“Good
news”,maybe for Vladimir Putin and the Russian economy. Disastrous
news for the Living Planet
Russia
Discovers Massive Arctic Oil Field Which May Be Larger Than Gulf Of
Mexico
The oil production platform at the Sakhalin-I field in Russia,
partly owned by ONGC Videsh Ltd., Rosneft Oil Co., Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Japan's Sakhalin Oil and Gas Development Co. on June 9, 2009.
partly owned by ONGC Videsh Ltd., Rosneft Oil Co., Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Japan's Sakhalin Oil and Gas Development Co. on June 9, 2009.
27
September, 2014
In
a dramatic stroke of luck for the Kremlin, this morning there is
hardly a person in the world who is happier than Russian president
Vladimir Putin because overnight state-run run OAO Rosneft announced
it has discovered what may be a treasure trove of black oil, one
which could boost Russia's coffers by hundreds of billions if not
more, when a vast pool of crude was discovered in the Kara Sea region
of the Arctic Ocean, showing the region has the potential to become
one of the world’s most important crude-producing areas, arguably
bigger than the Gulf Of Mexico. The announcement was made by Igor
Sechin, Rosneft’s chief executive officer, who spent two days
sailing on a Russian research ship to the drilling rig where the find
was unveiled today.
Well,
one person who may have been as happy as Putin is the CEO of Exxon
Mobil, since the well was discovered with the help of America's
biggest energy company (and second largest by market cap after AAPL).
Then again, maybe not: as
Bloomberg explains "the
well was drilled before the Oct. 10 deadline Exxon was granted by the
U.S. government under sanctions barring American companies from
working in Russia’s Arctic offshore. Rosneft
and Exxon won’t be able to do more drilling, putting the
exploration and development of the area on hold despite the find
announced today."
Which
means instead of generating billions in E&P revenue, XOM could
end up with, well, nothing. And that would be quite a shock to the US
company because the unveiled Arctic field may hold about 1 billion
barrels of oil and similar geology nearby means the
surrounding area may hold more than the U.S. part of the Gulf or
Mexico, he said.
For
a sense of how big the spoils are we go to another piece
by Bloomberg,
which tells us that "Universitetskaya, the geological structure
being drilled, is
the size of the city of Moscow and large enough to contain more than
9 billion barrels, a trove worth more than $900 billion at today’s
prices."
The
only way to reach the prospect is a four-day voyage from Murmansk,
the largest city north of the Arctic circle. Everything will have to
shipped in — workers, supplies, equipment — for a few months of
drilling, then evacuated before winter renders the sea icebound. Even
in the short Arctic summer, a flotilla is needed to keep drifting ice
from the rig.
Sadly,
said bonanza may be non-recourse to Exxon after Obama made it quite
clear that all western companies will have to wind down operations in
Russia or else feel the wrath of the DOJ against sanctions breakers.
Which leaves XOM two options: ignore Obama's orders (something which
many have been doing of late), or throw in the towel on what may be
the largest oil discovery in years.
And
while the Exxon C-suite contemplates its choices, here is some more
on today's finding
from Bloomberg:
“It
exceeded our expectations,” Sechin said in an interview. This
discovery is of “exceptional significance in showing the presence
of hydrocarbons in the Arctic.”
The
development of Arctic oil reserves, an undertaking that will cost
hundreds of billions of dollars and take decades, is one of Putin’s
grandest ambitions. As Russia’s existing fields in Siberia run dry,
the country needs to develop new reserves as it vies with the U.S. to
be the world’s largest oil and gas producer.
Output
from the Kara Sea field could begin within five to seven years,
Sechin said, adding the field discovered today would be named
“Victory.”
Duh.
The
Kara Sea well -- the most expensive in Russian history -- targeted a
subsea structure named Universitetskaya and its success has been seen
as pivotal to that strategy. The start of drilling, which reached a
depth of more than 2,000 meters (6,500 feet), was marked with a
ceremony involving Putin and Sechin.
The
importance of Arctic drilling was one reason that offshore oil
exploration was included in the most recent round of U.S. sanctions.
Exxon and Rosneft have a venture to explore millions of acres of the
Arctic Ocean.
But
what's worse for Exxon is that now that the hard work is done,
Rosneft may not need its Western partner much longer:
“Once
the well is plugged, there will be a lot of work to do in
interpreting the results and this is probably something that Rosneft
can do,” Julian Lee, an oil strategist at Bloomberg First Word in
London, said before today’s announcement. “Both parties are
probably hoping that by the time they are ready to start the next
well the sanctions will have been lifted.”
And
here is why there is nothing Exxon would like more than to put all
the western sanctions against Moscow in the rearview mirror: "The
stakes are high for Exxon, whose $408 billion market valuation makes
it the world’s largest energy producer. Russia represents the
second-biggest exploration prospect worldwide. The Irving,
Texas-based company holds drilling rights across 11.4 million acres
in Russia, only eclipsed by its 15.1 million U.S. acres."
Proving
just how major this finding is, and how it may have tipped the
balance of power that much more in Russia's favor is the emergence of
paid experts, desperate to talk down the relevance of the Russian
discovery:
More
drilling and geological analysis will be needed before a reliable
estimate can be tallied for the size of the oil resources in the
Universitetskaya area and the Russian Arctic as a whole, said Frances
Hudson, a global thematic strategist who helps manage $305 billion at
Standard Life Investments Ltd. in Edinburgh. Sanctions forbidding
U.S. and European cooperation with Russian entities mean that
country’s nascent Arctic exploration will be stillborn because
Rosneft and its state-controlled sister companies don’t know how to
drill in cold offshore conditions alone, she said.
“Extrapolating
from a small data sample is perhaps not going to give you the best
information,” Hudson said in a telephone interview. “And because
of sanctions, it looks like there’s going to be less exploration
rather than more.” In addition, the expense and difficulty of
operating in such a remote part of the world, where hazards include
icebergs and sub-zero temperatures, mean that the developing
discoveries may not be economic at today’s oil prices.
Maybe.
Then again perhaps the experts' time is better suited to estimating
just how much longer the US shale miracle has left before the US is
once again at the mercy of offshore sellers of crude.
In
any event one country is sure to have a big smile on its face: China,
since today's finding simply means that as Russia has to ultimately
sell the final product to someone, that someone will almost certainly
be the Middle Kingdom, which if the "Holy Gas Grail" deal
is any indication, will be done at whatever terms Beijing chooses.
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