“But
Peak Oil is still a myth!” - LOL
Saudis
seek oil in Red Sea 'safe zone'
Saudi
Arabia's state oil company has launched major seismic studies in the
Red Sea off the kingdom's west coast in a bid to boost production
offshore
UPI,
6
December, 2012
Saudi
Arabia's state oil company Aramco has launched major seismic studies
in the Red Sea off the kingdom's west coast, 1,000 miles from the
dangers of the Persian Gulf, in a bid to boost its production levels
from new offshore fields.
Aramco
hasn't issued estimates of the Red Sea's energy potential but the
Middle East Economic Digest reports that "it is anticipated
there could be up to 100 billion barrels of oil reserves under the
seabed.
"This
is equal to a 38 percent increase on Saudi Arabia's current proven
reserves of 267 billion barrels."
Development
could cost up to $25 billion but the strategic gains for Riyadh are
immense.
Aramco
announced the discovery of an offshore gas field showing promising
flows northwest of the Red Sea port of Duba, set to be the hub of the
new exploration drive.
The
Saudis "are confident the area has sufficient oil and gas
deposits to sustain a massive development, including offshore
platforms, pipelines and onshore processing and bunkering
facilities," MEED reported.
The
Saudis are only too well aware of predictions the U.S. shale oil boom
will eventually turn America into the world's top producer, a
position the kingdom has held for decades and is the source of its
geopolitical power.
The
vast U.S. shale oil deposits are expected to make the country a net
exporter by 2020, ending a half-century of dependence on Persian Gulf
oil. Industry analysts forecast that by 2017, the United States,
dubbed "Saudi America," will overtake the kingdom's output
of 10 million bpd.
These
days, Saudi Arabia ships more oil to Asia, mainly China, than it does
to the United States. Even if U.S. demand plummets, the expanding
economies of China and India will ensure the kingdom's market won't
shrink.
But
the Saudis, and other gulf producers, are requiring ever-greater
volumes of energy for their own industrial and population expansion,
particular for electricity generation and desalination plants.
Indeed,
MEED noted that Aramco's initial focus in Red Sea development will be
on natural gas, rather than crude oil, for domestic consumption, that
will free up more oil for export.
It's
not clear to what degree the prospect of developing fresh fields and
production outlets far from Iran, the kingdom's arch-rival which whom
it's locked in a confrontation in the gulf, is behind the Red Sea
exploration.
But
the Saudis are ever-mindful that some of their eastern fields, which
include the world's largest, are running down after more than 60
years' production while demand is growing in Asia.
Even
so, the security aspect of the kingdom's all-important energy
production was emphasized by Riyadh's Nov. 12 accusations of Iranian
military intrusions into its territory near oil and gas fields in the
gulf.
The
Saudi newspaper Okaz reported that Riyadh has complained to U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that Iranian helicopters had flown over
the Hasba gas field several times in recent weeks.
It
also reported that two Iranian navy gunboats had intercepted an
Aramco vessel within Saudi territory as defined in a 1968 agreement
with pre-revolutionary Tehran.
Iran,
which lies on the gulf's eastern shore 150 miles from the kingdom's
oil-rich Eastern province, responded by accusing the Saudis of
conducting exploration work in prohibited border areas.
Saudi
Arabia, where Islam was born 1,300 years ago, overwhelmingly adheres
to the mainstream Sunni branch of Islam. Iran is predominantly
Shiite, a radical offshoot sect. The sects have been locked in a
bitter religious schism since the death of the Prophet Muhammad in
the late seventh century.
In
the current confrontation in the gulf, centered on Iran's nuclear
program, the Saudis are backed by the United States.
Tehran
has threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, the only gateway to the
gulf through which one-third of the world's oil supplies pass, if
they're attacked.
That
may not happen in the current face-off but if it does Saudi Arabia
and the United Arab Emirates have developed pipelines to bypass the
strait to carry oil exports. This, however, will total only about
one-third of the 17 million bpd that transits Hormuz.
Having
producing fields and infrastructure on the Red Sea will give Riyadh a
new edge.
The
Red Sea's much deeper than the gulf but Aramco says production could
start as early as 2016.
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