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-China's shale round focuses on cash not expertise: Kemp

Mon, 18th Mar 2013 16:12

By John Kemp

LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - China's Huadian Corporation,one of the country's top power producers, which won fourlicences in the second shale gas licensing round last year, willtender for engineering and drilling services to meet itscommitment to prospect for gas in blocks across Hubei, Hunan andGuizhou provinces.

"We will be looking for professional services from seismicsurvey to drilling via a tender towards late this year," acompany official told an industry seminar on Monday.

The second licensing round, which closed in October 2012,has met with much scepticism from outside observers because fewof the winners had any experience with drilling for oil and gas.Licence holders will all need to contract with service companieslike Halliburton, Schlumberger and localequivalents like Anton Oilfield Service Group .

But the critics have missed the point. The purpose of thesecond licensing round was not to identify companies withexisting expertise.

Big established players like China National PetroleumCorporation (CNPC) and Sinopec are already prospecting inSichuan following an earlier licensing round, in partnershipwith international majors like Shell.

In addition, Chevron is prospecting in southwestern Guizhou.And ENI has recently signed a joint study agreement with CNPC todevelop Sichuan's Rongchang shale gas block.

However, existing license holders have been criticised formaking slow progress and not spending enough drillingexploration and appraisal wells. Only a couple of dozen pilotand exploratory wells have been drilled in total over the lastthree years.

"Since most licences for gas exploration have been allocatedto the three domestic companies CNPC, CNOOC and Sinopec, thesethree companies form an oligopoly in the upstream sector interms of licences and the bulk of domestic production,"according to the authors of a recent study on "Gas Pricing andRegulation" prepared by the International Energy Agency (IEA)with input from China's regulators.

"There is little room for small and medium-sized companiesas they own few licences, often with less competitive economics.As the threshold for exploration to be performed in order tokeep the licence low, these companies usually keep the licencespreventing new entry, and other companies have few chances toget these licences through relinquishment," the IEA explained.

The agency contrasted the situation with the UK North Sea,where bidders are required to submit detailed field developmentprogramme, and must adhere to them or have their explorationrights taken away and given to another company.

"Drill or drop clauses may apply in the licence, stimulatingthe licensed party to keep up with the agreed upon workprogramme," according to the IEA.

WALLETS, NOT DRILLS

The central objective of the second licensing round was toaward licences to a broader range of companies and, crucially,to extract enforceable promises from them to invest heavily indrilling wells.

It doesn't matter that these companies have little or noexperience with oil and gas exploration. It has always beenassumed they would contract the work to domestic andinternational companies with the relevant expertise. The keypoint is that all the second round licence winners are cash richand can afford to invest heavily in drilling.

Huadian is a case in point. The second round winners areoften portrayed as small and inexperienced. But Huadian is oneof the country's largest power producers, with more than 100Gigawatts of installed generating capacity, which means it hasfar more potential output than the United Kingdom or the stateof California.

Huadian has been able to commit to spending 2.7 billion yuan($434 million) drilling 24 exploration and appraisal wells overthe next three years, mostly cheaper horizontal boreholes, withan additional 20 to be drilled if commercial volumes of gas arefound.

As a major power producer, Huadian has a strong interest infinding and developing its own sources of natural gas to reduceits reliance on gas purchased from others, or coal.

Coal producer Shenhua Corporation was another second roundwinner. Other licences have been awarded to companies withstrong backing from provincial governments in areas thought tocontain shale gas deposits, which therefore have a strongfinancial interest in developing them as quickly as possible.

It is far from clear that awarding exploration licences toinexperienced investors and then expecting them to contract withservice companies to do the actual drilling is the mostefficient way to run the domestic shale gas programme.

But existing gas producers have fallen far behind schedulewith their own work. The government probably sees a differentapproach as the best way to reinvigorate the country's domesticshale programme.

The new system is almost guaranteed to be highlyinefficient. But it could start to open up China's domesticshale gas sector to a much wider range of companies and startbuilding the critical infrastructure of drilling, fracking andother services firms that have been critical to the success ofthe shale revolution in North America.

Schlumberger Chief Executive Paal Kibsgaard told investorsat a conference on Monday that "the customer base in China is expanding quickly after shale activity opened up to a wide rangeof companies outside the traditional exploration and productionindustry."

"While we see solid activity growth in the shale basins inthe medium term, we still expect the strongest activity growthin 2013 to come from onshore areas and complex conventional landdevelopments," Kibsgaard noted.

China's shale sector faces a long development timeline. Butinvolvement of major engineering companies like Huadian suggeststhe sector is poised for substantial expansion by the end of thedecade, in line with Schlumberger's estimates for the take offof unconventional gas elsewhere.

More News
20 Jan 2022 12:01

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 stalls as AB Foods drags on index

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 stalls as AB Foods drags on index

Read more
20 Jan 2022 09:54

UPDATE 2-Oil stocks, GSK weakness pull FTSE 100 lower; Deliveroo jumps

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Deliveroo fourth-quarter order growth jumps* Premier Foods top midcap gainer on strong profit outlook* Unilever abandons plan to buy GSK's ...

Read more
19 Jan 2022 21:37

Shell to carry out Pernis, Netherlands oil refinery maintenance until end of June

AMSTERDAM, Jan 19 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Wednesday it plans to carry out major maintenance work at its Pernis oil refinery in the Netherlands in the coming five months."We will inspect a large number of installations from the insid...

Read more
19 Jan 2022 08:56

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 steady despite UK inflation intensifying

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 steady despite UK inflation intensifying

Read more
18 Jan 2022 17:05

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks fall on worries over higher interest rates

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks fall on worries over higher interest rates

Read more
18 Jan 2022 13:08

UPDATE 1-Norway awards 53 new petroleum production licences

(Adds detail, quotes)OSLO, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Norway awarded 53 new petroleum production licences on the Norwegian continental shelf in the latest licensing round for mature areas, the oil and energy ministry said on Tuesday.Stakes were offered to...

Read more
18 Jan 2022 13:00

Angry investors seek to appoint board member to Third Point UK fund

LONDON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - Activist investors in Third Point's London-listed fund want independent director Richard Boleat appointed to the board to improve corporate governance, they said in a letter to shareholders on Tuesday.Third Point Investo...

Read more
18 Jan 2022 12:51

UPDATE 2-Climate activists lose court case against UK oil regulator

(Adds reaction from government minister)By Shadia NasrallaLONDON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - A UK High Court on Tuesday threw out a case brought by climate activists against the country's oil and gas regulator OGA, rejecting their argument that the OGA's ...

Read more
18 Jan 2022 12:51

UPDATE 1-Climate activists lose court case against UK oil regulator

(Add climate activists' response)By Shadia NasrallaLONDON, Jan 18 (Reuters) - A UK High Court on Tuesday threw out a case brought by climate activists against the country's oil and gas regulator OGA, rejecting their argument that the OGA's actions...

Read more
18 Jan 2022 12:14

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Markets red as inflation worries return to fore

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Markets red as inflation worries return to fore

Read more
18 Jan 2022 09:44

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Goldman Sachs raises BT to Conviction Buy

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Goldman Sachs raises BT to Conviction Buy

Read more
18 Jan 2022 09:03

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 slips despite oil boosting BP and Shell

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE 100 slips despite oil boosting BP and Shell

Read more
17 Jan 2022 10:33

UPDATE 2-Oil majors, Iberdrola among winners set to harness Scottish wind

(Updates throughout)By Nina ChestneyLONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Utility Iberdrola and oil majors BP and Shell are among companies offered seabed rights to develop offshore wind projects in the first tender of its kind in over a decade, Crown Estate...

Read more
17 Jan 2022 10:33

UPDATE 3-Scottish wind sale nets nearly $1 billion with Shell, BP among winners

(Adds comment from Shell, BP, analysts)By Nina ChestneyLONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - BP, Shell and utility Iberdrola were among the winners of seabed rights to develop Scottish offshore wind projects, in an auction which raised nearly 700 million pou...

Read more
17 Jan 2022 10:33

UPDATE 1-Crown Estate Scotland offers 17 projects seabed rights for offshore wind

(Adds more detail)By Nina ChestneyLONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Crown Estate Scotland said on Monday it has offered seabed right agreements to 17 projects in its ScotWind leasing round which is aimed at supporting wind energy development.Out of 74 ap...

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.