Don't say the news is always bad! This is the second international company to pull out
US player pulls out of East Coast oil hunt
The government's drive for new investment in oil and gas development in New Zealand has suffered another blow with the departure of Texan mid-sized player Apache Corp from a joint venture with Canadian TAG Oil.
15
January, 2013
The
pair were to explore together for oil and gas on the North Island's
East Coast. TAG says it will now go it alone.
The
shale gas play is likely to involve the controversial practice of
hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking", to which the
Parliamentary Commissioner for the Environment last year gave a
partial clean bill of health, subject to robust regulation.
A
groundswell of local opposition to the exploration has been building
in the region.
Unlike
the Taranaki region on the west coast of the island, the east has no
previous experience of oil and gas exploration. TAG is already
actively producing oil and gas from numerous onshore wells in
Taranaki, has engaged in some fracking to do so, and won more permits
in Taranaki in a government tender round late last year.
"We
are a large company and we have opportunities all over the world,"
an Apache senior vice-president for global corporate affairs, Bob
Dye, told BusinessDesk from from Houston.
"We
reviewed where we are at and decided to invest our money elsewhere."
Exploration
activity has been progressing, including exploration areas around
Gisborne and Hawke's Bay sporting signs saying 'This is Apache
Country'.
"We
wish TAG all the best," said Dye. "They are a good company
to work with but we decided to reallocate."
The
Apache website cites no more than a commitment to "evaluate
potential well performance for an oil shale project in New Zealand."
The
decision, typical of oil companies with global reach and a constantly
evolving portfolio of possible investments, follows a decision
announced last month by the Brazilian oil and gas giant to relinquish
exploration rights in the Raukumara Basin, in deep water off East
Cape in the Exclusive Economic Zone.
Painted
locally as a victory for opposition organised by Greenpeace and local
iwi Te Whanau a Apanui, the Petrobras decision came as the company
retrenched across the world to deal with serious commercial problems
in its home market.
TAG
chief executive Garth Johnson expressed disappointment at Apache's
decision.
"Whether
we like it or not, this is the nature of the oil and gas exploration
business around the world and we will treat it as an opportunity and
move on," he said in a statement. "We will continue with
the work programme on the East Coast in the same careful, methodical
and safe way that we have carried out our work programme in
Taranaki."
A
much smaller company than Apache, the Canadian explorer has struggled
at times to communicate its plans positively, but Dye said TAG was "a
good company to work with."
Most
of TAG's producing assets are in New Zealand, although its shares are
listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, which was not trading at the
time of the TAG statement in New Zealand

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