shows little sign it is willing to invest in refining in the region. Expansion of the sector is indeed further constrained by the fact that – with the exception of Nigeria and South Africa – most local markets are simply too small to sustain a competitive refinery, and profits from long-haul products exports substan­tially lower than those from local sales… leaving the hope of competing on a world stage stuck in a Catch-22.
As a result, of all the announced new grassroots refineries, only five have actually been completed, and four were built by the Chinese – more specifically by CNPC, who put in a 110,000 BOPD plant at Khartoum in Sudan, a 12,500 BOPD plant at Adrar, Algeria, the 20,000 BOPD refinery at N’Djamena, Chad, and the similarly-sized Zinder plant in Niger. China is involved in theory with further expansion in Khartoum, and possible projects in Uganda and Equatorial Guinea. The fifth new plant was Egypt’s MIDOR refinery in 2001. Three refineries have been ex­panded since 2000 (Khartoum, Morocco’s Mohammedia, and Cameroon’s Limbé) and one has been debottlenecked at Skikda/Arzew in Algeria.
Much has been said and written about China’s investment relationship with Africa. Untroubled by political niceties in countries like Sudan, and motivated by a seemingly unquenchable thirst for raw materials, the Chinese have dared to make investments unthinkable to Western businesses – and more importantly to Western banks. As a result, in 2010 alone, Chinese bilateral trade with Africa grew 45 percent to a record $115 billion. By 2015, it is expected to hit $325 billion. Back in 2005, it was somewhere below $40 billion.
Chinese refinery construction in Africa – at least at the outset – was positioned as a quid pro quo enterprise. Refineries, like other infrastructure projects (railways, for example) were offered in exchange for a lock on natural resources.
But as the reality of making refining work commercially in some African countries has hit home, even the Chinese appetite for such deals has waned. Beijing’s trade partnerships are a great deal more about trade than about partnership. China’s interest in African infrastructure development should not be mistaken for philanthropy. There has been hard prag­matism behind every proposed Chinese project, and equally hard pragmatism behind its decisions to pull out, or not to invest in the first place.
CNPC was supposed to be expanding its Chad plant to 50,000 BOPD for example. It holds a 60 percent stake in the refinery. But a row in 2011 over fuel prices soured the deal and led the Chad government early last year to suspend its agreement with the Chinese altogether. President Idris Deby, enthused by the refinery start-up, had decreed a three-month price ‘jubilee’, slashing gasoline prices to some 67 cts/litre – about 40 percent of the price prevalent in Chad before the refinery opened. The move left the refinery $4.7 million in the red after only a few months of operation, according to CITAC’s researches, and refining came to a halt in September that year. Once restarted, a continuing row led to CNPC’s refinery General Manager being ejected from the country. From the Chad government’s perspective, it was having its arm twisted by Beijing; from Beijing’s, the expecta­tion was that contractual commitments needed to be met. Despite a renegotiated deal, it was not until December 2012 that pump prices actually rose, however.
A similar story at Adrar in Algeria that led to refinery closure was theoretically settled by negotiation early in 2012, but the status of the plant remains unclear.
And famously a $2 billion Sinopec plan to build a refinery at Lobito in Angola earlier this century never even got off the ground. Sinopec pulled out in 2007, and as of 2013, state Angolan oil company Sonangol is still looking for investment partners for the project. The construction contract has been awarded to US company Kellogg Brown and Root, but the comple­tion date has been pushed back from 2012 to 2014, or possibly 2015.
The question is now whether China’s taste for refining investment may have cooled to the point where it will decline to participate in more projects altogether.
It is more than three years since an expansion of the Khartoum refinery was announced – but nothing has happened, not least because in the intervening time, Sudan has become two countries, and ownership of the oil, in which CNPC has various equity stakes, is in dispute.
It’s too early to say that the Chinese affair with Africa is over. Chinese com­panies have after all completed over 500 infrastructure projects on the continent. Problems with a few high-profile projects should not overshadow that record. Nevertheless, recent experience may have underlined the need in Beijing to take additional care when assessing country risk – and a return to tighter agreements, perhaps more refinery processing agree­ments, is on the cards.
South Africa’ PetroSA began a pre-feasibility study on a 320,000–400,000 BOPD refinery at Coega in 2008. In 2012 it signed a joint study agreement with Sinopec on the plant and in March this year moved ahead to a ‘Framework Agreement’, valid for two years, for construction of the plant. Such an agreement, however, is no guarantee that construction will go ahead.
And if Chinese enthusiasm has waned, it is hard to see from where else Africa can obtain both the funding and commitment to construct new plants.
Uganda is looking at building a small refinery to exploit the waxy crude find made by Tullow Oil in the northwest of the country in 2006. But the plan has been bogged down in a dispute with investors Total, Tullow and CNOOC over whether or not also to build a crude export pipeline. The investors are keen to build a small 30,000 BOPD plant (with potential enlargements later) and export the rest. Uganda’s President Museveni has floated grander refining ambitions, however, mooting a refinery as large as 180,000 BOPD at times. CITAC under­stands a deal may now have been done for the smaller plant, though nothing has been signed, and meanwhile no actual crude oil is likely to flow from the find until 2014.
Equatorial Guinea, meanwhile, has also proposed to build a 20,000 BOPD refinery in its Rio Muni province. And in Nigeria, grand plans for up to three new refineries have been floated. Most recently, in April 2013, Africa’s richest man, Nigerian business mogul Alhaji Aliko Dangote, announced a plan to construct a 400,000 BOPD refinery by 2016, investing up to $8 billion of his own money in the scheme. Even as he launched it, however, Dangote acknowledged that his plan might face stiff political opposition from interests benefiting from Nigerian products imports.
The conclusion seems clear: it will not be possible for African refining to keep pace with the continent’s economic expansion over the next decade. But that expansion looks set to take place, refining assets or no.
By implication, investment in oil products supply will take place, but it will be investment in far less financially risky import, storage and distribution logistics. There will be a downstream oil boom. But it won’t be in refining.


Indigenous Nigerian Companies Seeks to Take Over Chevron's Onshore Assets

The deadline for indicative offers for Chevron's 40% stakes in three of its onshore assets have lapsed. Of the 20 odd companies invited to  bid for the Oil Mining Leases (OMLs) 52, 53, and 55, Seplat, the continent's largest indigenous oil producer and First Hydrocarbon Nigeria (FHN), the local subsidiary of London listed Afren, and Niger Delta Petroleum Resources (NDPR) are looking good to clinch the acreages. 

The indicative offer is meant to determine how technically and financially sound the bidders are, but does not entirely define who wins the bid, in the opinion of impeccable sources at the Department of Petroleum Resources, the country's regulatory agency.

Also on the invitees list are Onyx, owned by Swiss investor Jean Claud Gandur; Lekoil, Frontier Oil and several others.

The indicative offer marks the beginning of the series of events culminating in the emergence of a winner by the end of September, 2013.

AP Completes Processing in Cote d'Ivoire's CI-513 and CI-509

Three Dimensional (3D) seismic processing has been completed for the entire 4,200km2 survey over Blocks CI-513 and CI-509, offshore Cote d'Ivoire. 

African Petroleum (AP), the Australian minnow which operates the assets says that "final angle-stacks have been received for both CI-513 (May 2013) and CI-509 (June 2013), allowing for prospects to be matured further". The company enthuses that the 3D seismic data shows encouraging submarine fan leads and prospects over Blocks CI-513 and CI-509 and has confirmed the presence of major turbidite fan systems.

The company currently plans to drill one well on each Block, 'Ayame' in CI-513 and 'Leraba' in CI-509 during the second half of 2014. 

Apache Pushes Up Egypt's Reserve Estimates

Apache Corporation has reported seven oil and gas discoveries in four different geological basins and six different concessions, south of the Mediterranean sea in Egypt's onshore Western Desert. All seven finds have been tested with one of them already producing, the company reported in a statement. These seven finds "are located in basins and acreages that highlight the geological and geographic diversity across the company's 9.7 million gross acres", says Thomas M. Maher, Egypt Region Vice President and General Manager.

"The well is currently online and producing at restricted rates of 2,000 barrels of oil per day while gas rates continue to be monitored. Drilling and completion costs for the well were $5 million. Apache has a 100 percent contractor interest in the WD 30 Development Lease", he further stated.

Development lease applications have been submitted to the Egyptian General Petroleum Company (EGPC) for both of these future producers.

South Sudan Oil Sale on the Rise

On 23rd July, South Sudan published figures for oil sales that suggests that until recent weeks, output had been consistently rising. According to the government, its share of marketed oil was 1 million barrels in June; 2.2 million barrels in July and a projected 3.2 million barrels in August. Assuming an average of government shares in sales of 60%, that puts sales at an average of 55,000 b/d in June, 118,000 in July and 172,000 b/d in August.

Nigeria: Taleveras named preferred bidders for Afam Generation Company

Finally, Afam Power Generation Company would be going to Taleveras Group, after the company emerged as the preferred bidder, after making a $260 million bid. The reserve bidder is TES Power, a consortium led by China National Electric Engineering Compay, having offered $223 million.