Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSA.L Share News (RDSA)

  • There is currently no data for RDSA

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

COLUMN-Australia, not China, the next great shale gas hope: Clyde Russell

Tue, 17th Sep 2013 04:06

--Clyde Russell is a Reuters market analyst. The viewsexpressed are his own.--

By Clyde Russell

LAUNCESTON, Australia, Sept 17 (Reuters) - China may boastthe world's largest potential reserves of shale gas but islikely to lose to Australia in the race to be second behind theUnited States in bringing significant production on line.

While it's clear that the United States has gained, and willcontinue to enjoy, first-mover advantage, it's also likely thatthe next shale gas producer stands to reap substantial benefits.

For China, boosting domestic natural gas output would reducedependency on expensive imports in the form of liquefied naturalgas or pipelines from Russia and central Asia.

For Australia, developing significant shale output couldunderpin a new round of LNG projects, either at existing plantsor greenfield sites, that would give the nation an unassailableglobal lead in the market for the super-chilled fuel.

But to be clear, both countries' shale gas plans are intheir infancy and face significant challenges that have largelybeen overcome already in the United States.

If shale gas were a marathon, the United States is alreadyat the half-way mark, running at a comfortable pace. Australiais a few hundred metres into the race and China has barelycrossed the starting line.

The good news is that other potential runners are nowhere inthe picture. Argentina and Mexico, which have the second- andsixth-highest potential reserves, are still in the changingrooms, as is eighth-ranked South Africa.

In those three countries, political and investment risksmean they are unlikely to start developing shale any time soon,if their governments wanted to.

Other countries, such as Britain, have yet to decide if theycan run the race, while France has declined to enter and Polandlooks like it has pulled up lame.

Australia has several advantages over China when it comes todeveloping shale gas reserves, despite its potential resource,estimated at about 437 trillion cubic feet by the EnergyInformation Administration, being about 40 percent of China's1,115 trillion cubic feet.

Chief among them is that much of the shale reserves arelocated in remote basins, away from population centres.

This means the potential opposition from farmers andenvironmentalists is reduced and shale drilling is lessdisruptive to other segments of the economy.

Even though the reserves are in remote areas, there isexisting infrastructure available as some of these areas, suchas the central Australian Cooper Basin, have long histories ofconventional gas and oil production.

This gives shale gas output the ability to flow from thecentre of the country to the east coast, where it could be fedinto existing, or expanded, LNG plants.

Three LNG plants based on coal-seam gas are underconstruction in Queensland state, but a fourth may not proceedbecause of concern over adequate gas reserves and the increasingdifficulty of winning community support for coal-seam wells onproductive farmland.

Santos, Australia's No.2 energy firm, has startedshale output on a commercial scale and plans to feed the gasinto an LNG plant it is building in partnership with Malaysia'sstate-owned Petronas.

EASY FOR GLOBAL GIANTS

Australia's other significant advantage over China is thatit is an easy place for global majors to invest and do business.

While there is red and green tape, higher labour costs andtaxes, there is also legal certainty for long-term investmentsand a tradition of foreign investment in the petroleum sector.

This can be seen by the increasing involvement of oil majorsin Australian shale plays, with the latest coming from Chevron, which invested $349 million in February to buy intoacreage.

Others that have farmed into Australian shale includeConocoPhillips, France's Total, Japan'sMitsubishi Corp and India's Bharat Petroleum.

Australia's richest person, iron ore magnate Gina Rinehart,has also entered the business, buying into Lakes Oil early this year.

In contrast, China seems to have been reluctant to allowforeign companies to make significant inroads in its shalereserves, although this may be changing.

State-owned giants PetroChina and Sinopec have made some efforts to drill shale wells, but highcosts appear to have tempered their enthusiasm.

This prompted China to award exploration licences to 16companies in late 2012 - problem was that none of them had everdrilled a shale well before.

So far, only a handful of wells have been drilled andfractured in China's most promising basin, Sichuan/Chongqing,and none have yet resulted in commercial output.

Foreign firms are becoming more involved in China, with HessCorp entering an agreement to develop a block withPetroChina in July.

Hess joins Royal Dutch Shell, Total,ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil, BP and Chevron intrying to get China projects underway.

But the need for joint ventures has slowed progress and mostof the majors have yet to start serious exploration programmes.

China's target of 6.5 billion cubic metres of shaleproduction by 2015 looks optimistic, and even if achieved, thiswould be less than 3 percent of what U.S. shale gas output wasin 2011.

China also faces pressure from competing land use, lack ofwater and a lack of infrastructure to take gas to majorpopulation centres.

The initial wells drilled also suggest that the geology maybe more challenging in China than in many of the U.S. basins,which will add to costs and have a negative impact on economicviability.

China's difficulties place Australia in prime spot to getsecond-mover advantage, but this doesn't mean a shale gasrevolution on the scale of the United States is likely.

Far more likely is that development will be slower andlinked to capacity to liquefy and export the gas. Also likely isthat the junior firms active in the shale plays will chasehigher value liquids first and gas second, as is happening inthe United States.

But even going for liquids will provide benefits toAustralia as industry knowledge of local shale conditionsincreases and infrastructure and investment boosts development.

More News
16 Dec 2021 22:13

UPDATE 2-Royal Dutch Shell confirms delay in sale of Texas refinery to Mexico's Pemex

(Adds approval expected by Jan. 13)By Stefanie Eschenbacher and Erwin SebaMEXICO CITY/HOUSTON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell on Thursday confirmed a Reuters report that the sale of its controlling interest in a Texas refinery to Mexican stat...

Read more
16 Dec 2021 14:42

Latin American oil auctions kick off after two-year lull

* 11 firms registered to bid in Brazil's auction on Friday* Competition expected to be fiercest since 2018* Seven Latin American nations to hold auctions in 2022-2023By Marianna Parraga and Sabrina ValleHOUSTON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - Latin America's oil...

Read more
15 Dec 2021 12:16

Five companies seek to develop CO2 storage off Norway

OSLO, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Five companies have applied to build carbon dioxide (CO2) storage on the Norwegian continental shelf, the country's oil and energy ministry said on Wednesday.The ministry proposed in September two offshore areas, one in th...

Read more
15 Dec 2021 10:10

UPDATE 2-FTSE dips as inflation surges to 10-year high

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* IAG down on plans to cancel Air Europa acquisition* Rentokil falls for second day on M&A plans* Inflation jumped to 5.1% in Nov vs. 4.2% in...

Read more
15 Dec 2021 09:33

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: BofA starts Pod Point at Buy; Barclays cuts DCC

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: BofA starts Pod Point at Buy; Barclays cuts DCC

Read more
14 Dec 2021 09:40

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: JPMorgan raises Experian, cuts BAE Systems

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: JPMorgan raises Experian, cuts BAE Systems

Read more
13 Dec 2021 16:10

UK dividends calendar - next 7 days

UK dividends calendar - next 7 days

Read more
13 Dec 2021 11:48

Brazil's oil regulator approves Mero oilfield production agreement

SAO PAULO, Dec 13 (Reuters) - Brazilian state-run oil company Petrobras said on Monday that the country's oil regulator ANP has approved a production agreement for the Mero oilfield, deciding on which stake of its oil and gas output will be hold ...

Read more
13 Dec 2021 10:16

UPDATE 2-Energy, bank stocks drag London's FTSE 100; Omicron fears weigh

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Purplebricks plunges after delaying results* SThree drops as CEO steps down* FTSE 100 down 0.8%, FTSE 250 off 1.2% (Updates to close)By Ba...

Read more
13 Dec 2021 07:22

Qatar Energy acquires 17% stake in Shell-operated concessions in Egypt

DUBAI, Dec 13 (Reuters) - Qatar Energy will acquire a 17% stake in two Shell-operated concessions (Block 3 and Block 4) in Egypt's Red Sea region, Shell Egypt said on Monday.Shell will remain the main operator of the concessions, Shell Egypt's st...

Read more
12 Dec 2021 14:00

Activist group targets Exxon with shareholder climate resolution

* Follow This targets Exxon for first time* Dutch group also targets other energy companiesBy Ron Bousso and Sabrina ValleLONDON, Dec 12 (Reuters) - Climate activist group Follow This targeted Exxon Mobil Corp with a shareholder resolution urging i...

Read more
10 Dec 2021 23:26

UPDATE 1-Shell restarting Louisiana refinery crude unit after repairs from Hurricane Ida -sources

(Adds no reply from company)HOUSTON, Dec 10 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell Plc was restarting on Friday the crude distillation unit (CDU) at its 230,811 barrel-per-day (bpd) Norco, Louisiana, refinery after completing repairs from Hurricane Ida, sa...

Read more
10 Dec 2021 20:44

Shell restarting Louisiana refinery crude unit after repairs from Hurricane Ida -sources

HOUSTON, Dec 10 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell Plc was restarting on Friday the crude distillation unit (CDU) at its 230,811 barrel-per-day (bpd) Norco, Louisiana, refinery after completing repairs from Hurricane Ida, said sources familiar with pl...

Read more
10 Dec 2021 16:57

Can we still be friends? Shell sends Dutch PM parting note

By Toby SterlingAMSTERDAM, Dec 10 (Reuters) - On the day that shareholders of Royal Dutch Shell PLC voted to move the company's headquarters to London https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/royal-dutch-shell-plc-shareholders-set-approve-move-london...

Read more
10 Dec 2021 15:29

Belarus oil firm cancels 2022 exports to Germany after EU sanctions - traders

MOSCOW, Dec 10 (Reuters) - Belarusian oil company Belorusneft has cancelled its 2022 export plans to Germany via the Druzhba pipeline following new European Union sanctions on the company, three traders familiar with the matter said on Friday.On ...

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.