XM اپنی سروسز امریکہ کے شہریوں کو فراہم نہیں کرتا ہے۔

Gas may dash Big Oil's Namibian dreams 



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>ANALYSIS-Gas may dash Big Oil's Namibian dreams </title></head><body>

More gas than expected in fields

Geology means oil will cost more to produce

First production may be next decade

Government wants joint gas plan

By Ron Bousso, America Hernandez and Wendell Roelf

PARIS/CAPE TOWN, Nov 7 -International companies and the government of Namibia had high hopes only months ago they could quickly cash in on offshore discoveries and turn the country they saw as the world's last frontier of untapped oil into a prolific producer.

They have since hit a major complication: an unexpectedly high percentage of gas in the fields, meaning they need to install additional infrastructure. That will slow development and may make projects unprofitable, according to executives, politicians and industry sources.

"What we are seeing is that all our discoveries have a very high gas-to-oil ratio," Namibia's Petroleum Commissioner Maggy Shino told an industry conference last month.

Namibian law bans flaring - or burning gas off, releasing CO2 into the atmosphere - meaning companies will have to inject the gas back into the reservoir or process it for consumption, which Shino said was in any case the right thing to do.

"We really want to utilise the gas and generate as much value as possible ... and start then the industry of gas-to-power and petrochemicals, established in Namibia," she said.

After initially hoping for first oil by 2026, Namibia's government is working with operators to agree on a single plan with common infrastructure for the 8.7 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of unexpected gas.

The idea is to revamp a long-stalled project to pipe gas to an onshore gas-fired power plant to supply Namibia, then neighbouring South Africa and the wider region.

Initially designed to handle 1.3 tcf from Namibia's smaller Kudu field, the power plant project and related gas infrastructure would need significant upscaling.

Namibia's government has started talks with Shell SHEL.L, Total TTEF.PA, Galp GALP.LS and Norway's BW Energy BWE.OL, and wants Namibia's national oil company Namcor lead the gas development plan.

For the companies, the problem is the additional work could delay oil production into the 2030s, making it harder to monetise.

Although the industry says oil will be needed for decades to come, the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates global use will peak before 2030 as the world weans itself off carbon-emitting fossil fuels and as electric vehicle use increases, led by the world's biggest commodities consumer China.

For the major companies that have acquired or are seeking to invest in stakes in development blocks, that is a setback, industry sources told Reuters.

GUYANA DREAM FADES

The oil industry leapt to attention in February 2022 when France's TotalEnergies and London-listed Shell announced major discoveries in Namibia's Orange basin holding a cumulative 5.1 billion barrels of oil.

Investors piled in this April when Portugal's Galp said it found as much as 10 billion barrels in the same area.

Many drew comparisons to Guyana, where discoveries in 2015 led to an oil bonanza that has given the country GDP growth above 20% for the last five years.

But the high gas content, which became apparent over the last year as operators carried out more extensive drilling of reservoirs in Namibia, has since made oil majors cautious.

"We are working on it ... It's a matter of being able to re-inject all this gas in the reservoir at a cost that is acceptable," TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne told investors in New York last month.

Injecting gas back into rock under 3,000 metres (9842.52 ft) is already expensive, Pouyanne said. "If we have to have a big gas machine handling 500 million standard cubic feet per day instead of 200 or 300, of course, it changes the dimensions."

Total is struggling to get production costs in Namibia under $20 per barrel - an internal requirement for a final investment decision (FID) on new projects. The company is considering re-negotiating terms with authorities to try to lower costs.

It still hopes to take a FID next year and produce first oil in 2029 based on a plan to reinject all the gas rather than wait for a common solution, said one person familiar with the company's thinking, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The final decision would depend on whether the project would still be profitable enough, another source said.

"Namibia underwhelms," Jefferies analyst Giacomo Romeo summed up in an investor note. Total proposed a smaller-than-expected development of 160,000 barrels per day and did not restate previous hopes for a FID in 2025, Romeo said.

Shell has considered building a floating gas liquefaction unit at the oilfield to produce LNG for export at the block where it made the Graff discovery, according to one source. That would significantly increase development costs and delay oil output start-up.

Shell declined to comment.

Shell CEO Wael Sawan told analysts on Oct. 31 that Namibia's acreage was "very challenging," and that the lower permeability of the rock made extracting oil and gas harder.

"A lot of our focus is on figuring out whether we can find ways to be able to develop commercially investable projects," Sawan added.

Galp, which has put half its Namibian stake up for auction, has postponed the sale pending results of additional exploratory drillings later this year. U.S. major Chevron, as well as Rhino Resources, which is backed by BP and Eni’s ENI.MI joint venture Azule Energy, are also expected to drill in Namibia this year.



Reporting by America Hernandez in Paris, Ron Bousso in London; Editing by Simon Webb and Barbara Lewis

</body></html>

دستبرداری: XM Group کے ادارے ہماری آن لائن تجارت کی سہولت تک صرف عملدرآمد کی خدمت اور رسائی مہیا کرتے ہیں، کسی شخص کو ویب سائٹ پر یا اس کے ذریعے دستیاب کانٹینٹ کو دیکھنے اور/یا استعمال کرنے کی اجازت دیتا ہے، اس پر تبدیل یا توسیع کا ارادہ نہیں ہے ، اور نہ ہی یہ تبدیل ہوتا ہے یا اس پر وسعت کریں۔ اس طرح کی رسائی اور استعمال ہمیشہ مشروط ہوتا ہے: (i) شرائط و ضوابط؛ (ii) خطرہ انتباہات؛ اور (iii) مکمل دستبرداری۔ لہذا اس طرح کے مواد کو عام معلومات سے زیادہ کے طور پر فراہم کیا جاتا ہے۔ خاص طور پر، براہ کرم آگاہ رہیں کہ ہماری آن لائن تجارت کی سہولت کے مندرجات نہ تو کوئی درخواست ہے، اور نہ ہی فنانشل مارکیٹ میں کوئی لین دین داخل کرنے کی پیش کش ہے۔ کسی بھی فنانشل مارکیٹ میں تجارت میں آپ کے سرمائے کے لئے ایک خاص سطح کا خطرہ ہوتا ہے۔

ہماری آن لائن تجارتی سہولت پر شائع ہونے والے تمام مٹیریل کا مقصد صرف تعلیمی/معلوماتی مقاصد کے لئے ہے، اور اس میں شامل نہیں ہے — اور نہ ہی اسے فنانشل، سرمایہ کاری ٹیکس یا تجارتی مشورے اور سفارشات؛ یا ہماری تجارتی قیمتوں کا ریکارڈ؛ یا کسی بھی فنانشل انسٹرومنٹ میں لین دین کی پیشکش؛ یا اسکے لئے مانگ؛ یا غیر متنازعہ مالی تشہیرات پر مشتمل سمجھا جانا چاہئے۔

کوئی تھرڈ پارٹی کانٹینٹ، نیز XM کے ذریعہ تیار کردہ کانٹینٹ، جیسے: راۓ، خبریں، تحقیق، تجزیہ، قیمتیں اور دیگر معلومات یا اس ویب سائٹ پر مشتمل تھرڈ پارٹی کے سائٹس کے لنکس کو "جیسے ہے" کی بنیاد پر فراہم کیا جاتا ہے، عام مارکیٹ کی تفسیر کے طور پر، اور سرمایہ کاری کے مشورے کو تشکیل نہ دیں۔ اس حد تک کہ کسی بھی کانٹینٹ کو سرمایہ کاری کی تحقیقات کے طور پر سمجھا جاتا ہے، آپ کو نوٹ کرنا اور قبول کرنا ہوگا کہ یہ کانٹینٹ سرمایہ کاری کی تحقیق کی آزادی کو فروغ دینے کے لئے ڈیزائن کردہ قانونی تقاضوں کے مطابق نہیں ہے اور تیار نہیں کیا گیا ہے، اسی طرح، اس پر غور کیا جائے گا بطور متعلقہ قوانین اور ضوابط کے تحت مارکیٹنگ مواصلات۔ براہ کرم یقینی بنائیں کہ آپ غیر آزاد سرمایہ کاری سے متعلق ہماری اطلاع کو پڑھ اور سمجھ چکے ہیں۔ مذکورہ بالا معلومات کے بارے میں تحقیق اور رسک وارننگ ، جس تک رسائی یہاں حاصل کی جا سکتی ہے۔

خطرے کی انتباہ: آپکا سرمایہ خطرے پر ہے۔ ہو سکتا ہے کہ لیورج پروڈکٹ سب کیلیے موزوں نہ ہوں۔ براہ کرم ہمارے مکمل رسک ڈسکلوژر کو پڑھیے۔