Ogjournal20150706 DL
Ogjournal20150706 DL
Ogjournal20150706 DL
MIDYEAR
FORECAST
ETHYLENE
REPORT
Introducing
From the plant oor to the executive suite, a single device is now
capable of protecting your people and impacting the operations
A single detector head easily accepts all sensor types its simply
plug and play. Learn how the Meridian universal gas detector is
redening universal. Visit www.UniversalByScott.com
LET'S WORK.
2013 Scott Safety. SCOTT, the SCOTT SAFETY Logo and Scott Health and Safety are
registered and/or unregistered marks of Scott Technologies, Inc. or its afliates.
dare to discover
CONTENTS
July 6, 2015 Volume 113.7
WORLD OIL MARKET AT A GLANCE
FIG. 1
FIG. 1a
FIG. 1b
96
2.5
China
OECD
95
2.0
GENERAL INTEREST
Natural gas opposition has
shifted to transportation,
speakers say
Nick Snow
37
US House committee
leaders send letters
to Plains, PHMSA
about leak
1.5
Supply
93
Demand
92
Million, b/d
Million, b/d
94
1.0
0.5
91
0.0
90
-0.5
89
-1.0
26
Nick Snow
43
Nick Snow
44
Nick Snow
Nick Snow
38
40
45
SPECIAL REPORT
SPECIAL REPORT
Conglin Xu
Laura Bell
Robert Brelsford
MIDYEAR FORECAST
26
74
International survey
of ethylene from
steam crackers2015
Leena Koottungal
85
Robert Brelsford
46
ETHYLENE REPORT
Precommissioning tests
ongoing at Braskems
Mexican petchem project
Nick Snow
Robert Brelsford
41
47
Senate Democrats
outline broad
energy goals to
nations governors
REGULAR FEATURES
Nick Snow
42
COVER
OG&PE
P1
NEWSLETTER 8
LETTERS/CALENDAR 18
JOURNALLY SPEAKING 22
EDITORIAL 24
SERVICES/SUPPLIERS 105
STATISTICS 108
MARKET CONNECTION 111
ADVERTISERS INDEX 115
EDITORS PERSPECTIVE/
WATCHING GOVERNMENT 116
MOTORMAX
An Innovative Turnkey
Solution to Motor Management
TM
Reduced wiring
The easiest way to simplify your motor management process while increasing
equipment and personnel protection is with MOTORMAX.
Find out more about this turnkey solution at selinc.com/7965-og7.
FIG. 1
900
1,800
2D acquired (Norway)
2D acquired (NL)
800
1,400
700
1,200
600
1,000
500
800
400
2D seismic, 1,000 km
1,600
48
100
TECHNOLOGY...
PROCESSING
TRANSPORTATION
Newfoundland,
Labrador prepare for
deepwater exploration
Lack of business
drivers inhibits UK gas
storage development
Robert Brelsford
Adrian Finn
Zak Loftus
Patrick J. Curth
James R. Courtier
Gary B. Smallwood
Rick Mauro
Scot Evans
Tayvis Dunnahoe
48
Chinas Yanchi
area, western Ordos
basin derived from
mixed source
74
International survey
of ethylene from
steam crackers2015
64
Zhou Shichao
Wang Xingzhi
Liu Xinshe
Han Peng
53
Innovation addresses
US environmental
regulations; more needed
Leena Koottungal
Bennett Resnik
Benjamin Nussdorf
70
85
Manouchehr Takin
Ramin Takin
FIG. 1
Levelland
Lubbock
Nelson-Farrar
monthly cost indexes
Northwest
shelf
Gary Farrar
94
New
Mexico
Snyder
Lamesa
Texas
Sweetwater
Big Spring
Central basin
platform
Midland
Midland
basin
Delaware
basin
92
NELSON-FARRAR
QUARTERLY
COSTIMATING:
Indexes for selected
equipment items
Gary Farrar
98
Eastern
shelf
64
100
DIGITAL
TECHNOLOGY
TO DRIVE
PERFORMANCE.
MILITARY SPEC
TOUGH TO
GUARANTEE
DURABILITY.
Kenwood NX-5000 Series digital
gita
al
ssets,
radios can tie into existing IP as
assets,
expand your coverage, ofer GPS,
le
text messaging and more, while
ta
ary
beating the most rigorous military
ou
us
specs for demanding, continuous
use in the worlds roughest
et
environments. Call today to set
up a demo .
1-800-950-5005 www.kenwood.com/usa
OGJ
WIRELINE SERVICES
Houston offce
OUSTICS GEOMECHANICS PULSED PennWell,
1455 West Loop South, Suite 400,
Houston, TX 77027
360-IMAGING POROSITY AND LITHO
Tel 713.621.9720/Fax 713.963.6285/
Web site www.ogjonline.com
GEOLOGY RESISTIVITY NUCLEAR
Editor Bob Tippee, [email protected]
AGNETIC RESONANCE TESTING AND Chief Technology Editor Warren R. True,
[email protected]
MPLING SIDEWALL CORING RESER Managing Editor-News Steven Poruban,
[email protected]
Managing Editor-Technology Christopher E. Smith,
EVALUATION WIRELINE GEOLOGY
[email protected]
ECHANICAL INTERVENTION PLUGBAC Exploration Editor Tayvis Dunnahoe,
[email protected]
RVICES PERFORATING PIPE RECOV Upstream Technology Editor Michael T. Slocum,
[email protected]
GEOLOGY PRODUCTION LOGGING
Downstream Technology Editor Robert Brelsford,
[email protected]
LSED NEUTRON SEISMIC PROPELLA Senior Editor-Economics Conglin Xu,
[email protected]
IMULATION MICROSEISMIC SEISMI Staff Writer Matt Zborowski,
[email protected]
OFILE GEOPHYSICS GEOMECHANI Survey Editor/News Writer Leena Koottungal,
[email protected]
PIPE RECOVERY PULSED NEUTRON Special Projects Paula Dittrick,
[email protected]
Special Correspondent Alan Petzet,
[email protected]
Editorial Assistant Vannetta Dibbles,
[email protected]
WERE
WIRED.
From comprehensive formation
evaluation to full casing analysis,
our wireline services help you manage
every aspect of your operations
in both openhole and cased-hole wells.
Explore the full breadth of our wireline
services at weatherford.com/wireline
Washington
Tel 703.533.1552
Washington Editor Nick Snow, [email protected]
OGJ News
Please submit press releases via e-mail to:
[email protected]
Subscriber Service
P.O. Box 2002, Tulsa OK 74101
Tel 1.800.633.1656 / 918.831.9423 / Fax
918.831.9482
[email protected]
Circulation Manager Ron Kalusha
[email protected],
Houston Administration
Copyright 2015 by PennWell Corporation (Registered in U.S. Patent & Trademark Offce). All rights reserved. Oil & Gas Journal or any part thereof may
not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transcribed in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and
recording, without the prior written permission of the Editor. Permission, however, is granted for employees of corporations licensed under the Annual
Authorization Service offered by the Copyright Clearance Center Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Mass. 01923, or by calling CCCs Customer
Relations Department at 978-750-8400 prior to copying. Requests for bulk orders should be addressed to the Editor. Oil & Gas Journal (ISSN 00301388) is published 12x per year - monthly the frst Monday of each month in print and other Mondays in digital form by PennWell Corporation, 1421
S. Sheridan Rd., Tulsa, Okla., Box 1260, 74101. Periodicals postage paid at Tulsa, Okla., and at additional mailing offces. Oil & Gas Journal and OGJ
are registered trademarks of PennWell Corporation. POSTMASTER: send address changes, letters about subscription service, or subscription orders
to P.O. Box 3497, Northbrook, IL 60065, or telephone (800) 633-1656. Change of address notices should be sent promptly with old as well as new
address and with ZIP code or postal zone. Allow 30 days for change of address. Oil & Gas Journal is available for electronic retrieval on Oil & Gas
Journal Online (www.ogjonline.com) or the NEXIS Service, Box 933, Dayton, Ohio 45401, (937) 865-6800. SUBSCRIPTION RATES in the US: 1 yr.
$89; Latin America and Canada: 1 yr. $94; Russia and republics of the former USSR, 1 yr. 2,200 rubles; all other countries: 1 yr. $129, 1 yr. premium
digital $59 worldwide. These rates apply only to individuals holding responsible positions in the petroleum industry. Single copies are $10 each except
for 100th Anniversary issue which is $20. Publisher reserves the right to refuse non-qualifed subscriptions. Oil & Gas Journal is available on the
Internet at http://www.ogjonline.com. (Vol. 113, No. 7) Printed in the US. GST No. 126813153. Publications Mail Agreement Number 602914. Return
Undeliverable Canadian Addresses to: P.O. Box 1632, Windsor, ON N9A 7C9.
Its time to
$135
million
65
56%
INEFFECTIVE
AT RISK
communication
FAIL
35
FAIL
20%
30
OVERRUNS
40%
anticipated value
DISAPPEARS
50
39%
schedule
Good front end
REDUCTION
planning leads to as
much as 20% cost savings
and 39% schedule reduction
for total project design
and construction.
PERSONNEL
cost savings
67
TO
YEARS
expected to
RETIRE
SUCCESSFUL IMPLEMENTATION
www.emersonprocess.com/projectcertainty
E M E R S O N . C O N S I D E R I T S O LV E D .
OGJ
Newsletter
July 6, 2015
International News
for oil and gas professionals
GENERAL INTEREST Q U IC K TA K E S
USGS: Water usage for fracing varies across shale plays
The volume of water required to hydraulically fracture wells
varies widely across the country, according to the first national
analysis and map of hydraulic fracturing water usage detailed
in a recent US Geological Survey study.
The analysis was published in Water Resources Research, a
journal of the American Geophysical Union. Researchers found
water volumes for fracturing varied from 2,600 gal/well to 9.7
million gal/well.
As of 2014, median annual water volume estimates for fracturing in horizontal wells increased to more than 4 million gal/
well for oil wells and 5.1 million gal/well for gas wells. That
compared with an initial average of about 177,000 gal/well for
oil and gas wells in 2000, the study said.
One of the most important things we found was that the
amount of water used per well varies quite a bit, even within
a single oil and gas basin, said USGS scientist Tanya Gallegos,
the studys lead author. A better understanding of the volumes
of water injected for hydraulic fracturing could be a key to understanding the potential for some environmental impacts.
USGS noted that horizontal drilling accounted for the highest average water use for fracturing in 52 out of the 57 watersheds studied. The watersheds where the most water was used
to fracture wells involved shale formations.
Horizontal wells generally require more water than vertical or
directional wells. USGS said this research was part of its larger
effort to understand the resource requirements and potential environmental impacts of unconventional oil and gas development.
shore rigs there from July 4 through Oct. 31, FWSs Alaska office indicated in the June 30 LOA, which allows incidental, but
not intentional, takes of game.
It authorizes Shell to proceed, provided the company complies with mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures under
the Marine Mammal Protection Act, which include maintaining
a 15-mile buffer between the rigs while they are in operation.
Another US Department of the Interior agency, the Bureau
of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, continues to review
Shells drilling permit applications, DOI said. FWSs action neither approves of nor precludes the companys proposed activity
on its lease this summer, which will be subject to all applicable
regulations and conditions, it emphasized.
people
powered
The power of our resources means nothing
without the energy of our people. Their
focus and expertise make our energy more
dependable, more sustainable, and more useful.
We are looking for talented oil & gas
professionals to join the team.
To learn more, visit www.aramco.jobs/ogj
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 29
Motor gasoline
Distillate
Jet fuel
Residual
Other products
June 30
Crude production
NGL production2
Crude imports
Product imports
Other supply2 3
TOTAL SUPPLY
Net product imports
June 25
June 26
June 29
1Not
9,352
3,841
1,627
217
4,792
19,829
8,950
3,874
1,515
195
3,960
18,494
4.5
(0.9)
7.4
11.3
21.0
7.2
8,985
4,021
1,543
208
4,806
19,563
8,684
3,885
1,432
240
4,464
18,705
3.5
3.5
7.8
(13.3)
7.7
4.6
9,597
3,161
6,957
2,010
1,975
23,700
(1,440)
8,442
2,766
7,211
1,917
2,109
22,445
(1,172)
13.7
14.3
(3.5)
4.9
(6.4)
5.6
9,372
3,094
7,219
2,062
2,306
24,053
(1,557)
8,256
2,687
7,338
1,854
2,207
22,342
(1,572)
13.5
15.1
(1.6)
11.2
4.5
7.7
16,449
16,754
93.7
15,859
16,104
90.3
3.7
4.0
15,855
16,167
90.6
15,533
15,840
88.5
2.1
2.1
June 24
Latest
week
Previous
week1
462,993
218,494
135,428
39,731
39,816
467,927
217,814
133,591
40,505
40,285
Change
Same week
year ago1 Change
June 25
June 26
June 29
June 30
(4,934)
680
1,837
(774)
(469)
388,090
214,977
120,566
37,799
38,539
Change, %
Crude
Motor gasoline
Distillate
Propane
Futures prices5 6/26
28.1
23.4
35.3
88.8
Change,
%
28.5
23.2
34.0
86.1
74,903
3,517
14,862
1,932
1,277
60.06
2.77
(1.4)
0.9
3.8
3.1
59.89
2.85
19.3
1.6
12.3
5.1
3.3
Change, %
24.8
24.0
31.1
65.0
13.3
(2.5)
13.5
36.6
Change
0.2
0.1
106.58
4.64
Change
(46.52)
(1.87)
(43.6)
(40.3)
Based on revised figures. 2OGJ estimates. 3Includes other liquids, refinery processing gain, and unaccounted for crude oil. 4Stocks
divided by average daily product supplied for the prior 4 weeks. 5Weekly average of daily closing futures prices.
Source: Energy Information Administration, Wall Street Journal
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 29
June 30
BAKER HUGHES INTERNATIONAL RIG COUNT: TOTAL WORLD / TOTAL ONSHORE / TOTAL OFFSHORE
3,900
3,600
3,300
3,000
2,700
2,400
2,100
1,800
600
300
0
2,127
1,810
318
May 14
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 29
June 30
Jun. 14
Jul. 14
Aug. 14 Sept. 14
Oct. 14
Nov. 14
Dec. 14
Jan. 15
Feb. 15
Mar. 15
Apr. 15
May 15
1,873
1,700
1,400
1,100
859
800
650
350
236
250
June 24
June 25
June 26
June 29 June 30 1
3Nonoxygenated
10
Change,
%
June 30
YTD avg.
year ago1
YTD
average1
Change,
%
$/bbl
61.50
61.00
60.50
60.00
59.50
59.00
58.50
58.00
4 wk. avg.
year ago1
50
135
4/11/14
4/25/14
4/18/14
5/9/14
5/2/14
5/23/14
5/16/14
6/6/14
5/30/14
6/20/14
6/13/14
4/10/15
6/27/14
4/24/15
4/17/15
5/8/15
5/1/15
5/22/15
5/15/15
6/5/15
5/29/15
6/19/15
6/12/15
6/26/15
COMPLETION SOLUTIONS
COMPLETE
WITH
THE
LEADER.
Solving challenges.
12
14
PROCESSING Q U IC K TA K E S
SIBUR plans MTBE expansion at Togliattikauchuk
Russian conglomerate OAO SIBUR Holding, Moscow, has
started preparatory work for a project designed to expand production capacity for methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) at its
Togliattikauchuk petrochemical complex in Togliatti in Russias
Samara region.
The project, which involves construction of a new unit, will
increase MTBE production capacity at the plant to 135,000
tonnes/year from its current 75,000 tpy, SIBUR said.
As part of the expansion, SIBUR will install 58 pieces of
equipment, as well as upgrade existing equipment, with automated process-control systems to improve efficiency and safety
at the site, the company said.
Feedstock for Togliattis expanded MTBE production will
come from the plants own output of isobutaneisobutylene
fraction, which SIBUR said it will boost to 130,000 tpy from its
current 105,000 tpy.
Preparation of the construction site is under way, as is development of project documents for an upcoming tender the company
plans to issue for the purchase long-lead equipment, SIBUR said.
The expansion project comes as part of SIBURs companywide initiative to expand its MTBE production capacities to
help meet industry demand in regional fuel markets for octaneenhancing additives, the petrochemical producer said.
SIBUR disclosed no details regarding when the expanded
plant would be commissioned.
Quick
Coupling
Style
www.iri-oiltool.com
2014 Industrial Rubber, Inc. (PEN1407/0114)
Direct
Connect
Style
TRANSPORTATION Q U IC K TA K E S
Shell unit takes interest in Poseidon oil pipeline
Shell Midstream Partners LP has completed its acquisition of
36% equity interest in Poseidon Oil Pipeline Co. LLC from
Equilon Enterprises LLC, a subsidiary of Shell Oil Products US,
for $350 million.
Poseidon is a proprietary 367-mile offshore crude oil pipeline
with 350,000 b/d capacity transporting to Texas and Louisiana. It
includes ownership of strategic platform South Marsh Island 205.
This marks the second acquisition by Shell Midstream Partners following the initial public offering, said Peggy Montana,
general partner board member (OGJ Online, Apr. 30, 2015).
She said Poseidon is a key corridor pipeline for producers
with close proximity to developments in the central and western Gulf of Mexico.
16
18
ipaa.org/meetingsevents/ 5-7.
OCTOBER 2015
EGAS
Announcement For
Available data for review or purchase can be obtained from the Egyptian Natural Gas Holding
Company (EGAS) premises:
85 El Nasr Road, 1st District, Nasr City, Cairo Egypt, P.O. 11371
The purchase of data package for each block is considered a requirement to bid for that block.
Also the basic data, coordinates, procedures, terms and conditions and the Model Agreement
for participation in this Bid Round can be obtained through the Egyptian Natural Gas Holding
Company (EGAS) website : www.egas.com.eg
The closing date will be on Thursday, 30th July, 2015 before 12:00 P.M (Cairo local time)
For more information, please contact:
Vice Chairman for Agreements and Exploration
The Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company (EGAS) Tel.: +202 24055830/ 31 Fax: +202 24055832
E-mail: [email protected]
20
carbon-managementtechnology-conference-2015-cmtc-2015
17-19.
Turkmenistan International Oil & Gas
Conference (OGT),
Ashgabat, web site:
www.oilgas-events.
com/OGT 17-19.
Petroleum, Refining
& Environmental Monitoring Technologies
Conference Exhibition
& Seminars (PEFTEC),
Antwerp, web site:
www.peftec.com
18-19.
IADC Critical Issues
Asia Pacific Conference & Exhibition,
Singapore, web site:
www.iadc.org/event/
asia-pacific-2015
18-19.
SPE Latin America &
Caribbean Petroleum
Engineering Conference (LACPEC), Quito,
Ecuador, web site:
www.spe.org/events/
lacpec/2015/en/
18-20.
THE
KONG
RIGGER GRIP
CUT 5 GLOVE
3541
BEST USES
Rigging, Oil & Gas Drilling, Extraction & Refining, Fracking,
Tool Pushing, Mining, Demolition, Heavy Construction
502.774.6455
[email protected]
www.konggloves.com
JOURNALLY SPEAKING
BOB TIPPEE
Editor
22
of shale geology, geophysics, stimulation, and operations to optimize the production process would
potentially double the number of effective stages,
thereby doubling output per well and cutting the
cost of oil in half, Mills says.
He calculates that a doubling of well productivity
would cut break-even costs of most US shale plays
to $5-25/bbl and concludes, Americas shale fields
would then be competitive in volume and in price
with Saudi Arabias vaunted ultralow-cost oil fields.
Mills expects adoption of big-data analytics to
occur quickly and production from shale to be
buoyant in the meantime.
Although the rig count has plummeted, productivity gains evident before last years oil-price
plunge, supplemented by withdrawals from hefty
inventories, will sustain output. Returning to
more-normal stock levels, Mills reckons, could
mean nearly 500,000 b/d of oil from storage.
Supply also will come from wells awaiting completion, likely to total 5,000 by yearend. According
to Mills, those wells could swiftly add 2-3 million
b/d of oil to US supply.
Responding to the price drop, meanwhile, operators will progress from the repetitive, factorydrilling approach many of them employedoften
sacrificing innovation and efficiencywhile prices
were above $100/bbl to a high-grading strategy requiring analysis not only to modify techniques for
each well but also to use the best tools and techniques in only the best parts of the shale.
This step, Mills says, will disprove conventional
supply forecasts. Starting from historical averages
based on the many low-performing wells drilled
during the price boom, he explains, those predictions are too low.
Shale 2.0
While the high-grading strategy, leveraged by new
technologies, will affect supply powerfully, however,
it remains just a precursor to what Mills calls Shale
2.0, the emergence of which comes not from individual technologies or digital connectivity but from
the use of big data for radically better asset optimization and operations.
Someday, bytes thus might become a central metric in Oil & Gas Journals Midyear Forecast. This
years report, beginning on p. 26, sticks with barrels,
of which the market already has way too many.
For 50 years Ariel has worked diligently to cultivate and strengthen business
relationships with our suppliers, distributors, and end-users. By listening to
and collaborating with all levels of the industry, we are able to implement
timely innovations to our product line as the industry evolves, thereby securing
the companys position as the World Standard in Natural Gas Compression.
EDITORIAL
Considering cost
Consideration of cost in regulatory decision-making should be a simple matter of common sense. At
this moment in history, though, bureaucratic attention to economic consequence requires a ruling by
the Supreme Court.
With a margin of just one vote, the high court
upheld challenges to the Environmental Protection Agencys Mercury Air Toxics Standard
(MATS) on grounds of insufficient accounting for
cost. The decision, disclosed on June 29, is intellectually satisfying. But thats about all.
A broader problem
The court didnt reject the rule; it only said EPA
should have considered costs when it determined,
to satisfy the Clean Air Act, that applying MATS
regulation to power plants was appropriate and
necessary. The court also didnt address the broader problem: the agencys autonomous, multifront
campaign against hydrocarbon energy, starting
with coal.
There, the MATS already has done its work.
Its requirements, along with those of the Cross
State Air Pollution Rule and pending Clean Power
Program, have raised the costs of generating electricity from coal punishingly. During 3-plus years
of MATS judicial review, power companies have
been retiring coal-fired plants.
Offering modest comfort is the prospect that the
ruling will make EPA less willing to ignore cost in
other initiatives. Some observers expect the agency
be more careful about cost in its final Clean Power
Plan, covering emissions of greenhouse gases from
existing power plants.
But EPA has earned profound suspicion for its
analyses of costs and benefits. In the regulatory impact analysis accompanying the MATS, the agency
estimated costs to power plants at $9 billion/year
and benefits of lowering emissions of covered substances, to the extent it could assess them, at only
$4-6 million/year. Yet what EPA called ancillary
benefitsmainly reductions in emissions of sulfur dioxide and particulatescame to an estimated
$37-90 billion/year.
The higher benefit numbers made regulation
seem advantageous. But they were based mainly
on estimates of premature deaths averted by the
regulation. When policy-makers pretend to be
24
IF THEY
WHEN THEY WEAR IT,
ITS NOT
COMPLIANT.
There are no shortcuts when it comes to worker
compliance. Because you can see the big picture,
you must provide workers with FR garments that make
them less likely to cheat. With GlenGuard, you can
promise your workers lighter, more comfortable work
wear. Thats because we are dedicated to making
the lightest FR fabrics in the world. Its also why we
make sure our fabrics:
HAVE SUPERIOR BREATHABILITY
REDUCE THE RISK OF HEAT STRESS
ARE THE MOST COMFORTABLE IN THE INDUSTRY
WICK AWAY MOISTURE
ARE LIGHTWEIGHT
GLENGUARD.COM
F L A M E R E S I S TA N T FA B R I C S F O R W O R K W E A R
GENERAL INTEREST
Laura Bell
Statistics Editor
26
Table 1
2014
2015
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
Qtr.
Year
Qtr. Year
Million b/d
Demand
OECD
North America
Europe
Asia/Pacifc
Total OECD
23 9
13 0
89
45.7
23 6
13 4
77
44.7
24 2
13 9
77
45.8
24 5
13 6
83
46.3
24 0
13 5
81
45.6
24 2
13 6
87
46.5
23 8
13 5
78
45.1
24 3
13 9
79
46.1
24 5
13 6
83
46.5
24 2
13 7
82
46.0
Non-OECD
FSU
Europe
China
Other Asia
Latin America
Middle East
Africa
Total non-OECD
46
06
10 2
12 2
66
78
39
46.0
48
07
10 4
12 1
68
82
39
46.9
51
07
10 4
11 8
69
86
38
47.3
50
07
10 8
12 3
69
80
39
47.5
49
07
10 4
12 1
68
81
39
46.9
46
07
10 5
12 5
67
79
40
47.0
47
07
10 8
12 6
68
83
41
47.9
48
07
10 7
12 3
70
87
40
48.3
48
07
11 0
12 8
70
81
41
48.5
47
07
10 8
12 6
69
83
41
47.9
Total demand
91.7
91.6
93.1
93.8
92.6
93.5
93.1
94.3
95.0
94.0
Supply
OECD
North America
Europe
Asia
Total OECD
18 2
35
05
22.2
18 8
32
05
22.6
19 1
31
05
22.8
19 7
35
05
23.7
19 0
33
05
22.8
19 9
34
04
23.8
19 5
33
05
23.3
19 3
32
05
23.0
19 5
34
05
23.5
19 6
33
05
23.4
Non-OECD
FSU
Europe
China
Other Asia
Latin America
Middle East
Africa
Total non-OECD
13 9
01
42
35
42
14
23
29.8
13 8
01
42
35
43
13
23
29.6
13 8
01
42
34
45
13
23
29.7
13 9
01
43
36
46
13
23
30.2
13 9
01
42
35
44
13
23
29.8
14 0
01
43
37
46
13
24
30.5
14 0
01
43
37
45
12
23
30.2
13 8
01
42
37
45
12
23
29.9
13 8
01
42
38
45
12
23
30.0
13 9
01
43
37
45
12
23
30.1
Processing gain
Other biofuels
22
17
22
23
22
25
22
23
22
22
22
18
22
23
22
26
22
23
22
22
Total non-OPEC
55.9
56.6
57.2
58.3
57.0
58.3
58.0
57.7
57.9
58.0
OPEC
Crude
NGL
Total OPEC
30 0
63
36.3
30 1
63
36.4
30 5
64
37.0
30 5
65
37.0
30 3
64
36.7
30 5
65
37.0
31 3
66
37.9
31 3
66
37.9
30 8
67
37.5
31 0
66
37.6
Total supply
92.2
93.0
94.1
95.3
93.7
95.3
95.9
95.6
95.4
95.6
05
14
11
14
11
19
28
13
04
16
Stock change
Table 2
Year 2015
Volume
% change
1,000 b/d
from 20141
DEMAND
Motor gasoline
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
8,952
7,402
1,550
21
21
21
9,010
7,462
1,548
10
10
10
Jet fuel
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
1,515
1,064
451
58
58
55
1,503
1,058
445
22
22
22
Distillate
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
4,130
3,611
519
20
20
20
4,100
3,574
526
22
22
22
Residual
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
230
125
105
(5 7)
(5 7)
(5 7)
220
120
100
(14 4)
(14 4)
(14 4)
2,470
2,439
31
58
58
58
2,520
2,493
27
69
69
69
Other products
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
1,943
1,757
186
05
05
05
2,027
1,842
185
04
04
04
19,240
16,399
2,841
25
26
23
19,380
16,552
2,828
18
20
07
4,585
4,098
487
15 9
15 9
15 9
4,680
4,205
475
12 0
12 0
12 0
23,825
20,498
3,327
49
50
40
24,060
20,758
3,302
36
39
22
SUPPLY
Domestic production
Crude & condensate
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
9,482
8,347
1,135
13 1
15 0
06
9,450
8,318
1,132
85
94
22
NGL
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
3,140
3,071
69
11 1
11 1
93
3,180
3,113
67
73
73
73
12,622
11,418
1,204
12 6
14 0
11
12,630
11,431
1,199
82
88
24
1,050
1,029
21
(0 7)
(0 7)
(5 2)
1,060
1,037
23
(1 1)
(1 1)
(1 1)
Imports
Crude oil
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
7,173
6,098
1,075
(1 8)
(1 8)
(1 8)
7,150
6,080
1,070
(2 5)
(2 5)
(2 5)
2,178
2,005
173
12 4
12 4
13 2
2,050
1,858
192
88
88
76
Total Imports
Dist 1-4
Dist 5
9,351
8,103
1,248
12
14
9,200
7,938
1,262
(0 2)
(0 1)
(1 0)
1,025
850
175
(4 5)
(4 5)
(5 0)
1,045
864
181
(3 8)
(3 8)
(3 8)
24,048
21,401
2,647
65
73
02
23,935
21,271
2,664
38
43
03
223
903
(680)
(125)
514
(639)
15,850
16,130
17,880
90 2
21
18
(0 2)
25
15,980
16,280
17,920
90 8
09
08
03
05
1,256
788
468
692
15 2
11 6
21 9
(0 1)
1,215
776
439
692
42
05
11 4
01
IMPORT DEPENDENCY
Total imports % domestic demand
Net imports % domestic demand
48 6
24 8
47 5
23 3
27
GENERAL INTEREST
Table 3
Other
22,690
22,230
460
21
no negative effect from a strengthening US dollar, the spillover effect of low
Middle East
23,690
23,212
478
21
crude prices on private consumption
Australia
296
363
(67)
(18 5)
China
4,254
4,177
77
18
has been most significant in the US. In
India
768
774
(6)
(0 8)
Indonesia
794
795
(1)
(0 1)
2015s first 3 months, with West Texas
Malaysia
600
511
89
17 4
Intermediate averaging below $50/bbl,
Other
863
900
(37)
(4 1)
total US oil demand rose 480,000 b/d
Asia-Pacifc
7,575
7,520
55
07
year-on-year to 19.29 million b/d, acTotal world
77,131
75,122
2,009
27
counting for one third of the worlds
Source: Oil & Gas Journal
gain in oil demand in that quarter, according to EIA
data.
OPEC PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY
Table 4
However, as both lower price supMay 2015
Spare
ports and additional winter heating
Capacity
production
capacity
Country
1,000 b/d
demand fall out of the outlook, IEA
Algeria
1,140
1,110
30
forecasts OECD demand growth to deAngola
1,800
1,770
30
celerate through the end of the year.
Ecuador
570
550
20
SPECIAL
Iran
3,600
2,850
750
Crude oil demand throughout Asia
Iraq
3,900
3,850
50
REPORT
Kuwait
2,820
2,760
60
has been exceptionally strong over the
Libya
500
450
50
first quarter of 2015, as the Chinese reNigeria
1,920
1,760
160
Qatar
700
670
30
fineries increased run rates and strateSaudi Arabia
12,340
10,250
2,090
United Arab Emirates
2,940
2,870
70
gic reserves.
Venezuela
2,490
2,440
50
For the full year, IEA forecasts global oil demand to climb
Total OPEC
34,720
31,330
3,390
to 94 million b/d from the 2014 average of 92.6 million b/d.
Source: International Energy Agency
Demand will increase 400,000 b/d this year to 46 million
b/d in the OECD group and rise 1 million b/d in non-OECD
countries to 47.9 million b/d, with the largest increases in
can economies will continue as well, with persistent inflaChina and other Asian countries. Non-OECD countries will
tion, larger current account deficits, and foreign debts. Brazil
continue to be the main contributor to global oil demand
remains in the grip of recession.
gains.
First quarter
2015
2014
Change
Change,
1,000 b/d
%
28
X2
Twice the size, twice the capacity. AMERICAN Steel Pipe proudly boasts a new,
$70-million expansion, bringing its annual processing capacity to 700,000 net tons.
A brand new 150,000-square-foot processing facility houses the latest in technology,
including new end facing system to bevel the pipe, two hydrotesters, and two ultrasonic testing
machines. Mill upgrades include a new steel skelp leveler, weld stand, seam annealers,
flying cutoff, and marking system. Were pretty proud of our new addition, but
what does it mean to our customers? Shorter lead times for the highest quality
ERW steel pipe that money can buy. Made in America The Right Way.
GENERAL INTEREST
Table 5
Country
Type of
crude and
API gravity
May
2015,
$/bbl
Change
May 2015
Jan. 2015,
%
In effect
Jan.
2015,
$/bbl
Change
May 2015
June 2014,
%
In effect
June 1,
2014,
$/bbl
In effect
June 1,
2013,
$/bbl
In effect
June 1,
2012,
$/bbl
In effect
June 1,
2011,
$/bbl
In effect
June 1,
2010,
$/bbl
OPEC
Saudi Arabia
Abu Dhabi
Algeria
Nigeria
Libya
Arabian Light 34
Murban 39
Saharan 44
Bonny Light 37
Es Sider 37
62 62
66 18
64 12
65 31
63 22
40 8
36 7
33 8
34 6
35 2
44 47
48 41
47 91
48 51
46 76
(42 3)
(40 2)
(43 1)
(42 9)
(43 2)
108 61
110 74
112 66
114 36
111 31
101 30
102 61
102 07
106 12
103 07
94 51
96 76
94 69
97 19
96 04
111 16
113 33
116 62
117 74
113 72
70 56
74 78
73 97
75 61
74 22
OTHER
Indonesia
UK
Mexico
Russia
Minas 34
Brent Blend 38
Isthmus 33
Urals 32
62 98
64 32
63 78
64 33
35 8
34 4
40 1
36 8
46 37
47 86
45 52
47 03
(43 8)
(40 5)
(40 1)
(41 2)
112 13
108 03
106 47
109 44
103 19
102 92
104 08
102 74
104 83
95 19
93 16
93 81
120 12
115 59
109 97
113 55
76 99
73 26
72 14
72 23
Year
1978
1980
1985
1990
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015*
Table 6
Average
wellhead
crude
price,
$/bbl
Refners
acquisition
cost of
crude,
$/bbl
Retail
motor
gasoline,
all types,
/gal
On
highway
diesel
fuel
/gal
Jet
fuel and
kerosine (ex
cluding tax),
/gal
9 00
21 59
24 09
20 03
14 62
18 46
17 23
10 87
15 56
26 72
21 84
22 51
27 56
36 77
50 28
59 69
66 52
94 04
56 35
74 71
95 73
94 52
95 99
87 39
46 98
12 46
28 07
26 75
22 22
17 23
20 71
19 04
12 52
17 51
28 26
22 95
24 10
28 53
36 98
50 24
60 24
67 94
94 74
59 29
76 69
101 87
100 93
100 49
91 98
55 68
65 2
122 1
119 6
121 7
120 5
128 8
129 1
111 5
122 1
156 3
153 1
144 1
163 8
192 3
233 8
263 5
284 9
331 7
240 1
283 6
357 7
369 5
358 4
342 5
251 4
110 9
149 1
140 1
131 9
150 9
181 0
240 2
270 5
288 5
380 3
246 7
299 2
384 0
396 8
392 2
382 5
283 7
38 7
86 8
79 6
76 6
54 0
65 1
61 3
45 2
54 3
89 9
77 5
72 1
87 2
120 7
173 5
199 8
216 5
305 2
170 4
220 1
305 4
310 4
297 9
277 2
186 3
*OGJ estimate
Source: US Energy Information Administration, for 1978-2014 data
Tehran
could boost exports by 1 mil
2 49
OGJ forecasts that following this
2 09
2 27
years
first quarter supply of 30.5 mil4 31
3 96
lion b/d, crude output by the organi3 38
zation will average 31.3 million b/d
5 47
5 89
in the second and third quarters and
8 69
6 73
then ease to 30.8 million b/d in this
6 97
years fourth quarter.
8 86
3 94
Non-OPEC production is forecast
4 37
4 00
to
increase
to 58 million b/d in 2015
2 75
3 73
from 57 million b/d a year earlier. IEA
4 36
expects non-OPEC supply to decline
3 02
in the second half of the year compared with an increase in the first half,
leading to yearly growth of 1 million
b/d, which is one third of growth witnessed in 2014.
OECD commercial inventories built up 38 million
bbl in April, ending at a 147-million bbl surplus vs.
the 5-year average level, the widest since April 2009.
Henry Hub
natural
gas spot
price
$/MMBTU
OPEC has continued to surpass its collective production output quota on a monthly basis over the
course of this years first and second quarters, aiming to squeeze out competitors and regain market
Crude oil prices
share.
Crude oil prices have started to recover from the
At the organizations June 5 meeting in Vienna,
low levels witnessed at the beginning of the year,
SPECIAL
members decided to maintain their collective outdriven by increasing demand, stock draws in the
REPORT
put quota of 30 million b/d for the next 6 months,
US, conflict in the Middle East, and expectations
although actual production has surpassed that levfor an easing of US light, tight oil output growth.
el by upwards of 1.3 million b/d.
In May, North Sea Brent and WTI crude oil spot
Elevated production could persist for at least the next few
prices averaged $64.08/bbl and $59.26/bbl, respectively,
months, considering the desire to defend market share, reup from a respective average of $47.76/bbl and $47.22/bbl
cent rig count activity in key countries, and rising local sumin January. However, the upside was limited by still plenti-
30
GENERAL INTEREST
FIG. 1
FIG. 1a
FIG. 1b
96
2.5
China
OECD
95
2.0
1.5
Supply
Million, b/d
Million, b/d
94
93
Demand
92
0.5
91
0.0
90
-0.5
89
-1.0
2012
2013
2014
2015
2012
2.95
2.90
41.0
2.85
Production
40.5
%
30.50
30.25
Billion, bbl
30.75
2013
FIG. 1c
41.5
31.00
Million, b/d
1.0
2014
2015
FIG. 1d
Max/Min. 2010-14
Average 2010-14
2014
2015
2.80
2.75
2.70
40.0
2.65
30.00
39.5
29.75
Market share
2.55
39.0
29.50
2013
2.60
2014
2.50
Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Aug.Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec.
US energy demand
Total US energy demand will rise 0.4% to 98.88 quadrillion
btu (quads), and energy efficiency will improve to 6,027 btu/
dollar of GDP from last years rate of 6,121 btu/dollar of GDP.
31
GENERAL INTEREST
FIG. 2
120
110
Brent
100
WTI
$/bbl
90
80
US oil demand
70
60
50
40
2013
2014
2015
Source: Bloomberg, EIA, OGJ analysis. Confdence Interval derived from price of future options for the 5 trading days ending June 4, 2015
FIG. 3
1,600
10
1,500
US oil rig count
1,300
8
1,200
1,100
1,000
900
Million, b/d
1,400
800
5
700
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
Million, b/d
2.0
US
Other
Total
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.0
2012
32
2013
2014
2015
GENERAL INTEREST
FIG. 4
FIG. 4a
Gasoline
Max/Min 2010-14
Average 2010-14
2014
2015
450
425
400
240
235
230
Million, bbl
475
Million, bbl
FIG. 4b
245
500
225
220
215
375
210
350
325
205
Distillate
FIG. 4c
180
4.0
170
3.5
160
3.0
150
2.5
FIG. 4d
Tcf
Million, bbl
200
140
2.0
130
1.5
120
1.0
110
0.5
33
GENERAL INTEREST
5,385.4
6,450.4
7,593.8
8,955.0
10,174.8
12,559.7
12,682.2
12,908.8
13,271.1
13,773.5
14,234.2
14,613.8
14,873.7
14,830.4
14,418.7
14,783.8
15,020.6
15,369.2
15,710.3
16,085.6
16,407.3
Energy
Energy
consumption
consumption
per GDP,
(trillion
2009 dollar
btu)
(Mbtu)
71,965
78,067
76,392
84,485
91,032
98,819
96,172
97,647
97,921
100,094
100,193
99,492
101,027
98,906
94,138
97,480
96,902
94,487
97,255
98,459
98,880
13.4
12.1
10.1
9.4
8.9
7.9
7.6
7.6
7.4
7.3
7.0
6.8
6.8
6.7
6.5
6.6
6.5
6.1
6.2
6.1
6.0
Table 7
Oil
energy
consumption
(trillion
btu)
Oil energy
consumption
per GDP,
2009 dollar
(Mbtu)
32,732
34,205
30,925
33,552
34,441
38,266
38,190
38,226
38,790
40,227
40,303
39,824
39,491
36,907
34,959
35,489
34,824
34,016
34,613
34,783
35,426
6.1
5.3
4.1
3.7
3.4
3.0
3.0
3.0
2.9
2.9
2.8
2.7
2.7
2.5
2.4
2.4
2.3
2.2
2.2
2.2
2.2
Natural
gas energy
consumption
(trillion
btu)
Natural gas
energy
consumption
per GDP,
2009 dollar
(Mbtu)
19,948
20,235
17,703
19,603
22,671
23,824
22,773
23,510
22,831
22,923
22,565
22,239
23,663
23,843
23,416
24,575
24,955
26,089
26,819
27,592
28,337
3.7
3.1
2.3
2.2
2.2
1.9
1.8
1.8
1.7
1.7
1.6
1.5
1.6
1.6
1.6
1.7
1.7
1.7
1.7
1.7
1.7
Total
oil and
natural gas
energy
consumption
(trillion
btu)
Total
oil and
gas energy
consumption
per GDP,
2009 dollar
(Mbtu)
52,680
54,440
48,628
53,155
57,112
62,090
60,963
61,736
61,621
63,150
62,868
62,063
63,154
60,750
58,375
60,064
59,779
60,105
61,432
62,375
63,763
9.8
8.4
6.4
5.9
5.6
4.9
4.8
4.8
4.6
4.6
4.4
4.2
4.2
4.1
4.0
4.1
4.0
3.9
3.9
3.9
3.9
Oil and
natural gas
energy
% of total
energy
73.2
69.7
63.7
62.9
62.7
62.8
63.4
63.2
62.9
63.1
62.7
62.4
62.5
61.4
62.0
61.6
61.7
63.6
63.2
63.4
64.5
*OGJ estimate.
Source: US Energy Information Administration
US ENERGY DEMAND
Table 8
2014
2015*
Trillion btu
Oil . . . . . . . . . .
Gas . . . . . . . . . .
Coal . . . . . . . . .
Nuclear. . . . . . .
Hydro, other
renewables . . .
Total
Change,
%
Share, %
2014
2015
34,783
27,592
17,991
8,329
35,426
28,337
16,790
8,500
1.8
2.7
(6.7)
2.1
35.3
28.0
18.3
8.5
35.8
28.7
17.0
8.6
9,622
98,459
9,827
98,880
2.1
04
9.8
100 0
9.9
100 0
SPECIAL
REPORT
*OGJ estimate.
Source: 2014 US Energy Information Administration
Totals may not equal sum of components due to independent rounding
Table 9
2012
2013
2014
bcf
2015,
bcf
% change,
2015/2014
Production
Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Louisiana . . . . . . . . . . . .
Federal Gulf of Mexico . .
Other states . . . . . . . . . .
Total production
7,475
2,955
1,508
13,345
25,283
7,545
2,407
1,309
14,430
25,691
7,750
1,982
1,231
16,308
27,271
2.7
(17.7)
(6.0)
13.0
62
8,100
1,845
1,210
17,745
28,900
4.5
(6.9)
(1.7)
8.8
60
Imports . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Canada . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Mexico . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
LNG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total imports
2,962
175
3,137
2,785
1
97
2,883
2,634
1
59
2,694
(5.4)
0.0
(39.2)
(6 6)
2,530
1
93
2,624
(3.9)
0.0
57.6
(2 6)
Supplemental gas . . . . . .
61
Losses, etc.* . . . . . . . . . . (1,315)
Total new supply
27,166
55
(1,435)
27,194
56
(1,427)
28,594
1.8
(0.6)
51
58
(1,512)
30,070
3.6
6.0
52
(9)
27,157
546
27,740
(252)
28,342
22
(650)
29,420
38
Exports . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total consumption
1,619
25,538
1,572
26,168
1,524
26,818
(3.1)
25
1,890
27,530
24.0
27
34
% change,
2014/2013
Imports, exports
Total US imports of crude and products will average 9.2 million b/d this
year, down slightly (0.2%) from last
year. Product imports will increase
8.8%, and crude imports will decrease
2.5%.
During this years first quarter, US
total petroleum imports increased 2%
over the same period the prior year to
average nearly 9.4 million b/d. Crude
oil imports were down 0.9% from the
prior year, falling to 7.27 million b/d.
GENERAL INTEREST
Imports of refined products were up 13% to nearly 2.1 million b/d.
Canada is the No. 1 crude oil exporter to the US, representing 39% of all exports in 2014 with 2.885 million b/d. During this years first quarter, crude imports from Canada averaged 3.223 million b/d, up 11.7% from the 2014 annual
average.
With the startup of two major pipelines that move Canadian heavy crude to
the Gulf Coast, Enbridge Inc.s 600,000-b/d Illinois-to-Oklahoma Flanagan South
Pipeline, and Enterprise Products Partners 450,000-b/d Oklahoma-to-Texas Seaway Twin, more crude from Canada is expected to arrive and compete with other
imports on the Gulf Coast.
Crude imports from Saudi Arabia, the No. 2 exporter, were down 21.1% to
915,000 b/d. This follows a 12.5% decrease in 2014. Total crude imports from
OPEC member countries dropped 16.5% in this years first quarter, following a
14.3% decrease last year.
The growth in refined product imports was mainly driven by motor gasoline
imports. According to data from the American Petroleum Institute, total motor
gasoline imports increased 11.2% year-over-year for the first 5 months of 2015.
Product imports from Canada surged 39.6% in the first quarter to 702,000 b/d.
OGJ forecasts that the US will export 4.68 million b/d of crude oil and petroleum products, up 12% from last year. Crude oil exports averaged 445,000 b/d
in the first quarter of 2015, up from 243,700 b/d in the first quarter of last year.
Product exports averaged 4.02 million b/d in the first quarter vs. 3.6 million b/d
a year earlier.
US crude exports have included modest amounts of Canadian-produced crude
that was moved through the US and reexported.
US oil inventories
At midyear, industry crude oil stocks stood at 468 million
bbl, up from 383.8 million bbl at the same time in 2014.
Crude in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve totaled 692 million bbl.
According to OGJs estimates, at the close of this years
first half, distillate stocks were up almost 10% from a year
earlier to 133.7 million bbl. Total gasoline stocks were up
1.1% from mid-2014 to 221.3 million bbl. Jet fuel and residual fuel oil stocks were up from year-ago levels while stocks
of unfinished oils fell.
Volumes of crude and oil products in storage will finish
2015 higher than a year earlier. OGJ forecasts that crude in
industry stocks will be 439 million bbl, and products will
total 776 million bbl compared with a respective 394 million bbl and 772 million bbl at yearend 2014.
Refining
Increased refinery runs, capacity, and utilization have
helped accommodate increases in US crude oil production.
For year to date, refinery gross inputs were up 1.8%
compared with year to date 2014. Gross inputs to refineries averaged a record 16.1 million b/d in 2014 compared
with 15.1 million b/d in 2010. According to EIAs recently
released annual Refinery Capacity Report, nearly 75% of
the 1 million b/d increase in refinery gross inputs is the
result of a four percentage point increase in refinery uti-
Table 10
46
20
20
6
1,837
26
139
18
1,190
64
365
35
5,722
29
18
1,325
70
395
3,885
753
297
90
121
245
1,124
515
608
1
9,482
34
15
16
3
1,431
25
129
22
886
21
323
25
4,572
28
18
1,239
65
289
2,933
531
174
79
97
181
1,117
523
593
1
7,685
35 3
33 3
25 0
100 0
28 4
40
78
(18 2)
34 3
204 8
13 0
40 0
25 2
36
69
77
36 7
32 5
41 8
70 7
13 9
24 7
35 4
06
(1 5)
25
23 4
US REFINERY UTILIZATION
Table 11
Input to
Crude
distillation
Operable Utilization
runs
units
capacity
rate,
1,000 b/d
%
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015*
1990-2015 change
Volume
Percent
2014-15 change
Volume
Percent
12,854
13,246
13,401
13,409
13,301
13,411
13,613
13,866
13,973
14,195
14,662
14,889
14,804
15,067
15,128
14,947
15,304
15,475
15,220
15,242
15,156
14,648
14,336
14,724
14,806
14,999
15,312
15,849
15,980
13,003
13,447
13,551
13,610
13,508
13,600
13,851
14,032
14,119
14,337
14,838
15,113
15,080
15,299
15,352
15,180
15,508
15,783
15,578
15,602
15,450
15,027
14,659
15,177
15,289
15,373
15,724
16,145
16,280
15,642
15,927
15,701
15,623
15,707
15,460
15,143
15,150
15,346
15,239
15,594
15,802
16,282
16,525
16,582
16,744
16,748
16,974
17,196
17,385
17,450
17,607
17,678
17,575
17,736
17,328
17,818
17,859
17,920
83 1
84 4
86 3
87 1
86 0
87 9
91 5
92 6
92 0
94 1
95 2
95 6
92 6
92 6
92 6
90 7
92 6
93 0
90 6
89 7
88 5
85 3
82 9
86 4
86 2
88 7
88 3
90 4
90 8
2,571
19 2
2,670
19 6
2,297
14 7
131
08
135
08
61
03
35
GENERAL INTEREST
US IMPORTS
Table 12
First
quarter
average
2015,
1,000 b/d
Change
15/14,
%
Annual
average
2014,
1,000 b/d
Change
14/13,
%
Annual
average
2013,
1,000 b/d
13
37
06
12 6
98
64
34 3
94
269
41
915
717
465
2,501
(30 9)
28 1
(30 5)
(21 1)
(2 2)
(33 4)
(16 5)
136
210
59
1,159
733
698
2,995
(32 3)
(9 5)
(75 3)
(12 5)
(2 9)
(5 8)
(14 3)
201
232
239
1,325
755
741
3,493
44 3
57
02
10 4
02
01
02
47
100 0
3,223
413
13
761
13
4
15
340
7,283
11 7
40 5
(35 0)
(2 6)
44 4
(20 0)
50 0
56
(0 7)
2,885
294
16
20
781
9
5
10
322
7,337
11 9
(19 9)
(33 3)
11 1
(8 1)
(47 1)
(37 5)
(52 4)
(8 5)
(5 1)
2,579
1
367
24
18
850
17
8
21
352
7,730
Share of
total
2015
%
Country
42
10
23
27
10 2
89
22
49
57
217
(14 4)
214 3
(12 5)
(8 1)
(5 2)
104
7
56
62
229
20 9
75 0
77
(27 1)
09
86
4
52
85
227
33 1
06
34
52 7
100 0
702
12
71
1,116
2,118
39 6
(25 0)
16 4
61
12 4
503
23
16
61
1,052
1,884
(10 7)
45
23 1
(10 3)
(14 7)
(11 5)
563
22
13
68
2
1,234
2,129
Change
15/14,
%
Table 13
1
2014,
1,000 bbl
1
2013,
1,000 bbl
Motor gasoline
Jet fuel
Distillate fuel oil
Residual fuel oil
Unfnished oils
Other
221,300
39,800
133,700
40,100
83,900
269,200
11
97
99
94
(3 9)
13 1
218,830
36,293
121,674
36,657
87,325
238,037
(2 7)
(10 3)
(0 5)
(2 1)
07
17
224,911
40,459
122,334
37,453
86,759
234,105
788,000
67
738,816
(1 0)
746,021
468,000
21 9
383,886
22
375,689
1,256,000
11 9
1,122,702
01
1,121,710
Crude stocks
Total
1
36
Change
14/13,
%
recently completed
construction of one
of the few new refineries built in the US
in the past 30 years.
SPECIAL
Delek US plans to
REPORT
increase crude distillation unit capacity by 10,000 b/d at
its Tyler, Tex., refinery, and Marathon
Petroleum Corp. reported that it plans
to add 35,000 b/d in condensate splitter capacity at its Catlettsburg, Ky., refinery by yearend.
Refinery utilization will average
90.8% this year on operable capacity of
17.92 million b/d, OGJ forecasts. Last
year, refineries ran at 90.4% of capacity on average. A combination of factors
is holding utilization high, including a
strong rise in gasoline demand, high
margins in the face of low input costs,
and good exports opportunities.
For the first 5 months of this year,
the Gulf Coast cash refining margin
averaged $11.81/bbl, up 22% from a
year earlier, according to Muse, Stancil & Co. And East Coast and West
Coast margins averaged $5.87/bbl
and $22.88/bbl, respectively, compared with a respective $2.74/bbl and
$15.12/bbl during the first 5 months
of 2014. However, as infrastructure
builds out, some of the crude price
advantages for Midcontinent refiners
erode, resulting in less excessive margins from a year earlier.
The average composite cost of
crude oil for US refiners in this years
first half was estimated at $51.05/bbl,
down from $98.70/bbl a year earlier.
GENERAL INTEREST
to gas in generating electric power, coal plant retirements,
and to a smaller extent the increased gas consumption by
industry, particularly in petrochemical production. According to Bentek Energy, year-to-date gas-power burn is up 3.1
bcfd, or 12%. Residental and commercial demand will decline this year compared with a 4% increase last year.
The total count of rigs targeting gas fell to 223 for the
week ending June 19, according to Baker Hughes Inc. data.
Since the start of 2015, the number of gas rigs fell 105
units. However, gas rigs seem to have stabilized in the past
2 months.
Despite of the drop in drilling activity, market production of gas continues to climb, reflecting increases in drilling efficiency and new systems coming online to move gas
out of producing shale areas. Output from the Marcellus
shale will contribute to a large portion of 2015 production
growth.
The pace of gas production growth, however, is to decelerate slightly in 2015, driven by lower associated gas production combined with reduced activity.
From 2010 to 2014, US gas exports to Mexico doubled
in response to declining Mexican production, increasing
Mexican demand for gas, and rising US production. Mexi-
Opposition to natural gas projects has moved from exploration and production to transportation, speakers said during
a discussion on Capitol Hill of US gas infrastructure needs.
Pipeline opposition has become a stand-in for opposition to
fossil fuels for some groups, said Kim Watson, Kinder Morgan Inc.s (KMI) eastern pipeline group president.
Attacking hydraulic fracturing hasnt worked, so opponents have focused on attacking pipelines, Watson told attendees at a June 24 forum sponsored by the US House Natural Gas Caucus. Theyre using the same scare stories and
misinformation they tried upstream.
George Stark, external affairs director for Cabot Oil & Gas
Corp.s eastern US operations, said, The resource is stranded.
We have the supplies ready to be produced in Pennsylvania
and West Virginia. They wont be affected by Gulf Coast hurricanes. All we lack is the capacity to get it to customers.
Cabot has fewer rigs drilling wells on its Appalachian
leases in 2015 than it did in 2013 and 2014, Stark told OGJ
following the event. That would change with approval of two
pending pipeline projects with capacity to transport 500
MMcfd each, he said.
Gas prices climb when theres not enough pipeline capacity, Watson said. New England has paid more than $7 billion in the last 2 years than what it would have with access to
supplies in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Ohio, she said.
Yet opponents have been saying that pipelines shouldnt be
built because consumers would be paying too much.
Referring to TransCanada Corp.s proposed Keystone XL
crude oil pipeline, David Mallino, legislative director for the
Laborers International Union of North America, said, Were
seeing Keystone-like fights on every gas pipeline thats being
proposed. We know the goal of some folks is to strand the
resource. If it cant get to market, it will stay in the ground.
37
GENERAL INTEREST
could reach 3.5-4.7 bcfd by 2025, she said.
Watson said that by 2035, KMI expects another $641 billion of transportation systems will be required: $313 billion
for gas, $272 billion for crude, and the remainder for natural
gas liquids. Modern pipeline development is more complicated and takes longer than in the past, she noted.
Stark, who also appeared on Americas Natural Gas Alliances behalf, confirmed this as he used the proposed $650
million Constitution Pipeline from Marcellus shale fields in
Pennsylvania to Schenectady, NY, as an example. Cabot and
Williams Cos. Inc. announced a joint venture for the 124mile, 30-in. project in February 2012 (WGL Holdings and
Piedmont Natural Gas Co. subsequently became participants) and began its prefiling process with the US Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission in April.
Ground surveys began that June, and Constitution began
its public open houses, FERC scoping meetings, and easement negotiations that fall before submitting its 7(c) application to FERC, Stark said. FERC issued a final environmental
impact statement for the project in October 2014 and followed that with a project certification order in December.
38
GENERAL INTEREST
Corp. said in a June 29 letter to US Sec. of State John F. Kerry
and two senior State Department officials.
Given the passage of time, the facts supporting the proposed project have continued to build, Kristine Delkus,
TransCanadas executive vice-president and general counsel,
said in the letter to Kerry; Amos Hochstein, special envoy
and coordinator for international energy affairs at DOSs Bureau of Energy Resources; and Judith G. Garber, acting assistant secretary for oceans and international environmental
and scientific affairs.
For this reason, as a prudent applicant, TransCanada believes it is necessary to provide [DOS] with updated information on recent developments, Delkus said. These developments include:
The Canadian governments May 15 announcement
that it intends to cut greenhouse gas emissions to 30% below
2005 levels by 2030. The government also plans to develop
additional regulatory measures, including rules aligned with
recently proposed US steps to reduce methane emissions
from oil and gas operations, Delkus said.
The Alberta governments announcement that it will
THEYLL NEED IT
SOON. WHICH MEANS
YOU NEED IT NOW.
Nows the time to equip your crew with the 2112-certied outerwear to power through
winters worst. Head to toe, nothing outworks Carhartt. United we outwork them all.
39
GENERAL INTEREST
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Albertas plans to invest more than $1.3 billion (Can.)
over 15 years in two large-scale, oil sands-related carbon capture and storage projectsthe Alberta Carbon Trunk Line
and Quest Projects. The projects will start up in 2015 and
store 2.76 million tonnes/year of carbon dioxide, or the equivalent of taking 550,000 cars/year off the road, Delkus said.
The letter was sent close to the fifth anniversary of the
start of the Keystone Pipelines operations from Alberta to
refineries in Illinois and the Gulf Coast, which has safely
transported nearly 1 billion bbl of Canadian and US crude
oil since 2010 after receiving a presidential permit in 2
years, TransCanada said on June 30.
40
Natural gas faces growing competition from coal and renewable energy sources at a time when its potential demand
growth is slowing down, an International Energy Agency official said. The last large contracts for [LNG] were signed
in 2014 just before oil prices collapsed. We believe it is still
41
GENERAL INTEREST
competitive, but there are risks, said Laszlo Varro, who
heads IEAs gas, coal and power markets division.
LNG is the only option besides pipelines to transport
large amounts of gas from country to country, but its very
expensive, Varro said during a June 25 presentation at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies. The coal industry in the United States is dreaming of the day when gas
prices go $5/MMbtu higher, because it costs more than that
to transport US LNG to Europe and Asia.
Varro spoke 3 weeks after IEA said in its 2015 MediumTerm Gas Market Report that global demand would rise 2%/
year through 2020, down from the 2.3%/year it projected in
its year-earlier forecast. It said weaker gas demand in Asia,
where persistently high gas prices caused users to switch to
other options until very recently, was behind the downward
revision.
Varro noted that based on contracts for actual projects,
the new question is whether LNG is competitive with wind
and solar particularly in countries along the equator. You
do need flexibility in power systems because the wind
doesnt always blow and the sun doesnt always shine, he
told the CSIS audience. That changes gass role to a backup,
and makes it compete with coal.
Renewable energy technology is improving as new wind
turbines are designed to generate less electricity in heavy
winds and more in lighter winds, Varro said. Solar photovoltaics face daily and seasonal challenges: In many countries,
85% of SV power is generated between March and October.
In Europe, half of gas-powered generation is cogeneration
which runs during the winter, he said.
Forty-five US Senate Democrats outlined broad energy policy goals including more clean energy technology investments, infrastructure improvement, and carbon pollution
reduction in a letter seeking support from the nations governors.
Your feedback will help us collectively craft a path forward on an energy policy that unleashes Americas limitless capacity for innovation, rewards middle-class families
for making smart energy choices, and keeps our air and
water clean for generations to come, Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (Nev.), Energy and Natural Resources
42
GENERAL INTEREST
We must cut pollution and end needless waste in both
the way we use energy, and in the way in which governments
execute our energy policy objectives, the Senate Democrats
said. Finally, we must continue to make foundational investments in the research and development that ensure US
businesses will successfully compete in growing global markets for new energy products and services.
Their letter came less than a month before the National Governors Association holds its 2015 summer meeting
July 23-26 in West Virginia. US Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee Chair Lisa Murkowski (R-Alas.) has
made passage of comprehensive energy legislation her top
priority for this year.
We recognize that the success of our efforts to address
todays challenges and tomorrows opportunities will continue to rely on a foundational partnership between federal policymakers and states, the Senate Democrats told the
governors. As such, we seek your input on policies consistent with these shared principles, to help guide our consideration of reasonable, common-sense updates to our nations
energy policy.
Flow Assurance.
Its what we do.
US House committee
leaders send letters to
Plains, PHMSA about leak
Nick Snow
Washington Editor
PRODUCTION CHEMISTRY
FLUID FLOW
OPERATIONS SUPPORT
Houston +1.832.500.3456
Denver +1.303.228.9484
www.assuredflowsolutionsllc.com
GENERAL INTEREST
clude other potential costs, including all third-party claims,
fines, penalties or regulatory or court proceedings or lost
revenues.
In a June 25 letter to PAA Chief Executive Greg Armstrong, House committee members sought information
about the companys maintenance and integrity operations
on the pipeline.
A handful from this group of lawmakers sent a second
letter the same day to White House Office of Management
and Budget Director Shaun Donovan as well as PHMSA Interim Executive Director Stacy Cummings seeking an update on what they said are long overdue gas and hazardous
liquid pipeline safety rules under the 2011 Pipeline Safety
Act that are still awaiting action.
Seventeen of 42 mandates under that law have not been
implemented, they noted. Many include rulemakings relating to integrity and maintenance programs; decisions
concerning expansion of such programs; guidance on risk
assessment intervals; and rules concerning automatic and
remote shutoff valves, leak detection, and accident notification, among other actions, the lawmakers said.
Officials from both the Association of Oil Pipelines and
the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America have told
OGJ that congressional pipeline safety hearings appear likely this summer.
Climate-change strategy
Royalty review
The New Democratic Party, which defeated the long-ruling
Progressive Conservatives in an election May 5, has named
Dave Mowat, president and chief executive officer of ATB
Financial, Edmonton, chair of the provinces royalty-review
advisory panel.
44
GENERAL INTEREST
Deliverability matters.
Flow Assurance.
Its what we do.
Recommended actions
It recommended that DOI take steps to address data limitations, track its review process, provide clarifying guidance,
and evaluate whether grants are effective. GAO said the department generally agreed with most but not all of the recommendations because it is taking other actions to address
some data limitations.
Washingtons poor record-keeping and lack of consistency is slowing down natural resource development for
tribes, said US Senate Indian Affairs Committee Chairman
John A. Barrasso (R-Wyo.), who requested the report.
US House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Rob
PRODUCTION CHEMISTRY
FLUID FLOW
OPERATIONS SUPPORT
Houston +1.832.500.3456
Denver +1.303.228.9484
www.assuredflowsolutionsllc.com
GENERAL INTEREST
Bishop (R-Utah) called GAOs report the latest black mark
against [BIA]. He said that his committee also would work
to ensure that [DOI] is held to account for this gross mismanagement and neglect toward tribal communities.
where these are better than Euro IV, produce naphtha for
the aromatics plant, and equip the refinery to produce bitumen and petcoke (OGJ Online, July 18, 2014).
Detailed plans
46
GENERAL INTEREST
PRODUCTION CHEMISTRY
FLUID FLOW
OPERATIONS SUPPORT
Houston +1.832.500.3456
Denver +1.303.228.9484
www.assuredflowsolutionsllc.com
TECHNOLOGY
Newfoundland, Labrador
prepare for deepwater exploration
Tayvis Dunnahoe
Exploration Editor
Historical
FIG. 1
900
1,800
2D acquired (Norway)
2D acquired (NL)
700
1,200
600
1,000
500
800
400
600
300
400
200
2001
1995
1989
1977
1971
1965
100
2007
2010
200
1,400
1983
800
1,600
Newfoundland and Labradors offshore sedimentary basins consist of more than 910,000 sq km
(350,000 sq miles). According to Nalcor President
and Chief Executive Officer Ed Martin, in an interview with OGJ, Newfoundlands offshore is parallel to the North Sea in size and scope.
Development of Newfoundland and Labradors geologically varied offshore basins began in the late 1960s, about
the same time as the North Sea. Newfoundland and Labradors offshore area is comparable in size to the North Sea,
but lags considerably in the amount of seismic data and development wells.
Regulatory uncertainties in the 1970s and 1980s slowed
Newfoundland and Labradors offshore development, according to Martin. By 2010, the Norwegian North Sea had
seen more than 1.6 million km of 2D seismic acquired, with
more than 800 exploration wells drilled, according to Nalcor. Offshore Newfoundland accounted for slightly more
than 600,000 km of 2D seismic and has had only 155 wildcats drilled in its history. Less than 20% of these were in
deep water.
In the UK sector of the North Sea, roughly one well has
been drilled per 139 sq km of 2D seismic. For Norway this
rate is 461 sq km/well. Newfoundland has one well drilled
per 4,396 sq km of 2D seismic, according to Nalcor.
There is an unexplored potential in Newfoundland and
Labradors offshore acreage, Martin said.
Newfoundlands exploration and appraisal wells have
found 19.8 million bbl of oil on average, compared with Norways 27.1 million bbl/well. The underexplored region has
potential, as further seismic studies isolate areas of interest
and decrease uncertainty.
Production built in the North Sea through the 1990s with
EXPLORATION &
DEVELOPMENT
48
KNIT
CUT RESISTANCE
Nitrile dipped and textured
palm provides CE level 3
cut resistance.
IMPACT
PROTECTION
Full-coverage Thermal Plastic
Rubber (TPR) knuckle guard.
THE ORHD
KNIT CR3
PINCH-POINT
PROTECTION
CUT LEVEL 3
GRIP
Nitrile dipped and textured
palm provides enhanced grip
in dry, oily and wet conditions.
CUT RESISTANCE
13-gauge knitted shell delivers
CE level 5 cut resistance.
THE ORHD
PINCH-POINT
PROTECTION
Thermal Plastic Rubber
(TPR) extends to the tip
of each nger.
KNIT CR5
CUT LEVEL 5
#mechanix
TECHNOLOGY
UK North Sea
Norwegian North Sea
Newfoundland Atlantic margin
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
Norway reaching more than 3 million b/d in 2001. Newfoundland and Labradors offshore production began in
1997 and peaked in 2007 at 500,000 b/d (Fig. 3). The key
takeaway is that while Newfoundland has seen fewer wells,
its finding success is similar to that of the UK and Norwegian sectors of the North Sea, Martin said.
50
1997
1993
1989
1985
1981
1977
1973
1969
1965
500
2009
2005
2014
2001
2000
Flemish Pass
The three most recent discoveries off NewfoundlandMizzen, Bay du Nord, and Harpoonwere made in Flemish
Pass basin by Statoil ASA in 2013. The discovery region lies
100-200 km northeast of Jeanne DArc basin and about 400
km from St. Johns in 1,100 m of water. Mizzen holds an estimated 100-200 million bbl of oil. Bay du Nord holds 300-
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 4
1970s
FIG. 4a
January 2013
FIG. 4b
GREENLAND
Saglek
GREENLAND
Saglek
Henley
Nain
Chidley
Nain
Labrador Sea
Labrador Sea
Hopedale
Hopedale
Hawke
Cartwright
Hawke
Cartwright
LABRADOR
Holton
LABRADOR
Miles
186
Km
300
Orphan
NEWFOUNDLAND
Miles
186
Km
300
Orphan
NEWFOUNDLAND
Pseudo frontier
From an analysts perspective, Canadas eastern provinces
are not frontier exploration territories. Offshore Newfoundland and Labrador has been producing oil for 17 years, and
weve developed a full suite of technology and approaches for
this environment, Wright said. Much of the region exists in
a frontier status, however, due to the underexplored nature
of most of its acreage. As early as the 1970s, many of the
productive basins on the continental shelf were known, but
as of January 2013, at least three new basins had been identified in newly imaged slope and deepwater regions (Fig. 4).
Ongoing projects such as Hebron and proven production
from current producing fields provide a safe landing for operators looking to move into the region for exploration drilling. Statoil, ExxonMobil, Suncor, and Husky are active in
projects off Newfoundland.
Even with the current decline in oil prices, offshore Newfoundland will likely be an investment risk worth taking.
51
TECHNOLOGY
Keep in mind that investing involves risk. The value of your investment will uctuate
over time and you may gain or lose money.
Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, Member NYSE, SIPC. 2015 FMR LLC. All rights reserved. 726211.1.0
Limiting uncertainty
Part of Nalcors mission in extending
successful development of Newfoundland and Labradors offshore resources is making sure it keeps pace with
resource assessment. Nalcor, in collaboration with Newfoundland and
Labraodors Department of Natural
Resources, will conduct detailed resource assessments in advance of new
scheduled license round closings. The
state-owned company has contracted
France-based firm Beicip-Franlab to
provide risk and unrisked resource reports on each new sector. The first will
come out in September before the November 2015 round closing.
Our primary goal is to reduce uncertainty for potential investors, providing an objective externally validated resource perspective on the acreage
up for bidding, Wright said. To further that goal, Nalcor also has joined
with Canadian firm C-CORE, a harshenvironment consulting company. The
partnership is aggregating 30 years of
metocean data for the Newfoundland
and Labrador offshore region, including information on ice flow, wind,
waves, and other hazards associated
with the harsh environment. The researchers have divided Newfoundlands offshore territory into 391 cells,
with metocean data provided for each
individual cell.
Constructed as an analysis of surface conditions, this study is intended
to link to offshore exploration plans to
compare harsh conditions with other
harsh environments globally. According to Wright, the report will be released in mid-2015.
TECHNOLOGY
Liupanshan
basin
Yishan slope
Jinxi
fexure
zone
Lvliang
Mountain
uplift zone
Weihe
graben
Weibei
uplift
Qin Mountain
fold belt
0
0
40-60 m
Tianhuan
syncline
Study
area
30-60 m
West-edge
obduction
Yangchi
zone
Lower Permian
Yimeng uplift
Member 1
PetroChina Changqing
Oilfield Co.
Xian, China
Shihezi formation
Member 8
Liu Xinshe
Han Peng
30-50 m
Hetao
graben
45-70 m
Member 7
Yinshan
fold belt
Member 2
Southwest Petroleum
University
Chengdu, China
FIG. 1
Shanxi formation
Zhou Shichao
Wang Xingzhi
62 Miles
100 Km
53
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 2
FIG. 2a
Test sample
90
75
z,
art
Qu
z,
art
50
25
50
Feldspar, %
75
ts,
ts,
25
75
en
Qu
50
gm
fra
en
50
Feldspar, %
ck
gm
25
Ro
fra
ck
50
3
25
Ro
50
10
75
25
25
90
10
FIG. 2b
75
75
*1=Quartz sandstone; 2=Feldspathic quartz sandstone; 3=lithic quartz sandstone; 4=Feldspar lithic quartz sandstone; 5=Feldspar sandstone; 6=Lithic feldspar; 7=Feldspathic litharenite; 8=Lithic sandstone.
%
Quartz
Feldspar
Lithic
67
11
22
Table 1
Lithic content, %
Magmatic
Metamorphic
Sedimentary
15.7
53
31.3
74.1
1.1
24.8
36.8
35.4
27.8
71
0.2
28.8
6.6
44.6
48.8
70.7
4.1
25.2
19.7
44.33
35.97
Yanchi area
At present, methods such as heavy mineral analysis, paleocurrent direction, geochemistry, clastic rock classification,
54
lithic composition analysis, sandstone composition, and fission track dating are available for analyzing source data in a
specific basin.2-4
Researchers have put forward many views concerning the
development of circumbasin material, tectonic setting, and
general source direction in adjacent formations and areas of
Ordos basin, but few have carried out studies on the source
of the Yanchi area to the west of Sulige gas field.5 6
On the basis of previous research, this article analyzes
parent rock properties and tectonic setting with a discussion
about the sedimentary source direction and the condition
of mixed sources in Member 8 of the Shihezi formation and
Member 1 of Shanxi formation, in the Yanchi area.
This work provides a theoretical basis for future oil and
gas exploration in the Yanchi area by deploying a variety
of source analysis methods, including sandstone mineral
composition, quartz cathodoluminescence, heavy mineral
assemblage, identifying rare earth elements (REE), trace elements, and measuring zircon ages and paleocurrent direc-
TECHNOLOGY
tion. In addition, the study of these
data provides an inferred form of the
mixed source area by employing uniformitarianism.
The sediment body in the river
course found in the Lower Permian of
the Yanchi area shows a regular pattern of spreading in a NW-SE direction. Therefore, the area is divided into
three regions from West to East: Areas
1, 2, and 3 (Fig. 1).
PROVENANCE ANALYSIS*
FIG. 3
QmFLt*
FIG. 3a
Om
11%
90
20%
75
43%
42%
50%
50%
Mineral composition,
characteristics
47%
23%
13%
50%
Lt
QtFL
FIG. 3b
Qt
Qt = Total quartz granules
F = Total single-crystal feldspar
L = Unsteady rock debris
P = Anorthose
V = Volcanic cinder
Test sample
Recycled orogen
provenances
B>
Decreasing maturity
or stability
B<
Increasing rating of
ocean to continental
materials
V>P
P>V
QpLvLs
FIG. 3c
Qp
Qp = Polycrystalline quartz
debris (including frestone)
Subduction combination
sources
ic
en
og
qr
s
nd
sa
18%
13%
18%
d
ixe
M
32%
29%
Craton interior
Transitional continental
Basement uplift
Quartzose recycled
Mixed
Dissected arc
Transitional arc
Undissected arc
Transitional recycled
Lithic recycled
Qm = Monocrystalline quartz
F = Total single-crystal feldspar
Lt = Total lithic fragments
Test sample
Lv
Collision sature
fold-thrust sources
Ls
*Vertices of this triangle equal 100% with the opposite side, or base, equaling 0%. The midpoint of each tangent equals 50%. Starting from the vertices,
parallel to the base, if a point falls within <50% of the range, its content expression is 100% minus the percentage number of the axes. If >50%, its
content expression is the percentage number of the axes.
55
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 4
Su298
Su399
100
Su301
M6
TS1
Su147
Li2
Li5
Area 1
Area 2
Su403
Su423
40
L5 S404
Area 3
Su282
Wells
100
Area 2
North
South
Lian6
ZTR, %
80
Su424
60
40
20
0
S399
LH1
TS1
L2
Wells
56
60
Su404
Zircon
Leucoxene
Garnet
Tourmaline
Magnetite
20
Su303
Yanchi
80
ZTR, %
LH1
Northern areas
ELEMENTS
Co
Cobalt
Cr
Chromium
Eu
Europium
Hf
Hafnium
Ho
Holmium
La
Lanthanum
Sc
Scandium
Th
Thorium
Uranium
Yttrium
Yb
Ytterbium
Zr
Zirconium
type of source area and the identification of tectonic settings.2 11 Source indicators for sediment typically include Zr,
Th, Sc, and Y (Figs. 7-8).
The age distribution of zircon uranium-lead (U-Pb) in
the clastic rock reflects the magma-metamorphism that
occurred in the source area, further reflecting the structure of tectonic layers. The composition of sources during
sedimentation of layers can be deduced by comparing the
age information obtained from the zircon in the sediment
TECHNOLOGY
100
Kimberlite
Sedimentary or
metamorphic rocks
Alkaline
basalt
10
Granite
basalt
area
Basalt area
Chondrite
Continental
tholeiite
1
Oceanic
tholeiite
Shihezi Member 8
Shanxi Member 1
0
1
10
100
1,000
10,000
Samples, REE106
FIG. 5
1,000
Table 2
Yanchi area
Magmatite Metamorphics Sedimentary
7
28.4
64.6
12.2
25.6
62.1
57
TECHNOLOGY
1,000
FIG. 6
E29
Li7
Su404
Su421
100
10
1
Area 2
Area 1
La
Ce
Pr
Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb
Dy
Area 3
Yanchi
Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
E29
Area 2 samples,
chondrite
1,000
100
Su335
Li7
Su403
10
Su404
1
La
Ce
Pr
Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb
Dy
Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
Su310
Su255
Lian6
1,000
Area 3 samples,
chondrite
Li4
Li4
Su403
Su310
Su335
Su255
Lian6
Su126
100
Su421
Su126
10
1
Wellsite
La
Ce
Pr
Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb
Dy
Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
Wells
E 29
Area 1
Li 7
Su 404
Yu Tan 2
Area 2
Formation
8-Shihezi
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
8-Shihezi
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
Characteristics
Dark brown or disphotic, little purple
Dark brown or disphotic
Dark or light brown or little indigo-purple
Dark brown or disphotic
Dark brown or little purple
Light brown, little disphotic or purple
Brown, little disphotic
Dark brown or purple & little disphotic
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
Li 4
Su 179
Area 3
Su 319
Su 147
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
1-Shanxi
8-Shihezi
58
Table 3
Tectonic settings
The distribution patterns of the sedimentary basin and the
source area are controlled by tectonic structure to a considerable extent. Therefore, the composition and structural
characteristics of clastic sediment in the sedimentary basin
TECHNOLOGY
Co/Th
La/Th
59
TECHNOLOGY
the western section of the Yin Mountains archicontinent in the north. The
Th
Th
central portion of Area 2 is a mixed
source region, combining source characteristics from both directions, with
shallow-medium metamorphic quartz
grains, quartz of magmatic rock origin, and a predominant sedimentary
C
quartz. The heavy mineral assemblagC
es in 15 wells in the Yanchi area show
D
D
B
a broad variation of characteristics
B
across all three study areas (Fig. 4).
A
A
Test sample
Test sample
The heavy mineral assemblage in
Zr/10
Co
Zr/10 Sc
Areas 1 and 3 is zircon + leucosphenite
La
+ garnet, while that in the mixedsource Area 2 is mainly dominated by
tourmaline + zircon + leucosphenite.
Its abundant tourmaline content is
C+D
A = Oceanic island arc
different from other regions. A higher
B = Continental island arc
ZTR index indicates higher maturity.9
B
C = Active continental margin
Comparison of Area 2 with Areas 1
D = Passive continental margin
A
and 3 in terms of their ZTR indices
for 10 northern wells, shows Area 2s
index as lower than Area 1 or 3. A
Test sample
comparison of the ZTR indices of nine
Th
Sc
wells in Area 2 reveals that the ZTR
index in the northern portion is lower
than that in the south. The maturity
the measurement and calibration of the field outcrop paof the heavy minerals increases from north to south. More
leocurrent direction in Member 8 of Shihezi formation and
than 10 sample wells in the research area were selected for
Member 1 of Shanxi formation in the northwest of the recomparison with REEs in the field profile and the basin pesearch area (Hulusitai profile: 144-189; and Qianlishan
riphery. The researchers discovered that REE distribution in
profile: 92-165)(Fig. 10). This demonstrates that the main
Area 1 shows characteristics of serious depletion of Eu, Ho,
paleocurrent direction at the northwestern field profile is
and other heavy REEs.
NW-SE, showing a source from the northwest direction.
The main source for Area 1 is the Alxa in the northwest,
When taken together with the data from Zaozhuang at the
and Area 3 is highly affected by the source in the north of
northeastern field profile of the research area, the measured
the basin, which is demonstrated by the depletion in Eu, endata indicate that the main paleocurrent direction is NErichment in light REEs, and slight depletion in heavy REEs.15
SW.15 According to the measurement results of the mineral
The curve for Area 2 is smooth, with no depletion in Eu. The
composition, cathode luminescence, and Permian paleocurmixed source area is wedge-shaped and formed under the
rent, the source of the Yanchi area commonly consists from
influences of the Alxa and Yinshan from the NW and north,
the Alxa direction in the northwest and from the Yin Mounrespectively (Fig. 6).
tains direction in the north.
Mixed source
The comparison of the cathodoluminescence characteristics
of quartz in Areas 1, 2, and 3 indicate that the degree of metamorphism of the metamorphic rocks changes from shallow
to deep from west to east (Table 3). The quartz grains in the
origin of the western portion of Area 1 are consistent with
a source feed from the Alxa area in the northwest. Quartz
grains from the eastern portion of Area 3 are affected by
60
FIG. 8
Age determination
On the basis of uniformitarianism, the Yanchi area is sourced
from two directions. The source runoff and the amounts
of material from Alxa and Yin Mountains form the mixed
source Yanchi in a fusiform S, with two pointed ends and a
wider middle portion (Fig. 10).
The original data this study employed for dating orogenic
belts in the research area and zircon U-Pb isotopes in the
basin had already been collected to provide evidence of
ages for comparison between orogenic belts and the basin
and the approximate location of the source area.13 16 Com-
TECHNOLOGY
Percentage
2,600
206Pb/238U
2,200
0.4
1,800
1,400
0.2
1,000
600
200
0
8
207Pb/235U
12
0.4
0.2
0.0
0
16
20
20
16
16
12
8
4
0
600
1,400
1,000
12
16
12
8
4
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
500
1,000
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
207Pb/235U
References
1. Zhao, H., and Liu, C., Approaches and Prospects of
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
207Pb/235U
Th/U
Th/U
2,600
200
207Pb/235U
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
1,800
2,200
207Pb/235U
Percentage
206Pb/238U
0.6
0.0
FIG. 9
Lian54
Li4
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
207Pb/235U
61
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 10
62
TECHNOLOGY
The authors
Zhou Shichao ([email protected]) is a
PhD student at the College of Earth Science and
Technology, Southwest Petroleum University,
Chengdu. She holds a BE from Southwest Petroleum University (2009), and achieved her ME
from Southwest Petroleum University in 2012.
Wang Xingzhi ([email protected]) is a professor and doctoral supervisor at the College of
Earth Science and Technology, Southwest Petroleum University, Chengdu. He serves as the
deputy dean of the College of Earth Science and
Technology, Southwest Petroleum University.
He also serves as the leader of Sichuan provinces Academic and Technical Council, as the deputy director
of CNPCs carbonate key laboratory, and deputy director of
Ministry of Land and Resources sedimentary basin and oil and
gas resources key laboratory. He received a PhD from the China
University of Petroleum, Beijing, in 1996. He is a member of the
China Mineral Rock Geochemical Lithofacies Paleogeographic
professional committee and of the China Unconventional Oil
and Gas professional committee.
Liu Xinshe ([email protected]) is a senior engineer of exploration geology and deputy
chief geologist at the Institute of Exploration,
Development, and Research of PetroChina Co.
Ltd.s Changqing Oilfield Branch, Xian, China.
He holds a PhD from the Northwest University,
Xian.
Han Peng ([email protected]) is
an engineer of exploration geology at the Institute of Exploration, Development, and Research
of PetroChina Co. Ltd.s Changqing Oilfield
Branch, Xian. He holds an MS from Northwest
University, Xian.
KIMRAY READY
WHEN YOU ARE
Kimray has been partnering with our customers to make control
work for 67 years. Through industry ups and downs, Kimray
remains ready to provide quality products, technical training and
excellent service. Our diverse and experienced team is poised for
action and focused on your needs. We are ready when you are.
Connect with us at Kimray.com.
Kimray.com
2015 Kimray, Inc. MKSL-0234
TECHNOLOGY
Rick Mauro
Scot Evans
Halliburton Co.
Houston
Laredo Petroleum Inc.s Permian-Garden City asbasins multi-stacked horizontal targets available
set is an unconventional resource play with more
for development.
than four potential stacked zones covering a 1,700
square-mile fairway in five counties in the Midland
Garden City
basin, Texas. Early in the plays evolution, TulsaLaredo has developed extensive acreage on the east
based Laredo recognized the need to develop a
side of the Midland basin with interest in more
DRILLING &
proprietary database along with a process to charthan 350 sections representing 178,000 gross and
PRODUCTION
acterize each targeted reservoir.
148,000 net acres with most concentrated in GlassThis article describes a multi-domain model
cock and Reagan counties. Producing intervals to
that Laredo, assisted by Halliburton Co., used to
date include the vertical Wolfberry interval and
define the potential for the Permian-Garden City acreage.
the horizontal Wolfcamp shale (Upper, Middle, Lower), the
The model represents an integrated workflow combining
Cline shale, and Canyon formations. Additional horizontal
geoscience and engineering data with multivariate statistics.
targets include the shallower Spraberry, the Strawn, and the
The process began with acquisition of high-quality data
deeper Atoka-Bend-Woodford (ABW) zones.
including 3D seismic, microseismic, cores, well completion
With an average combined thickness of more than 5,000
and production histories, and petrophysical information.
vertical ft for all of the targeted zones, the Midland basin is
The data were then analyzed, processed, and incorporated
unique among US shale plays.
into a predictive three-dimensional (3D) model. The result,
Early success with horizontal wells in both the Wolfcamp
demonstrated here, is a tool used in the planning of develand Cline intervals encouraged Laredo Petroleum to build a
opment wells to optimize initial production rates and estilarge technical database from which to pursue early efforts
mated ultimate reserves and yield a better understanding of
to increase production and execute a full drilling program.
the complexities of a multi-zone stacked resource.
All the targeted zones have flowed oil to the surface from offsetting vertical wells, but horizontal drilling and hydraulic
Midland basin
fracturing have made these objectives economically viable.
Conventional production began in the Permian basin in the
Keeping in mind the goal of having an economic program
1920s and now covers more than 86,000 square miles in
that took advantage of what each stacked horizontal target
West Texas and southeast New Mexico. Fig. 1 presents the
had to offer, Laredo Petroleum understood that the number
geologic architecture of the basin, showing the subdivision
of horizontal wells to be drilled, the capital commitment it
into the Delaware and Midland basins by the Central basin
would take, and the associated operational considerations
platform. Laredo Petroleums acreage in the eastern half of
made integrated development planning mandatory.
the Midland basin is high lighted in red.
Conventional production in the Permian comes from sevEarth-model program
eral horizons ranging in age from Permian down to OrdoLaredo Petroleum invested in extensive data capture over
vician. Beginning in 2008, Laredo Petroleum targeted the
its entire Garden City asset that included geophysical (3D
more basinal source rock and tight carbonate reservoirs of
seismic, gravity and magnetic data, and microseismic surthe Wolfcamp and Cline formations, using horizontal drillveys), logs (conventional openhole and dipole), cores (whole
ing and hydraulic fracturing. Fig. 2 illustrates the Midland
and sidewall), and well testing data (single zone and produc-
64
tion tests). A key element of the Laredo PetroleumHalliburton partnership is integrating these data into a 3D
geologic earth model, then using it to
support decisions about well spacing,
lateral length, and hydraulic fracturing
design.
The program has two phases:
Phase 1 focuses on the initial
coarser scale assessment of the overall
Garden City area.
Phase 2 focuses on a detailed pilot area identified in the first phase.
The goal is ultimately to drill the
best wells, as soon as possible, and determine the most efficient ways to accelerate that drilling for maximum net
present value.
Lubbock
Northwest
shelf
New
Mexico
Snyder
Lamesa
Texas
Sweetwater
Big Spring
Central basin
platform
Eastern
shelf
Midland
Midland
basin
EM: Phase 1
The first phase confirmed previous
work by Laredo Petroleum, focusing
on the Wolfcamp and Cline formations in the Midland basin through
attribute modeling of well and petrophysical data and using the extensive
3D seismic data Laredo Petroleum had
acquired over Garden City.
Results from Phase 1 also provided
insights into well spacing and prioritization of leases based on subsurface
modeling and dynamic simulations
including integration of microseismic,
petrophysics and core data, production and history matching with dynamic simulation of producing wells,
and geomechanical properties and
fracture modeling.
One of Laredo Petroleums goals
in Phase 1 was to obtain an overview
of the rock property heterogeneity in
each Wolfcamp and Cline zone over
much of the asset. This process identified potential sweet spots based on
such static-model indicators as hydrocarbon pore volume (HCPV) and geomechanical properties.
But a lack of production history
over the acreage base made direct correlations to potentially indicative rock
properties difficult. Laredo Petroleum
and Halliburton recognized the need
for a specific pilot program in which
better production data were available
FIG. 1
Delaware
basin
San Angelo
Area
shown
US
Ozona
arch
Sheffeld channel
Laredo leasehold
FIG. 2
Clearfork
Spraberry
Dean
Upper
Wolfcamp
Middle
Wolfcamp
Lower
Wolfcamp
Canyon
Penn
Cline
Stawn
ABW
Fusselman
65
TECHNOLOGY
Forsan
Lomax
FIG. 4
Howard
Mitchell
Martin
Howard
Howard
Glasscock
Lees
Garden City
Howard
Glasscock Sterling
Glasscock
Reagan
Stiles
Laredo leasehold
Reagan
Irion
10 miles
to validate results. Fig. 3 illustrates an example of the variation in HCPV for one Wolfcamp interval.
Results from Phase 1 highlighted how the earth model
process could assist in well planning to build potential field
development scenarios and estimate corresponding bud-
66
FIG. 3
EM: Phase 2
The second phase focused on a specific planning area (Fig.
4), which has served as the primary pilot area for expanding the scope of the earth model and statistically tying the
results to actual well production.
Phase 2s focus has also been to provide a higher resolution understanding of such reservoir attributes as brittleness, total organic carbon, and HCPV based on actual well
data and newly acquired and reprocessed full-wide azimuth
seismic data. We analyzed more than 80 seismic, petrophysical, and engineering attributes to gain insight into those
that would highlight the most productive intervals within
each formation. Fig. 5 shows the general workflow for the
earth-model process.
A key feature of Phase 2 was to add production data and
history for dynamic reservoir simulation and add detail to
the static model listed above. The goal was to correlate the
patterns discerned from the static data with actual productivity results and to use multivariate statistics to help develop a predictive model. Shale resource plays are characterized by a wide variety of petrophysical properties both well
and seismically derived. Robust multivariate statistics indicate which properties affect production, inclusion of many of
which did not at first seem intuitive. Fig. 5 shows the general
inputs.
Dynamic reservoir simulations then provide further understanding of reservoir performance and then these history-matched dynamic models refine both horizontal and
vertical spacing in a multi-stacked, target-rich environment.
The heterogeneity of the producing rocks from all the prospective Wolfcamp and Cline intervals is better understood
by use of the earth model and allows Laredo Petroleums development program to be based on lower drilling and operating costs.
Laredo Petroleum used the fully integrated earth model developed in Phase 2 both in identifying overall sweet
spots (both vertically and horizontally) and in picking
landing points and geosteering the horizontal laterals. As
Fig. 6 illustrates, the model, now tuned to integrate static
properties and production results, is used to improve lateral
placement within a given reservoir and the corresponding
TECHNOLOGY
EARTH-MODEL WORKFLOW
Inputs
FIG. 5
Seismic inversion,
petrophysical modeling
Layer-based modeling
Reservoir-properties model
Seismic horizons
Formation tops
Petrophysical data
Seismic attributes
Completion data
Results
Production data
Optimized wellbore
geometries
Geosteering
(stay-in zone)
Frac design,
spacing
FIG. 6
3
4
4
Intrawell vertical,
horizontal spacing
5
Lateral length
ideal landing point. The model then guides real-time geosteering, ensuring that the well maximizes contact with the
most productive reservoir areas as opposed to more common
industry practice of landing the well without steering and
hoping hydraulic fracturing will touch enough productive
reservoir rock to generate sufficient production.
67
TECHNOLOGY
PRODUCTION CORRELATION
200
175
Predicted production,* %
150
125
100
75
Avoid lower
productive zones
50
25
0
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
Actual production,* %
*90-day oil production.
Comparison
Actual results
Model prediction
46,302
45,985
68
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 9
50,000
20,000
Acknowledgment
The authors acknowledge Global Geophysical, Houston, for
its contribution and collaboration on Phase 2 of the project.
The authors
Patrick J. Curth ([email protected]) has
been senior vice-president, exploration and
land, at Laredo Petroleum Inc., Tulsa, since
October 2006. Before joining Laredo, he joined
Latigo Petroleum Inc. in 2000 as exploration
manager and served as vice-president, exploration, when Latigo was sold in May 2006. He
was vice-president, exploration, 1997-2001, at
Lariat Petroleum. Curth holds a bachelor of arts in geology from
Windham College, Putney, Vt., a masters in geological sciences
from the University of WisconsinMilwaukee, and a masters
in environmental sciences from Oklahoma State University,
Stillwater.
69
TECHNOLOGY
Benjamin Nussdorf
US Department of Energy
Washington
Technology spawned the recent boom in US oil and gas production which in turn led to new regulations that
keep the environment and people safe. That same
dedication to innovation will enable oil and gas
Air emissions, drinking water
companies to partner with regulators and meet the
Under the Clean Air Act, EPA regulates natural gas
new requirements.
industry air emissions by establishing new source
The environmental concerns over oil and gas
performance standards for various categories of
production, specifically unconventional producnew and newly modified stationary sources of air
tion such as hydraulic fracturing, are well known.
pollutants.1 It also regulates emissions of hazardDRILLING &
Water and air pollution and water conservation
ous air pollutants (HAPs).2
PRODUCTION
concerns are close to the front of the minds of operThe EPA issued a final rule, Oil and Natural
ators, regulators, and environmental groups. Each
Gas Sector: New Source Performance Standards
seeks continual and comprehensive improvement.
and National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Rigorous standards and best practices through efficient
Air Pollutants Reviews, imposing new emissions requiremonitoring and strict regulation can mitigate potential enviments on hydraulically fractured natural gas wells effective
ronmental risks. Alongside proper state and federal regulaJan. 1.3
FIG. 1
25
CO2
20
15
10
Change/year, %
-5
Change/year, %
-10
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
70
TECHNOLOGY
300
FIG. 2
200
100
0
2000
2002
2004
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
Industry responds
Innovative and advanced water treatment equipment is gradually supplanting traditional extraction and treatment technologies. Companies are developing more efficient means to
clean and recycle drilling water on site, as well as engineering more environmentally friendly drilling solutions.
Hydraulic fracturing is particularly water intensive. As
several regions in the US have experienced drought conditions, the need for efficient and effective water management
and treatment technologies has come to the fore.
Some oil and gas companies have taken a strong step to
green the hydraulic fracturing process through electrocoagulation (EC), as well and by using downhole drilling solutions with active ingredients from the food industry.
EC treatment applies an electric current across metal
plates to remove contaminants from water. The water might
Green completions
Methane emissions from the oil and gas industry continue
to be a concern. Natural gas is the cleanest burning fossil
fuel and is less carbon-intensive than alternative fuels. Despite this, gas well completions release VOCs, HAPs, and
methane.
The oil and gas industry has adopted special completion methods, known as green completions, to reduce
these emissions. Green completions capture gas flowback
that would otherwise be vented or flared. Instead, the gas is
cleaned and routed to the flowline or a collection system to
be reinjected into the well or another oil or gas well.
71
TECHNOLOGY
FIG. 3
Petroleum
175
Natural gas
Coal
159
135
Several states require the use of green-completion technology, and others address this issue by including best-management practices in their permitting processes. Companies
can also use captured gas as an on site fuel source or for
other purposes.
In August 2012, EPA unveiled rules revising NSPS and
HAPs standards for oil and gas production. EPA, under the
Clean Air Act, must review the NSPS every 8 years.
These new standards, implemented in January, require
companies to capture natural gas and VOCs that escape when
they prepare hydraulically fractured gas wells for production.
Reduced-emission completions capture or burn emissions, including methane, during the initial phase of water
flowback from hydraulic fracturing operations.
The EPA estimates these rules will result in the capture
of about 95% of the VOCs emitted from 11,400 newly fraced
and 1,400 refracture wells.4
Equipment to capture the emissions will require increased capital investment from the oil and gas industry.
EPA, however, estimates a net average savings of $11-19 million/company/year if companies sell captured gas (including
propane and LNG) and condensate in the market.4
Plunger lift systems, desiccant dehydrators, vapor recovery units, and various monitoring and repair technologies
are also being deployed to address the new regulatory requirements.
New rules also demand reductions in emissions from
equipment such as processing plants, storage tanks, and
certain pipeline compressors. The rules provide several reporting and notification requirements but only apply to well
72
References
1. 42 US Code 7411 - Standards of performance for new
stationary sources, 1970.
TECHNOLOGY
2. 42 US Code 7412 Hazardous air pollutants, 1970.
3. Oil and Natural Gas Sector: New Source Performance
Standards and National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants Reviews, Federal Register, Vol. 77, Issue 159, Aug.
16, 2012.
4. Overview of Final Amendments to Air Regulations for
the Oil and Natural Gas Industry, US Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 17, 2012.
5. Safe Drinking Water Act, Public Law 109-58, 322,
2005.
6. 42 US Code Part C Protection of underground
sources of drinking water, 1974.
7. Presidents Climate Action Plan, Executive Office of
the US President, June 2013.
8. Scheyder, E., Bakken Flaring Burns More than $100
Million a Month, Reuters, July 29, 2013.
9. 30 US Code 181- Mineral Leasing Act, 1920.
The authors
Bennett Resnik ([email protected]) has
worked in both public and private sectors,
focusing on federal and state energy and environmental regulation, government affairs, and
domestic public policy matters. He holds a JD
from Vermont Law School, a certificate in energy
innovation and emerging technologies from
Stanford University, California, and a BA from James Madison
University, Harrisonburg, Virginia.
Benjamin Nussdorf ([email protected]) is a senior
regulatory advisor with the US Department of Energy, Office of
Fossil Energy, and a lecturer at the Washington College of Law,
George Washington University Law School, Washington, DC.
He holds a JD from American University Washington College of
Law, Washington and a BA from the University of Pennsylvania.
DELIVERING
GLOBAL
SOLUTIONS FOR
E &P CHALLENGES
Drilling & Completion
Well Control
Reservoir & Production
+1.713.956.0956 Sierra-Hamilton.com
73
TECHNOLOGY
Royal Dutch Shell PLC has concluded a long-planned upgrade and expansion of its ethylene cracker complex (ECC) on Bukom
Island, Singapore, which along with the nearby 462,000-b/d Pulau Bukom refinery and 750,000-tonne/year monoethylene glycol
plant on Jurong Island, forms part of the companys integrated Shell Eastern Petrochemicals Complex. The upgraded ECC now has
an ethylene production capacity of more than 1 million tpy. Photo from Shell.
74
Low-cost feed
supports North
American ethylene
expansion plans
Robert Brelsford
Downstream Technology
Editor
75
TECHNOLOGY
Company
Formosa Petrochemical Corp.
Nova Chemicals Corp.
Arabian Petrochemical Co.
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
ChevronPhillips Chemical Co.
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Ineos Olefns & Polymers
Equistar Chemicals LP
Yanbu Petrochemical Co.
Table 1
Location
Capacity, tpy
Mailian, Taiwan, China
2,935,000
Joffre, Alta.
2,811,792
Jubail, Saudi Arabia
2,250,000
Baytown, Tex.
2,200,000
Sweeny, Tex.
1,950,113
Jurong Island
1,900,000
Terneuzen, Netherlands 1,800,000
Chocolate Bayou, Tex.
1,752,000
Channelview, Tex.
1,750,000
Yanbu, Saudi Arabia
1,705,000
The survey
Table 1 shows rankings of the 10 largest ethylene production
complexes in the world. The order for 2015 changed from
2014 amid revised data submitted from operators as well as
OGJs enhanced data collection efforts.
Table 2 ranks ethylene production capacity by region; Table 3 shows changes for individual countries between 2014
and 2015.
Table 4 lists the top 10 owners of ethylene capacity worldwide. The first column of capacities presents them for assets
owned entirely by one company; the second column reflects
the total of actual percentages for companies in joint ownership.
The exclusive, plant-by-plant ethylene production table,
based on OGJs survey, follows this article.
North America
Rising NGL supplies alongside projections for further
growth in long-term production from unconventional shale
development continued to support ethylene capacity expansion plans in North America despite a weaker crude oil price
environment (OGJ, June 1, 2015, p. 58; OGJ Online, May
12, 2015).
Late in 2014, Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP (CPCC)
completed installation of a furnace at its Sweeny petrochemical complex in Old Ocean, Tex., to expand ethylene production by 200 million lb/year, or about 91,000 tpy (OGJ
Online, Dec. 11, 2014).
The addition of the tenth furnace to Ethylene Unit 33
completes the Sweeny plants ethylene expansion project,
which began in 2013 (OGJ Online, June 3, 2013).
76
With the furnace now commissioned, the Sweeny complex has ethylene production capacity of about 4.3 billion lb/
year, or 1.95 million tpy.
Completion of the Sweeny project represents the next increment of expansion to the companys ethylene business,
which will include start-up of the US Gulf Coast petrochemicals project in 2017 as well as incremental growth of
CPCCs olefins derivative businesses, said Dave Smith, vicepresident of CPCCs olefins and natural gas liquids division.
CPCCs Gulf Coast expansion project includes the construction of an ethane cracker at the companys Cedar Bayou plant in Baytown, Tex., as well as two polyethylene (PE)
units with capacities of 1.1 billion lb/year (about 499,000
tpy) each at its Sweeny complex (OGJ Online, June 18, 2014;
Apr. 8, 2014).
The company also announced a study to boost the Cedar
Bayou plants production capacity of low-viscosity polyalphaolefins to 58,000 tpy from its current capacity of 48,000
tpy (OGJ Online, Nov. 7, 2014). If approved, the expansion
project is targeted for completion in 2016, CPCC said.
In February, LyondellBasell announced completion of an
800 million-lb/year (363,000-tpy) expansion at its ethylene
plant in La Porte, Tex. (OGJ Online, July 1, 2013).
Commissioning of the expansion, which was scheduled
to occur last summer (OGJ Online, May 2, 2014), took place
during third-quarter 2014, the company said in its annual
report to investors.
The postponed start-up resulted from a delay in the completion of extensive scheduled maintenance at the La Porte
plant during second-quarter 2014 after a mechanical issue
with a compressor (OGJ Online, July 28, 2014).
The La Porte project is one of four planned ethylene expansions LyondellBassel has undertaken, which also include
two possible projects at its plant in Channelview, Tex., and
one at its Corpus Christi, Tex., plant, all of which are benefitting from rising North American shale gas production
(OGJ Online, May 2, 2014).
During third-quarter 2014, LyondellBasell said it had begun preliminary engineering work to assess the feasibility of
an expansion project at its Channelview plant that possibly
could add as much as 550 million lb/year (249,000 tpy) of
ethylene capacity, according to a Sept. 24, 2014, company
release. If approved, the project would be completed sometime in 2017.
The proposed expansion project would be in addition to
work already under way to install two large cracking furnaces at the Channelview site that will increase the plants
ethylene capacity by 250 million lb/year (113,000 tpy). This
initial expansion at Channelview is to be commissioned
sometime this year, the company recently told investors.
An 800 million-lb/year (363,000-tpy) expansion project
at LyondellBasells Corpus Christi ethylene plant is scheduled to be completed by yearend.
In February, Williams Partners LP, Tulsa, commissioned
TECHNOLOGY
and started production of ethylene
REGIONAL CAPACITY BREAKDOWN
Table 2
for sale from its newly rebuilt and exJan. 1, 2015
Jan. 1, 2014
Change
panded Geismar, La., olefins plant fol Ethylene capacity, tpy
tpy, %
lowing a series of setbacks occurring
AsiaPacifc
45,455,000
45,701,000
246,000
0.54
Eastern Europe
7,971,000
7,971,000
0.00
in the wake of a June 2013 explosion
Middle East, Africa
27,507,000
26,007,000
1,500,000
5.77
at the site (OGJ Online, Feb. 10, 2015;
North America
35,045,780
35,035,926
9,855
0.03
June 13, 2013).
South America
5,038,500
6,383,500
1,345,000
21.07
Western Europe
22,745,265
24,918,265
2,173,000
8.72
The commissioning effort alongside
77
TECHNOLOGY
Jan. 1, 2015
133,000
838,500
527,000
500,000
330,000
193,000
2,230,000
3,500,000
400,000
5,235,794
13,878,000
4,540,000
100,000
90,000
544,000
330,000
330,000
3,050,000
5,757,265
20,000
660,000
3,420,000
600,000
4,734,000
200,000
1,420,000
6,645,000
130,000
1,650,000
350,000
Table 3
Jan. 1, 2014
133,000
838,500
502,000
500,000
330,000
193,000
2,460,000
3,500,000
400,000
5,530,794
13,778,000
4,006,000
100,000
90,000
544,000
330,000
330,000
3,373,000
5,757,265
20,000
660,000
3,315,000
600,000
4,734,000
200,000
2,170,000
6,935,000
130,000
1,650,000
350,000
Change, tpy
25,000
230,000
295,000
100,000
534,000
323,000
105,000
750,000
290,000
Country
Malaysia
Mexico
Netherlands
Nigeria
North Korea
Norway
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Romania
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Serbia
Singapore
Slovakia
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Thailand
Turkey
Ukraine
UAE
U.K.
US
Uzbekistan
Venezuela
Total
78
Jan. 1, 2015
Jan. 1, 2014
Change, tpy
1,723,000
1,384,000
4,037,000
300,000
60,000
550,000
320,000
700,000
330,000
2,520,000
844,000
3,490,000
13,155,000
200,000
3,980,000
220,000
585,000
5,630,000
1,280,000
625,000
33,000
3,532,000
588,000
630,000
3,550,000
1,995,000
28,425,987
140,000
600,000
143,762,545
1,723,000
1,384,000
3,965,000
300,000
60,000
550,000
700,000
330,000
2,520,000
844,000
3,490,000
13,155,000
200,000
5,380,000
220,000
585,000
5,630,000
1,430,000
625,000
33,000
3,172,000
520,000
630,000
2,050,000
2,855,000
28,121,132
140,000
1,900,000
145,971,691
72,000
320,000
1,400,000
150,000
0
0
360,000
68,000
1,500,000
860,000
304,855
1,300,000
2,209,145
TECHNOLOGY
The PDH plant in Point Comfort will have a propylene
production capacity of 545,000 tpy.
Neither a value of the contract nor a timeframe for the
PDH project was disclosed.
EIA recently issued three final greenhouse gas prevention-of-significant-deterioration construction permits for
the Point Comfort complex expansion, which FPC first announced in February 2012.
According to EPA, the $2 billion planned expansion will
include:
A 625,500-tpy low-density PE (LDPE) plant.
An olefins production unit at the complex as well as a
PDH unit consisting of 14 cracking furnaces, four PDH reactors, four steam boilers, and other associated equipment.
Two GE 7EA, 80-Mw natural gas-fired, combined-cycle turbines to the plants existing six GE 7EA combinedcycle gas turbines.
The Olefins 3 and associated PDH units will increase the
plants production capacity of high-purity ethylene by about
1.75 million short tons/year (about 1.59 million tpy), according to the final EPA permit.
FPC previously said the Point Comfort expansion was
designed to take advantage of increasingly reliable and lowcost North American natural gas feedstock supplies, as well
increase the security, flexibility, and breadth of material
supplies and products at the complex (OGJ Online, June 3,
2013).
In February 2015, South Africas Sasol Ltd. let a contract
to GE Oil & Gas, Florence, Italy, to provide the main-compression trains required for an LDPE plant at its proposed
integrated ethane cracker and downstream derivatives complex to be located in Westlake, La., adjacent to the companys existing operations near Lake Charles (OGJ Online,
Feb. 2, 2015; Dec. 3, 2012).
GE will supply main-compression and power-generation
trains consisting of primary-purge and hyper-compression
services for a 20-cyclinder, two-stage, LDPE hyper-compressor that will have discharge pressures of 45,000 psi and be
situated in the center of the new plant. GEs project equipment is scheduled to ship from Florence to the Lake Charles
site during first-half 2016.
In December 2014, Sasol let a contract to Toyo Engineering Korea Ltd., a subsidiary of Toyo Engineering Corp., to
provide detailed engineering, procurement, module fabrication, and construction support services for the planned
450,000-tpy linear LDPE plant to be included at the Westlake complex (OGJ Online, Dec. 4, 2014).
In addition to the LDPE plant, the $8.9 billion petrochemical complex will include a 1.5-million tpy grassroots
ethane cracker, as well as several other chemical manufacturing plants (OGJ Online, Dec. 23, 2014).
With site preparation now under way, the new complex is
on schedule to be commissioned in 2018.
While construction of the planned ethane cracker and
derivatives complex remains ongoing, Sasol delayed final investment decision on a proposed large-scale, gas-to-liquids
plant that would be located adjacent to the Westlake complex as part of a company-wide plan to conserve cash in response to lower international oil prices (OGJ Online, Jan.
28, 2015).
Shintech Inc., the US subsidiary of Shin-Etsu Chemical
Co. Ltd., Tokyo, through a contractor, let a series of contracts
in April to CB&I, Houston, to provide technology licensing
as well as equipment and construction work for a grassroots
ethylene production plant in Louisianas Iberville Parish
(OGJ Online, Apr. 24, 2015).
Under the contracts, which amount to more than $640
million, CB&I will provide ethylene technology, basic engineering and cracker heater supply, and construction services
for the project, which will be located in Plaquemine, La.
CB&I will deliver its proprietary ethylene technology, including SRT cracking heaters and recovery section design,
which features low-pressure separation and mixed refrigeration.
The contract awards follow Shintechs announcement
that it will invest $1.4 billion to build the 500,000-tpy plant
(OGJ Online, Apr. 23, 2015). The project is due to be completed during first-half 2018.
As of May, Braskem Idesa SAPI, a 75-25 joint venture of
Braskem SA, Sao Paulo, and Groupo Idesa SA de CV, Mexico
City, was nearing completion of its long-planned Etileno XXI
petrochemical complex in the Coatzacoalcos-Nanchital region of the Mexican state of Veracruz (OGJ Online, May 12,
2015; OGJ, July 7, 2014, p. 90; July 1, 2013, p. 90).
By the end of first-quarter 2015, construction on the project was 92% completed, with precommissioning and testing
of equipment and systems at the complex under way.
The total cost of the project, which initially was pegged at
$2.5-3 billion (OGJ, July 2, 2012, p. 78), currently stands at
$5.2 billion. The complex remains on schedule for start-up
during second-half 2015, according to Braskem.
The Etileno XXI complex will include a 1.05 million-tpy
ethylene cracker that uses Technip technology; two highdensity PE (HDPE) plants with capacities of 400,000 tpy
and 350,000 tpy, respectively, based upon technology from
Ineos; and a 300,000-tpy LDPE plant that uses technology
from LyondellBassell (OGJ Online, Mar. 31, 2011).
The complex will also house the following installations:
Storage, waste treatment, and utilities, including a 150Mw combined-cycle power and steam cogeneration plant.
A logistics platform for shipment of 1 million tpy of PE
via rail, truck, or bagged.
Administrative, maintenance, control room, and other
buildings (OGJ Online, Oct. 5, 2012).
The Braskem-Idesa joint venture previously signed a 20year supply agreement with state-owned Petroleos Mexicanos for the supply of 66,000 b/d of ethane based on pricing
at Mont Belvieu, Tex., to feed the complexs cracker (OGJ,
79
TECHNOLOGY
80
Table 4
TECHNOLOGY
Company
Total/Sonatrach
Egyptian Ethylene and Derivatives Co.
Oil & Natural Gas Corp.
Braskem/Idesa
Qatar Petroleum/ExxonMobil Corp.
Nizhnekamskneftekhim OAO
Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP
Dow Chemical Co.
Exxonmobil Corp.
Ingleside Ethylene LLC
LyondellBasell
LyondellBasell
Sasol
Westlake Chemical
Total
Table 5
2015
2016
2017
Ethylene capacity, tpy
1,100,000
460,000
1,100,000
1,000,000
1,600,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
1,550,000
544,000
552,000
363,000
1,500,000
113,000
6,175,000
4,050,000
3,657,000
Source: Oil & Gas Journal, May 4, 2015, p. 30 (data available at www.ogj.com)
ahead of schedule, within budget, and without lost-time injury, according to Huck Poh, general manager for Shells Pulau Bukom manufacturing site.
The ECC upgrade included installation of new furnaces,
heat exchangers, and heating coils to make the conversion
process more efficient, Shell says in a project description
posted to the companys web site.
Following with Shells strategy to maximize integration
of its Singapore refining and petrochemical operations to
meet growing regional demand, increased production from
the ECC will be shipped via a subsea pipeline to Jurong Island to support further expansion of intermediates plants,
including Shells MEG plant and third-party installations.
A final cost of the upgrading project was not disclosed.
China Petrochemical Corp. (Sinopec), however, has
shelved plans to build a $3.1 billion ethylene plant at Qingdao in Shandong Province, Honolulu-based consultancy FGE
reported in late 2014. The plant was to be Chinas first based
on natural gas and light-end feedstocks.
With a designed production capacity of 1 million tpy of
ethylene, the Qingdao plant was planned to be built over 3
years and completed in 2016-17. Half of the LPG feed would
come from imported natural gas and ethane and the remaining produced from a nearby refinery in Qingdao. The plant
received environmental clearance in June 2013, according
to FGE.
While the fate of Sinopecs Qingdao ethylene plant remains uncertain, FGE says it is likely that future olefin
plants in China may allow for an increased ability to use
lighter hydrocarbons as feedstock. Use of LPG could accelerate based on increased supply of US LPG into Asia coupled
with the widening spread between LPG and naphtha prices.
CNOOC Oil & Petrochemicals Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of
China National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC), in April let
a contract to Praxair Inc., Danbury, Conn., to provide in-
81
TECHNOLOGY
2, 2014).
In addition to basic engineering design services for the
project, KBR will provide licensing for its proprietary catalytic olefins technology, which converts olefinic, paraffinic,
or mixed streams into propylene and ethylene.
The project is intended to increase the plants olefins production capacity as well as help to diversify its feedstock
slate.
Lotte Chemical Titans production site in Malaysia consists of 11 production plants, 2 cogeneration plants, and 3
tank farms connected by a system of underground pipelines,
shared utilities, and controls that enable the sites to operate
as a single integrated petrochemicals complex, according to
the companys web site.
The Malaysian complex hosts two naphtha steam crackers with a combined ethylene production capacity of about
720,000 tpy, said parent company Lotte Chemical.
Lotte Chemical had yet to determine the investment cost
for the planned expansion of its Malaysian steam cracking
operations, which is scheduled for mechanical completion
in 2017.
The expansion project would increase the complexs production capacities for ethylene by 92,000 tpy, for propylene
by 170,000 tpy, and for BTX by 134,000 tpy, Lotte Chemical said.
Following a March 2014 agreement, Asahi Kasei Corp.
and Mitsubishi Chemical Corp. are advancing plans to unite
their naphtha cracking operations in Mizushima, Japan
(OGJ Online, Mar. 7, 2014).
The companies have concluded an agreement to establish
Asahi Kasei Mitsubishi Chemical Ethylene Corp., an equally
held joint venture for the operation of the unified naphtha
cracker in Mizushima, according to May 28 releases from
Asahi Kasei and Mitsubishi Chemical.
After start-up of the joint venture on Apr. 1, 2016, Nishi Nippon Ethylene LLP, which currently operates the
Mizushima naphtha crackers, will remove and dispose of
equipment resulting from unification of the crackers, the
companies said.
Asahi Kasei will shutter the 500,000-tpy naphtha cracker
at its Mizushima plant and share in the operation of the existing 500,000-tpy cracker at Mitsubishis nearby complex.
Unification of operations is scheduled for April 2016 following a planned upgrade to the naphtha cracker at Mitsubishis
plant, which will boost its ethylene capacity to 570,000 tpy
(OGJ, July 7, 2014, p. 90).
The companies, which established Nishi Nippon Ethylene in April 2011 to unify management of their respective
Mizushima naphtha crackers, made the decision jointly to
operate a single cracker.
But previously announced capacity closures in Japan remain ongoing (OGJ, July 7, 2014, p. 90; July 1, 2013, p. 90).
Mitsubishi in 2014 shuttered its No. 1 ethylene unit with
a capacity of 390,000 tpy at its Kashima complex in east-
82
TECHNOLOGY
HDPE and linear LDPE to 1.478 million tpy from 928,000
tpy; and paraxylene to 3.656 million tpy from 1.856 million
tpy (OGJ Online, May 3, 2012).
Indian Oil Corp. Ltd. (IOC) has approved a series of expansions and upgrades designed to improve fuel quality and
production at several of its refining and petrochemical operations in India (OGJ Online, Feb. 19, 2015).
The companys board at its Feb. 13 meeting approved a
total investment of 78.18 billion rupees ($1.259 billion) for
the projects, IOC said in a filing to Indias BSE Ltd. (formerly
Bombay Stock Exchange).
In addition to projects at the Koyali refinery in Gujarat
and the Barauni refinery in Bihar, the company will invest
8.9 billion rupees ($143 million) both for the construction of
a dedicated naphtha pipeline from Jaipur, Rajasthan, to Panipat, and for augmentation of IOCs 1,056-km (about 655mile) Koyali-Sanganer products pipeline to help meet naphtha feedstock requirements at its 2.3 million-tpy naphtha
cracker at Panipat in Haryana, according to the filing.
At Paradip, on Indias northeastern coast, the company
will invest 37.52 billion rupees ($604.5 million) on an ethylene glycol project, along with associated installations, IOC
said.
Designed to help IOC consolidate its glycol business, the
project would result in the production of low-cost MEG using off-gas from fluid catalytic cracking operations at the
companys Paradip refinery, which is scheduled to reach its
full processing capacity of 15 million tpy later this year (OGJ
Online, Dec. 1, 2014). Detailed timelines for the newly announced projects, however, were not disclosed.
Russia, Europe
Shell Chemicals Ltd., a Shell subsidiary, completed upgrades to improve efficiency and boost production volumes
at its Shell Deutschland Oil GMBHoperated petrochemicals plant at Wesseling, Germany, which together with the
Godorf refinery near Cologne-Godorf, comprise Shells
325,000-b/d integrated Rheinland refinery, Germanys largest (OGJ Online, Mar. 17, 2015; Jan. 11, 2012; Aug. 4, 2009).
The revamp, which involved modifications to furnaces,
compressors, column systems, tubes, and pipes at the complexs 2A naphtha steam cracker, lowered stack temperatures
and reduced fuel consumption at the plant. The project also
has enabled the upgraded 2A steam cracker to increase production of ethylene, propylene, butane, and pygas by 15%,
according to the company.
The decision to increase throughput and improve feedstock flexibility at the 2A cracker came in late 2011, following the shuttering of the Wesseling plants 2B cracker as part
of Shells strategy to strengthen both its refining-chemicals
integration and feedstock position at core manufacturing locations across the world.
During 2014, Wesselings 2A steam cracker, which receives advantaged feedstock and absorbs byproduct streams
from the nearby Godorf site, had an ethylene production capacity of 272,000 tpy, according to Shells website.
Shell, however, did not disclose details regarding either
the impact to processing units or current status of operations at the Wesseling olefins plant following a May 10 fire
that broke out in a cracker furnace at the site (OGJ Online,
May 11, 2015).
In September 2014, Borealis AG, Vienna, let a service contract to Neste Jacobs Oy of Finland for work related to an
upgrade of the ethane steam cracker at subsidiary Borealis
ABs petrochemical complex in Stenungsund, Sweden (OGJ
Online, Sept. 16, 2014).
Neste Jacobs will deliver engineering, procurement, and
construction management services for an upgrade of the
crackers processing section to enable increased cracking of
ethane at the unit. The upgraded steam cracker, which is
designed to produce 625,000 tpy of ethylene, will process
ethane feedstocks Borealis imports from the US.
Borealiss total investment for the project, which will include the addition of an ethane storage tank, is about $155.4
million. A timeframe for the project was not disclosed, but
Borealis signed a 10-year contract to buy ethane from Antero
Resources through Marcus Hook, Pa., starting in 2016 (OGJ,
June 1, 2015, p 67).
In November 2014, Petkim Petrochemicals Holding Co.
completed an expansion of its ethylene plant in Aliga, Izmir,
Turkey, the company said in its 2014 annual report to investors. The $118 million expansion project boosted ethylene
production capacity at the plant by 13% to 588,000 tpy from
a previous 520,000 tpy, according to a May presentation by
Petkim.
In April, Lukoil resumed production of ethylene and propylene at its 350,000-tpy Stavrolen petrochemical complex
in Budennovsk, Russia, following a February 2014 fire in
the plants ethylene production unit gas separation area (OGJ
Online, Apr. 7, 2015; Feb. 27, 2014).
As part of the repair and maintenance work, which was
completed according to the approved schedule, Lukoil also
carried out a project to expand the ethylene units capacity to
process straight-run naphtha and LPG feedstock supplied to
Stavrolen via rail from the companys Russian refineries and
gas processing plants.
The upgrading project included reconstruction of cracking furnaces, fuel-gas skids, gas feedstock evaporation complexes, and water-flush columns, the company said.
Lukoil, however, did not disclose current ethylene production rates at the complex.
In addition to the modernization of existing ethylene and
PE units at the Stavrolen complex, the first stage of a 2 billion-cu m/year gas processing plant also was scheduled to be
commissioned this year, Lukoil has said.
ZapSibNeftekhim LLC, a subsidiary of Russian petrochemical manufacturer OAO SIBUR Holding, Moscow, started construction this year on its long-planned integrated ethylene,
83
TECHNOLOGY
PE, and polypropylene (PP) production complex at Tobolsk in
Western Siberias Tyumen region (OGJ Online, Feb. 20, 2015).
The first foundations were laid for the ZapSibNeftekhim
(ZapSib-2) complex, which will include a 1.5 million-tpy
ethylene steam cracker, four PE production units with a
combined production capacity of 1.5 million tpy, a 500,000tpy PP production unit, and a 100,000-tpy butane-butylene
fractionation (BBF) unit, SIBUR said.
The start of construction follows the January issuance of
requisite permits by Tobolsks local government, which followed approval of final designs for the ZapSib-2 project by
Russias Glavgosexpertiza (General Board of State Expert Review) in late 2014.
Most on site preparations already have been completed,
and contracts for detailed design work, equipment, and material supplies for the complexs key process units have been
signed and initiated, SIBUR said.
First announced in 2012 and recently valued at a total capital cost of $9.5 billion, ZapSib-2, may face further delays.
Given the large capital investment required for the project, as well as the recent downturn in market conditions,
the budget for ZapSib-2 now will be adjustable subject to
exchange rates and the price of oil, which could change the
projects timeline, the company said.
As of late 2014, ZapSib-2 was scheduled to be commissioned in 2019-20, SIBUR said in a report to investors.
SIBUR awarded the following engineering and technology-related contracts for ZapSib-2s major units shortly after
announcing the project:
Linde AG to provide licensing and FEED for the 1.5
million-tpy ethylene plant (OGJ Online, June 22, 2012).
Ineos Technologies Ltd. to provide licensing for its proprietary Innovene G and Innovene S processes for the manufacture of linear LDPE and HDPE. The two 400,000-tpy
Innovene G plants and two Innovene S plants will produce
the full range of Ziegler monomodal, Ziegler bimodal, chromium, and metallocene products for Russian and export
markets, Ineos said in a June 29, 2012, release.
Technip SA to provide FEED for the PE plant, the service provider said in a June 27, 2012, release.
LyondellBasell to provide its Spheripol process technology for the single-line, 500,000-tpy PP plant, according
to a July 9, 2012, release from LyondellBasell.
ThyssenKrupp AG to provide FEED for the PP plant,
according to an Aug. 21, 2012, release from ThyssenKrupp.
SIBUR also said it recently has let a contract to Russias
OAO NIPIgazpererabotka to design infrastructure and off
site installations for the project.
To be located near SIBURs current Tobolsk polymer production site, ZapSib-2 will have direct access to gas fractionation capacity at those installations, where fractionation capacity in March 2014 was expanded to 6.6 million tpy from
3.8 million tpy specifically to handle growing volumes of
raw NGL supplies for the new project, the company said.
84
In 2014, SIBUR also completed construction of the PurovskPyt-YakhTobolsk pipeline, a 1,100-km raw NGL
pipeline that will have throughput capacities of about 4 million tpy between Purovsk and SIBURs loading rack in Noyabrsk, 5.5 million tpy between Noyabrsk and Pyt-Yakh, and
8 million tpy between Pyt-Yakh and Tobolsk, SIBUR said in
a recent report to investors.
Once fully commissioned in 2015, the company said it
expects the new pipeline will further ensure raw NGL feedstock supplies for ZapSib-2.
Middle East
State-owned TurkmenGaz, through a subcontractor, let a
contract to Metso Corp., Helsinki, in April to supply valve
technology for a $3-billion petrochemical complex under
construction in the Turkmenbashi district of Balkan province in western Turkmenistan (OGJ Online, Apr. 20, 2015).
This latest contract follows TurkmenGazs previous contract award to a consortium of Toyo Engineering Corp.,
Hyundai Engineering Co. Ltd., Hyundai Engineering &
Construction Co. Ltd., and LG International Corp. for engineering, procurement, construction, and commissioning of
the complex (OGJ Online, May 12, 2014).
The complexwhich will use gas sourced from Caspian
Sea fields to produce 400,000 tpy of ethylene, HDPE, and
80,000 tpy of PPis scheduled to be completed in 2018.
Last August, Oman Oil Refineries & Petroleum Industries Co. (ORPIC) let a contract to LyondellBasell for PP technology to be implemented at the Liwa Plastics Project (LPP)
in Omans Sohar Industrial Port Area (OGJ Online, Aug. 7,
2014).
LyondellBasell will provide its Spheripol PP process technology for LPPs 300,000-tpy PP plant. Scheduled for completion in 2018, LPP also will include a grassroots 800,000tpy ethylene plant, a pygas unit, a methyl tertiary butyl ether
(MTBE) and butene-1 unit, two polymer plants, a gas plant
and pipeline, and related offsites and utilities (OGJ Online,
Mar. 31, 2014).
ORPIC previously said that LPP, which will be adjacent to
the companys existing refinery and petrochemical plants at
Sohar, is valued at $3.6 billion (OGJ Online, Mar. 31, 2014).
The contract follows a previous award of additional contracts for technology licensing and engineering design of
three units for LPP to CB&I (OGJ Online, July 16, 2014), including the new 90,000-tpy high-conversion MTBE unit, as
well as technology for a 41,000-tpy butene-1 recovery unit.
CB&I said it also will provide its NGL-MAXSM gas processing technology for an 18 million-cu m/day NGL extraction plant.
LPP is scheduled for completion in 2018, the state-owned
company said.
SPECIAL REPORT
Leena Koottungal
Survey Editor/News Writer
Total
nameplate
capacity,
tonnes/year
Company
Location
ALGERIA
Sonatrach
Total Algeria
Skikda
133,000
133,000
ARGENTINA
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Huntsman Corp.
Petrobras Energia
Petrobras Energia
Total Argentina
275,000
490,000
21,000
32,500
20,000
838,500
100
100
AUSTRALIA
Huntsman Chemical Co. Australia Ltd.
Qenos Pty. Ltd.
Qenos Pty. Ltd.
Total Australia
Melbourne, Vic.
Altona, Vic.
Botany, NSW
32,000
205,000
290,000
527,000
100
90
90
AUSTRIA
OMV AG
Total Austria
Schwechat
500,000
500,000
15
AZERBAIJAN
Azerichimia
Azerichimia
Total Azerbaijan
Sumgait
Sumgait
30,000
300,000
330,000
BELARUS
Production Association Polymir
Production Association Polymir
Total Belarus
Novopolotsk
Novopolotsk
73,000
120,000
193,000
BELGIUM
BASF Antwerpen NV
Benelux FAO
Benelux FAO
Total Belgium
Antwerp
Antwerp
Antwerp
1,080,000
580,000
570,000
2,230,000
BRAZIL
Braskem SA
Braskem SA
Copesul
Copesul
Petroquimica Uniao SA
Rio Polimeros
Total Brazil
Camacari, Bahia
Camacari, Bahia
Triunfo, RS
Triunfo, RS
Santo Andre, Sao Paulo
Duque de Caxias
600,000
680,000
700,000
500,000
500,000
520,000
3,500,000
BULGARIA
Lukoil Neftochim Bourgas JSC
Lukoil Neftochim Bourgas JSC
Total Bulgaria
Bourgas
Bourgas
250,000
150,000
400,000
3.4
CANADA
Dow Chemical Co.
Imperial Oil Products & Chemicals
Nova Chemicals Corp.
Nova Chemicals Corp.
Nova Chemicals Corp.
Nova Chemicals Corp.
Total Canada
1,285,000
300,000
839,002
725,624
816,327
1,269,841
5,235,794
100
33
25
100
100
100
CHINA
BASF-YPC Co. Ltd.
China National Offshore Oil Co.
Nanjing
Daya Bay, Guangdong
25
100
100
16
16
75
10
10
6
16
16
23
62
18
18
94
50
50
95
100
100
100
100
10
33
30
34
20
86.6
100
25
600,000
950,000
85
SPECIAL REPORT
Location
Dushanzi
Daqing
Dalian
Quanzhou
Fushun
Gaoqiao
Guangzhou
Jilin
Lanzhou
Panjin
Panjin
Dushanzi
Liaoning Province
Tianjin
Beijing
Caojing, Shanghai
Caojing, Shanghai
Guangzhou, Guandong
Maoming, Guangdong
Neijing
Puyang, Henan
Qilu
Tianjin
Tianjin
Zhenhai
CHINA, TAIWAN
Chinese Petroleum Corp.
Chinese Petroleum Corp.
Chinese Petroleum Corp.
Formosa Petrochemical Corp.
Formosa Petrochemical Corp.
Formosa Petrochemical Corp.
Total China, Taiwan
Kaohsiung Linyuan
Linyuan
Linyuan
Mailiao
Mailiao
Mailiao
COLOMBIA
Empresa Colombiana de Petroleos
Total Colombia
Barrancabermeja
CROATIA
Polimeri
Total Croatia
140,000
320,000
4,000
800,000
115,000
14,000
150,000
700,000
700,000
480,000
130,000
1,000,000
800,000
1,200,000
660,000
145,000
700,000
140,000
380,000
650,000
180,000
720,000
200,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
13,878,000
30
30
60
100
100
60
100
80
100
500,000
720,000
385,000
700,000
1,035,000
1,200,000
4,540,000
6.8
6.8
0.6
0.8
5.8
100
100
100
93.2
92.4
93.6
56
100,000
100,000
80
Zagreb
90,000
90,000
100
CZECH REPUBLIC
Unipetrol
Total Czech Republic
Litvinov
544,000
544,000
EGYPT
Sidi Kerir Petrochemicals Co.
Total Egypt
Alexandria
330,000
330,000
FINLAND
Borealis OY
Total Finland
Porvoo
330,000
330,000
100
Feyzin
Notre Dame de
Gravenchon
Lavera
Dunkerque
Berre l'Etang
Carling-St. AvoldMarienau
250,000
400,000
100
100
FRANCE
A. P. Feyzin
ExxonMobil Corp.
Naphthachimie
Versalis France SAS
Societe du Craqueur de L' Aubette SCA
Total Petrochemicals
86
Total
nameplate
capacity,
tonnes/year
740,000
370,000
450,000
320,000
70
70
40
40
20
20
50
16
12
50
76
75
100
Hydrowax-40
13
SPECIAL REPORT
Company
Location
Total Petrochemicals
Total France
Gonfreville l'Orcher
520,000
3,050,000
GERMANY
Basell Polyfine GMBH
Basell Polyfine GMBH
BASF AG
BP Gelsenkirchen
BP Gelsenkirchen
INEOS
INEOS
LyondellBasell
Dow Chemical Co.
OMV Deutschland GMBH
Shell & DEA Oil GMBH
Shell & DEA Oil GMBH
Total Germany
Wesseling
Wesseling
Ludwigshafen
Gelsenkirchen
Gelsenkirchen
Dormagen
Dormagen
Munchsmunster
Bohlen
Burghausen, Bavaria
Heide
Wesseling
738,000
305,000
620,000
576,265
484,000
550,000
544,000
320,000
560,000
450,000
110,000
500,000
5,757,265
GREECE
EKO Chemicals Co. AE
Total Greece
Thessaloniki
20,000
20,000
HUNGARY
Tiszai Vegyi Kombinat Ltd.
Tiszai Vegyi Kombinat Ltd.
Total Hungary
Tiszaujvaros
Tiszaujvaros
370,000
290,000
660,000
INDIA
Gas Authority of India Ltd.
Haldia Petrochemicals Ltd.
Indian Oil Corp. Ltd.
Indian Petrochemicals Corp. Ltd.
Indian Petrochemicals Corp. Ltd.
Indian Petrochemicals Corp. Ltd.
Reliance Industries Ltd.
Total India
INDONESIA
PT Chandra Asri
Total Indonesia
600,000
600,000
IRAN
Amir Kabir Petrochemical Co.
Arak Petrochemical
Arya Sasol Polymer Co.
Bandar Imam Petrochemical Co.
Jam Petrochemical Co.
Marun Petrochemical Co.
Tabriz Petrochemical Co.
Total Iran
Amir Kabir
Arak
Assaluyeh Bushehr
Bandar Imam
Assaluyeh Bushehr
Bandar Assaluyeh
Tabriz
520,000
247,000
1,000,000
311,000
1,320,000
1,200,000
136,000
4,734,000
IRAQ
Present Status Unknown
Total Iraq
100
10
90
5
2
1
5
12
11
13
17
17
2.5
90
73
64
100
100
53
100
84
100
13
23
1.5
65
.01
14.4
5
16.4
95
65.4
Ref. gas-35
3.8
100
100
35-50
35-50
50-65
50-65
100
24
12
58
100
20
10
80
10
10
80
100
100
65
67
ISRAEL
Carmel Olefins Ltd.
Total Israel
Haifa
ITALY
Versalis SPA
Versalis SPA
Versalis SPA
Total Italy
Brindisi
Porto Marghera
Priolo
300,000
700,000
800,000
130,000
300,000
400,000
790,000
3,420,000
200,000
200,000
440,000
490,000
490,000
1,420,000
32
87
SPECIAL REPORT
Company
Location
JAPAN
Asahikasei Chemicals Corp.
Idemitsu Petrochemical Co. Ltd.
Idemitsu Petrochemical Co. Ltd.
Keiyo Ethylene
Maruzen Petrochemicals
Mitsubishi Chemical Corp.
Mitsubishi Chemical Corp.
Mitsui Chemicals Inc.
Mitsui Chemicals Inc.
Nippon Petrochemical
Showa Denko KK
Tonen Chemical Corp.
Tosoh Corp.
Total Japan
Kurasiki, Okayama
Chiba
Tokuyama
Ichihara, Chiba
Chiba
Kashima (Unit 2)
Mizushima
Ichihara, Chiba
Takaishi City, Osaka
Kawasaki
Oita
Kawasaki
Yokkaichi
KAZAKHSTAN
Akpo
Government
Total Kazakhstan
Aktau
Atyrau
KUWAIT
Equate Petrochemical Co.
Equate Petrochemical Co. (Equate II)
Total Kuwait
Shuaiba
Shuaiba
LIBYA
National Oil Co.
Total Libya
Ras Lanuf
MALAYSIA
Ethylene Malaysia Sdn. Bhd.
Optimal Olefins Sdn. Bhd.
Titan Petrochemicals Sdn. Bhd.
Titan Petrochemicals Sdn. Bhd.
Total Malaysia
Kertih
Kertih
Pasir Gudang, Johor
Pasir Gudang, Johor
400,000
600,000
287,000
436,000
1,723,000
100
100
MEXICO
Petroleos Mexicanos
Petroleos Mexicanos
Petroleos Mexicanos
Total Mexico
La Cangrejera, Veracruz
Morelos, Veracruz
Pajaritos, Veracruz
600,000
600,000
184,000
1,384,000
100
100
100
NETHERLANDS
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
SABIC Europe
SABIC Europe
Shell Nederland Chemie BV
Total Netherlands
Terneuzen (No. 1)
Terneuzen (No. 2)
Terneuzen (No. 3)
Geleen (No. 3)
Geleen (No. 4)
Moerdijk
580,000
585,000
635,000
595,000
670,000
972,000
4,037,000
NIGERIA
Eleme Petrochemical Co. Ltd.
Total Nigeria
Eleme River
NORTH KOREA
Namhung Youth Chemical Complex
88
Total
nameplate
capacity,
tonnes/year
484,000
374,000
450,000
768,000
525,000
453,000
540,000
553,000
450,000
450,000
600,000
505,000
493,000
6,645,000
10
5
100
98
100
20
5
10
55
80
90
NGL-15
NGL-10
100
100
100
100,000
30,000
130,000
800,000
850,000
1,650,000
100
350,000
350,000
10
10
10
10
15
15
80
80
85
85
100
100
100
300,000
300,000
NGL
60,000
60,000
Rafnes, Bamble
550,000
550,000
30
45
25
SPECIAL REPORT
Company
Location
PHILIPPINES
JG Summit Petrochemical
Total Philippines
Batangas
320,000
320,000
POLAND
PKN Orlen SA
Total Poland
Plock
700,000
700,000
PORTUGAL
Repsol SA
Total Portugal
Sines
330,000
330,000
QATAR
Qatar Petrochemical Co.
Q-Chem I
Ras Laffan Olefins Co.
Total Qatar
Mesaieed
Mesaieed
Ras Laffan
720,000
500,000
1,300,000
2,520,000
100
80
20
ROMANIA
Petrom SA
Petromidia SA
Petromidia SA
Petrotel SA
Total Romania
Pitesti
Navodari
Constanta
Teleajen
200,000
200,000
224,000
220,000
844,000
19.5
8.5
23.7
48.4
10.7
5.0
54.7
5.2
5.2
89.2
89.2
RUSSIA
Angarskneftorgsintez
Angarskneftorgsintez
Lukoil
Nizhnekamskneftekhim
Norsy
Omskykauchuyk
Orgsintez
Orgsintez
Orgsintez
Oxosyntez
Polimir
Salavatneftorgsintez
Sibur Himprom
Sibur-Neftechim
Sintezkauchuk
Tomsk PCC
Uraorgsintes
Total Russia
Angarsk, Siberia
Angarsk, Siberia
Budennovsk
Nizhnekamsk
Omsk, Siberia
Kazan
Kazan
Kazan
Orsk
Salavat
Nizhny Novgorod
Tomsk
Ufa
SAUDI ARABIA
Al Jubail Petrochemical Co.
Arabian Petrochemical Co.
Arabian Petrochemical Co.
Arabian Petrochemical Co.
Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP
Eastern Petrochemical Co.
Jubail United Petrochemical Co.
Saudi Basic Industries Corp.
Saudi Kayan Petrochemical Co.
Saudi Petrochemical Co.
Saudi Polymers
Tasnee
Yanbu Petrochemical Co.
Yanbu Petrochemical Co.
Total Saudi Arabia
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Yanbu
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Jubail
Yanbu
Yanbu
SERBIA
HIP-Petrohemija
Total Serbia
Pancevo
100
90
100
60,000
240,000
350,000
450,000
300,000
90,000
140,000
100,000
100,000
45,000
150,000
300,000
30,000
300,000
300,000
300,000
235,000
3,490,000
800,000
800,000
800,000
650,000
205,000
1,300,000
1,000,000
1,300,000
1,350,000
1,045,000
1,200,000
1,000,000
875,000
830,000
13,155,000
Kero.-29.6
5.6
5.6
100
100
20
50
50
50
100
50
80
100
100
100
16
16
18
50
200,000
200,000
89
SPECIAL REPORT
Location
SINGAPORE
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
Jurong Island
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
Jurong Island
Petrochemical Corp. of Singapore Pte. Ltd.Pulau Ayer Merbau
Petrochemical Corp. of Singapore Pte. Ltd.Pulau Ayer Merbau
Shell Eastern Petroleum Ltd.
Bukom Island
Total Singapore
900,000
1,000,000
465,000
615,000
1,000,000
3,980,000
33
Bratislava
220,000
220,000
SOUTH AFRICA
Sasol Polymers
Sasol Polymers
Total South Africa
Sasolburg
Secunda
110,000
475,000
585,000
SOUTH KOREA
Honam Petrochemical
Korea Petrochemical Industries Co. Ltd.
LG Daesan Petrochemical
LG Petrochemical Co. Ltd.
Lotte Daesan Petrochemical
Samsung General Chemicals
SK Corp.
SK Corp.
Yeochon
Yeochon
Yeochon
Total South Korea
Yeochun
Onsan
Daesan
Yeochun
Daesan
Daesan
Ulsan
Ulsan
Yeochun
Yeochun
Yeochun
700,000
320,000
450,000
760,000
600,000
820,000
545,000
185,000
480,000
420,000
350,000
5,630,000
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
SPAIN
Dow Chemical Co.
Repsol SA
Repsol SA
Total Spain
Tarragona
Puertollano
Tarragona
580,000
100,000
600,000
1,280,000
100
SWEDEN
Borealis AB
Total Sweden
Stenungsund
SWITZERLAND
Lonza Ltd.
Total Switzerland
Visp
THAILAND
Map Ta Phut Olefins Co.
Rayong Olefins Ltd.
PTT Global Chemical
PTT Global Chemical
PTT Global Chemical
PTT Global Chemical
IRPC Public Co.
Total Thailand
TURKEY
Petkim Petrochemicals Holding Co.
Total Turkey
Aliaga, Izmir
588,000
588,000
Kalush
250,000
180,000
200,000
630,000
Lisichansk
625,000
625,000
8.3
80
75
Residue-34
13.5
20
5
78.2
20
Ref. streams
40
33,000
33,000
900,000
800,000
437,000
385,000
350,000
300,000
360,000
3,532,000
33
100
100
SLOVAKIA
Slovnaft AS
Total Slovakia
UKRAINE
Chlorvinyl
Oriana
TNK-BP
Total Ukraine
90
Total
nameplate
capacity,
tonnes/year
20
30
40
60
10
100
80
5
100
6
18
LPG-60
LPG-14
28
49
90
Ref. gas-10
100
100
100
SPECIAL REPORT
Location
Total
nameplate
capacity,
tonnes/year
600,000
1,450,000
1,500,000
3,550,000
UNITED KINGDOM
INEOS
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
SABIC Europe
Total United Kingdom
Grangemouth
Mossmorran Fife
Wilton
730,000
400,000
865,000
1,995,000
UNITED STATES
BASF Fina Petrochemicals
Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP
Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP
Chevron Phillips Chemical Co. LP
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
Dow Chemical Co.
DuPont
Eastman Chemical Co.
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
Equistar Chemicals LP (LyondellBasell)
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
ExxonMobil Chemical Co.
Flint Hills Corp.
Formosa Plastics Corp. USA
Formosa Plastics Corp. USA
Huntsman Corp.
INEOS Olefins and Polymers USA
Javelina Co.
Sasol North America Inc.
Shell Chemicals Ltd.
Shell Chemicals Ltd.
Westlake Petrochemicals Corp.
Westlake Petrochemicals Corp.
Westlake Petrochemicals Corp.
Williams Olefins
Total United States
UZBEKISTAN
Uzbekneftegaz
Total Uzbekistan
Shurtan
VENEZUELA
Pequiven-Petroquimica de Venezuela SA El Tablazo, Zulia
Pequiven-Petroquimica de Venezuela SA El Tablazo, Zulia
Total Venezuela
TOTAL WORLD
860,000
835,000
855,000
1,950,113
630,000
1,010,000
520,000
740,000
590,000
410,000
680,000
781,000
875,000
875,000
476,000
771,000
1,189,000
550,000
1,000,000
2,200,000
900,000
634,921
816,000
725,000
180,000
1,752,000
151,000
471,655
1,179,138
1,451,247
285,714
567,000
630,844
884,354
28,425,987
100
100
100
100
100
20
10
30
80
20
15
25
5
50
10
75
50
20
25
70
40
20
100
25
5
5
80
10
60
80
9
58
8
67
20
30
20
20
8
8
8
70
100
25
70
10
20
40
1
95
95
60
20
8
9
9
45
45
15
15
25
25
75
60
40
40
50
35
15
25
Residue-25
LPG-40
Ref. Gas-100
100
5
100
100
70
92
35
60
30
8
140,000
140,000
250,000
350,000
600,000
30
100
70
143,762,545
91
TECHNOLOGY
Ramin Takin
Parkway Logic Ltd.
London
92
TECHNOLOGY
Surviving companies had to lower
their exploration and capital expenditures, delay developing new fields,
and even reduce investments in maintenance for existing production fields.
FIG. 1
14
Production
Capacity
12
Million b/d
10
Notable lessons
8
Although measures by the industry to
scale back spending resulted in a slow6
down in the growth ofor sometimes
an actual decrease inoil production,
4
it took several months, and sometimes
more than a year, to establish a new
2
supply-demand balance.
0
Expensive offshore platforms and
1985
2014
major onshore production installaSource: Worldwide oil and natural gas reserves, production, and refning tables in OGJ, Dec. 30, 1985, p. 63 and Dec. 1, 2014, p. 30; authors estimates
tions, for example, continued to operate because owning companies treated
their capital outlay as a sunk cost and
because their operating cash outflow was still below the
Underinvestment in the global industry occurred from
price of oil.
1998 until about 2004 because industry decision-makers
The impact to production occurred more quickly in cases
took years to gain confidence that the price of oil would not
where operating costs were too high or required more freagain fall back to $10/bbl or lower, as it did during the 1998quent capital expenditure. Many stripper wells, for example,
99 price collapse. Given the several-year lead times of upwere closed when they became due for costly maintenance
stream operations, when the industry did finally start to inwork.
crease investments in the mid-2000s, supply could not catch
The massive redundancies, recession, and crises in alup with years of strong growth in world oil demand (e.g.,
most all world oil provinces also forced politicians to act. In
Chinas economy).. Fear of a peak-oil crisis and new develop1986, for example, US Vice-Pres. George Bush visited Sauments in financial markets accentuated these factors, helpdi Arabia to meet with King Fahd bin Abdulaziz al Saud.
ing prices rise to nearly $150/bbl by July 2008.
Again, in 1998-99, US Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson
openly lobbied OPEC, including visits to some of its counExcess supply, weak demand
tries to meet with oil ministers.
In recent years the reverse has been happening, as the inIn order to restore balance to the world market, OPEC
dustrys field activities began to result in higher production,
eventually deemed it necessary to reduce its own producprompting the current oversupply and thus a reduced need
tion, choosing a lower production ceiling and allocating
for production from OPEC, the residual supplier. The accomsmaller quotas to its members.
panying table shows annual changes in world oil demand
The combination of OPECs decision to curtail producand supply met by non-OPEC producers during 2011-14.
tion and the fall in oil prices resulted in some actual reducSustained prices of more than $100/bbl since the late
tion to both OPEC and non-OPEC output.
2000s encouraged major investments in high-cost areas and
But the effects of reduced production were not immedithe application of new technology around the world, includate. It took more than a year before the world market stabiing US shale and tight rock plays, offshore West Africa, and
lized. This was particularly the case when the decision to cut
onshore-offshore East Africa.
production had been delayed and excess supply had gone
Another important but often unrecognized reason for
into inventories around the world, filling both onshore and
surplus oil supplies is improved performance of many older
offshore oil storage. The price of oil remained low until these
producing fields around the world due to the application of
inventories shrank to more normal levels, when it finally setnew technology. Production declines at these aging fields
tled lower compared with prices before the crisis.
have slowed, and in some cases, actually been reversed.
Social unrest, wars, lack of security, and the imposition of
Recent conditions
sanctions (e.g., Iraq, Libya, Nigeria, and Iran) kept some noThe oil price collapse in late 2014 appears to be broadly simtable oil producers out of the world market over the past few
ilar to previous price downturns. An imbalance appeared
years, but not enough to compensate for the surplus. And as
in the oil market, principally due to excess supply, and the
conditions in some of these areas have improved, more oil
price of oil fell sharply.
has reentered the world market.
93
TECHNOLOGY
Global oil demand has been growing more slowly than supply due to
weak economies in Europe, North
America, Japan, China, and other regions. The global economy also has
improved its energy efficiency and is
using less oil by substituting other energies.
These factors put downward pressure on oil prices. Producers hoped
OPEC would follow precedent and cut
production to defend the price of oil.
In an echo of the past, OPEC called
on non-OPEC producers to cooperate
Moving ahead
1962
Pumps, compressors, etc.
222.5
Electrical machinery
189.5
Internal-comb. engines
183.4
Instruments
214.8
Heat exchangers
183.6
Misc. equip. average
198.8
Materials component
205.9
Labor component
258.8
Refnery (infation) index
237.6
1980
2012
2013
2014
Mar.
2014
Feb.
2015
Mar.
2015
777.3
2,170.6
2,221.1
2,271.9
2,264.2
2,306.7
2,309.5
394.7
514.8
516.7
515.8
515.5
516.8
516.8
512.6
1,047.0
1,046.8
1,052.9
1,051.4
1,060.3
1,058.4
587.3
1,477.0
1,509.9
1,533.6
1,520.6
1,528.4
1,536.4
618.7
1,220.9
1,293.3
1,305.0
1,305.0
1,305.0
1,305.0
578.1
1,286.1
1,317.5
1,335.8
1,331.4
1,343.5
1,345.2
629.2
1,579.7
1,538.7
1,571.8
1,568.2
1,490.7
1,469.9
951.9
3,055.6
3,123.4
3,210.7
3,181.4
3,259.8
3,260.1
822.8
2,465.2
2,489.5
2,555.2
2,536.1
2,552.2
2,544.1
Fuel cost
Labor cost
1962
1980
2012
2013
2014
Mar.
2014
Feb.
2015
Mar.
2015
100.9
810.5
968.1
1,123.7
1,264.8
1,400.4
946.6
954.2
93.9
200.5
287.9
308.3
312.8
326.3
315.4
297.0
123.9
439.9
1,407.5
1,506.4
1,541.3
1,562.4
1,615.1
1,609.6
131.8
Invest., maint., etc.
121.7
Chemical costs
96.7
Operating indexes2
226.3
489.4
489.1
493.1
478.9
512.1
542.0
324.8
896.5
905.3
939.4
932.4
948.8
945.7
229.2
517.2
502.6
472.3
477.4
437.9
442.1
Wages
Productivity
Refnery
103.7
Process units
103.6
312.7
637.5
661.8
688.5
703.2
661.9
654.7
457.5
739.0
802.6
865.3
914.4
758.0
754.1
These indexes are published in the frst of each month and are compiled by Gary Farrar, OGJ Contributing Editor.
Add separate index(es) for chemicals, if any are used. Indexes of selected individual items of equipment and materials are
also published on the Quarterly Costimating page in frst issues for January, April, July, and October.
3
For correct values to March 2013 refnery construction and refnery operating indexes, see OGJ, Dec. 1, 2014, p. 87.
2
94
TECHNOLOGY
further recessionary pressure, unemANNUAL CHANGES IN GLOBAL OIL SUPPLY, DEMAND
ployment, and social stress.
2011-12
2012-13
2013-14
As on previous occasions, almost
Million b/d
World oil demand
0.9
1.2
1
all major and independent oil compaWorld oil supply (exclud0.6
1.5
2.2
nies around the world have announced
ing OPEC oil)
Demand for OPEC oil*
0.2
0.2
1.2
notable reductions of their exploration
and field development budgets for
*Totals may not add up due to independent rounding.
Source: OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report, February 2015
2015, as well as redundancies and other cost cutting measures.
These will result in lower oil production later in 2015 and, more noticeably, in the following
These intra-OPEC negotiations will eventually involve
years. Oil production declines could occur sooner where opheads of state capable of overriding the business decisions of
erating costs are high or where relatively heavy investment
their oil ministers and cutting production. Saudi Arabia may
is required for production maintenance or for drilling new
have to incur the greatest cuts.
wells to maintain rates of production. Fracing operations for
Pressure on politicians in the non-OPEC world also is
shale and tight formations fall into this group, as do stripbuilding. Non-OPEC producers have reduced output in the
per wells.
past. The Texas Railroad Commission, for example, imposed
High-cost operations with relatively short lead times,
smaller production quotas on oil companies in 1930-32 in
some highly leveraged, constitute a relatively larger share
response to the Great Depression (OGJ, July 28, 2003, p. 31).
of world oil supply today than in 1986. Some operators are
The current low-price regime will result in some reducfinding breathing room by negotiating lower prices with sertion of production in non-OPEC regions, but it will be insufvice companies, continuing to improve their operational effificient to raise the oil price to near its previous levels. Politiciency, and by virtue of current low-interest rates. Neverthecal pressure on OPEC to cut its own production will rise,
less, these are not enough to protect them from the realities
principally focused on Saudi Arabia and coming from both
of the oil market.
non-OPEC and OPEC countries. At the time of this writing
Concerns exist that productivity of wells fracked in existin January, we estimate this will not occur before autumn
ing formations may not be as high as the early wells focused
2015 and could occur much later.
on sweet spots. Highly leveraged operators may also find
If history repeats itself, the price of oil will begin to rise
themselves out of favor with the financial sector, leading to
until the market gradually stabilizes at a price lower than
a more rapid reduction of non-OPEC oil production than ocbefore the current crisis. The lower price, then, will encourcurred in 1986.
age higher consumption, prompting increased global oil deSome OPEC members (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the
mand. Higher demand, in turn, will lead to higher prices
United Arab Emirates, and Qatar), however, can tolerate an
and more field activity, which will increase supplies, and
extended drop in oil export revenues, as they could draw on
consequently, add downward pressure on oil prices once
healthy reserve funds or use their strong credit position to
again.
secure finance from the international banking system.
Other OPEC members, however, have smaller financial
OPECs future
reserves, larger populations, and already are suffering from
Extending the prognosis further, OPEC ultimately will debudget deficits. These countries cannot withstand the loss of
cide to lower its production ceiling and allocate new quooil revenues for long, creating tensions within OPEC.
tas to its members. This reversed course, however, will not
Saudi Arabia has the largest oil production capacity in
mean the organization is irrelevant, nor does it spell the end
OPEC (12.5 million b/d), with nearly 3 million b/d already
of OPEC.
unused. While this gives Saudi Arabia the flexibility in prinSimilar market conditions have occurred in the past. In
ciple to increase production and partly compensate for lower
spite of its shortcomings, OPEC is the only institution of
prices if world oil prices do not recover to $100/bbl levels,
commodity producers in the developing world that has its
other member countries already are producing near their
leaders meet regularly, its secretariat conduct systematic remaximum capacities. Some are above and some are below
search and market and policy analysis, and that has been
their theoretical production quotas because of technical
in existence for more than 50 years. It was established to
problems, imposed sanctions, politics, and lack of security.
strengthen the bargaining position of the producing counThey cannot compensate for the fall in prices by increasing
tries against the majors hegemony over the world oil martheir oil exports.
ket, the price of oil, and the volume of production from each
These countries are putting increasing pressure on Saudi
country.
Arabia to lower its output, raise the price, and provide them
OPEC may not have been nearly as successful as it was in
with much-needed oil revenue.
its early days had it not been for new independent oil compa-
95
TECHNOLOGY
nies giving OPEC producers credible partnering alternatives
to the majors.
The industry, the world oil market, and the role of OPEC
have evolved over the decades. The price of oil is now decided by the market. While OPEC no longer determines the
price of oil, it tries to ensure the price is reasonable for its
purposes and that the market is stable, even though it may
be difficult to define these goals.
Tensions within the organization will not eliminate
OPECs influence on the market in the near term. Member
states have but to look at the fate of many other commodity
producers, which have a much weaker bargaining position
and have needed fair trade activism by consumers to help
them receive reasonable revenue, to be reminded of the perils of diminishing their strength.
It is probably with this in mind that OPEC is exercising
its influence now, in an echo of its actions from 1986.
during 1990-2014, where he examined technical and economic aspects of world oil supply
and demand, OPEC policy, investments, among
other topics. Before joining CGES, he worked for
9 years at the OPEC Secretariat in Vienna after
careers with Irans International Oil Consortium,
Amoco, Ultramar, National Iranian Oil Co., and
Shell, as well as the Geological Survey of Iran and Anglo-American/Charter Consolidated. Takin holds a BS in geology from
Manchester, a PhD in geophysics from Cambridge, and an MBA
from Industrial Management Institute, Tehran.
Ramin Takin ([email protected]) is an
energy finance professional and start-up cofounder. He was vice-president of corporate
finance and development at Unaoil Group after
serving as managing director and risk manager
at Essdar Capital Ltd. Takin began his career
at Citigroup in London. Ramin holds a PhD in
quantitative finance from Imperial College, London in 2005, and
a masters in engineering, economics, and management from
University College, Oxford University, in 2001. He is an associate member of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.
The authors
Manouchehr Takin ([email protected]) is a
London-based independent global oil and energy consultant.
He was with the Centre for Global Energy Studies in London
TM
INCLUDING GITAS
OIL & GAS PIPELINE
CONFERENCE AND
PODS USER
CONFERENCE
PRESENTED BY:
OIL
O
OI
L, GAS
G
GA
&petrochemequipment
96
www.pods.org
NelsoN-Farrar Quar
Indexes for selected equipment items
Gary Farrar
t e r l y
Contributing Editor
Year
and
month
2012
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Year
2013
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Year
2014
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Year
1,639.8
1,629.5
1,630.7
1,623.9
1,614.9
1,576.3
1,542.3
1,546.1
1,555.9
1,519.3
1,534.2
1,543.8
1,579.7
3,019.1
3,025.3
3,029.9
3,039.2
3,040.6
3,041.0
3,051.8
3,075.6
3,076.3
3,082.1
3,089.5
3,096.8
3,055.6
2,467.4
2,467.0
2,470.2
2,473.1
2,470.3
2,455.1
2,448.0
2,463.8
2,468.1
2,457.0
2,467.4
2,475.6
2,465.3
1,287.6
1,292.7
1,291.3
1,277.6
1,276.7
1,274.1
1,277.3
1,280.3
1,296.2
1,292.9
1,289.6
1,296.7
1,286.1
643.2
638.8
633.6
632.3
629.2
623.3
624.9
632.6
638.9
648.1
654.3
651.0
637.5
763.3
733.7
716.6
700.6
693.5
706.7
725.4
747.5
736.5
757.5
788.2
798.1
739.0
1,544.9
1,530.1
1,545.6
1,546.1
1,527.1
1,519.2
1,536.1
1,535.7
1,533.2
1,533.1
1,548.6
1,564.8
1,538.7
3,098.8
3,101.6
3,103.7
3,107.9
3,112.4
3,115.9
3,119.3
3,120.8
3,120.8
3,150.8
3,162.0
3,166.7
3,123.4
2,477.3
2,473.0
2,480.5
2,483.2
2,478.3
2,477.2
2,486.0
2,486.7
2,485.7
2,503.7
2,516.7
2,525.9
2,489.5
1,297.8
1,300.2
1,308.6
1,318.1
1,319.8
1,319.8
1,323.7
1,325.1
1,324.2
1,322.3
1,322.5
1,328.5
1,317.6
650.3
664.1
660.8
669.8
668.1
664.9
656.6
652.4
653.7
670.3
665.9
665.4
661.8
782.7
785.9
785.9
820.9
834.2
827.8
805.2
785.4
786.5
800.8
801.3
815.1
802.6
1,587.8
1,582.9
1,568.2
1,583.4
1,574.9
1,573.5
1,574.9
1,577.0
1,582.0
1,567.0
1,549.1
1,541.5
1,571.8
3,167.4
3,171.6
3,181.4
3,196.9
3,206.3
3,210.5
3,217.7
3,219.1
3,228.3
3,234.0
3,243.2
3,252.2
3,210.7
2,535.6
2,536.1
2,536.1
2,551.5
2,553.7
2,555.7
2,560.6
2,562.3
2,569.8
2,567.2
2,565.6
2,567.9
2,555.2
1,337.6
1,330.6
1,331.4
1,334.1
1,334.4
1,334.5
1,338.2
1,337.0
1,337.9
1,336.9
1,336.9
1,340.5
1,335.8
688.9
713.4
703.2
690.0
690.2
691.4
684.0
674.2
679.4
688.2
676.0
683.4
688.5
863.5
954.9
914.4
871.7
880.6
877.8
857.8
821.3
833.1
837.8
813.3
857.4
865.3
The cost indexes may be used to convert prices at any date to prices at other dates by ratios to the cost indexes of the same
date. Item indexes are published each quarter (first week issue of January, April, July, and October). In addition the Nelson
Construction and Operating Cost Indexes are published in the first issue of each month of Oil & Gas Journal.
Operating cost
(based on 1956 = 100.)
1954
1972
2011
2012
2014
98.5
85.5
85.0
82.6
84.3
60.2
83.5
96.0
95.5
100.0
92.9
90.9
95.5
97.4
100.0
94.5
131.2
152.0
130.4
169.6
168.1
128.1
190.3
123.1
144.4
140.7
121.1
119.4
136.2
107.0
87.4
137.5
968.2
1,166.7
3,403.2
3,460.4
3,238.2
4,176.7
3,368.3
3,692.9
1,216.2
414.9
439.1
1,379.9
801.4
1,098.4
844.2
1,117.6
1,612.8
1,042.4
923.8
3,403.2
3,460.4
3,238.2
4,176.7
3,368.3
2,499.5
1,215.3
414.9
439.1
1,224.5
800.8
1,097.6
844.2
1,048.9
1,513.7
1,077.8
1,211.5
3,403.2
3,460.4
3,238.2
4,176.7
3,368.3
3,912.8
1,083.7
414.9
439.1
1,098.4
714.0
978.6
844.2
1,002.4
1,446.5
1,094.6
900.8
3,403.2
3,460.4
3,238.2
4,176.7
3,368.3
2,386.8
1,116.2
414.9
439.1
1,044.4
735.5
1,008.1
844.2
796.1
1,148.9
82.6
90.4
87.5
47.1
625.0
500.3
625.0
500.3
625.0
500.3
625.0
500.3
98
o s t i m a t i N g
I TEMIZED REFINING COST INDEXES
Operating cost
(based on 1956 = 100.)
1972
2011
2012
2014
88.7
97.2
210.0
197.0
1,304.3
470.8
1,407.5
489.4
1,541.3
493.1
1,615.1
512.1
499.9
630.6
545.9
2,684.9
3,540.2
2,985.6
2,746.0
3,636.7
3,055.6
2,866.3
3,848.5
3,210.7
2,914.4
3,901.3
3,259.8
161.4
143.6
144.7
193.1
188.1
159.1
141.1
138.5
159.9
157.7
171.2
161.9
150.5
171.7
190.7
156.8
151.0
173.8
154.6
198.5
197.8
181.2
238.0
324.4
212.4
252.5
322.8
274.9
342.0
218.4
199.6
216.3
211.0
271.0
149.3
233.3
274.3
266.7
281.9
278.5
346.5
328.4
272.4
353.4
303.9
310.6
1,809.1
1,106.1
1,381.3
1,953.3
1,667.3
952.7
1,247.9
998.1
513.7
1,070.2
1,346.8
821.1
1,036.0
1,153.6
1,067.3
1,153.0
1,136.1
1,405.4
1,987.7
1,469.9
2,039.0
1,151.1
797.9
1,644.4
1,804.9
1,136.8
1,338.5
2,020.7
1,718.2
935.0
1,270.5
1,016.7
514.8
1,098.6
1,368.3
815.7
1,047.0
1,220.9
1,133.7
1,229.3
1,199.2
1,424.4
2,027.4
1,477.0
1,960.4
1,210.0
870.6
1,793.9
1,827.1
1,204.8
1,375.6
2,077.9
1,743.1
963.2
1,360.7
1,086.9
515.8
1,125.3
1,400.6
798.2
1,052.9
1,305.0
1,178.5
1,320.9
1,312.7
1,457.9
2,099.7
1,533.6
2,014.9
1,489.7
1,025.0
2,112.1
1,815.1
1,228.6
1,388.6
2,101.7
1,740.2
973.8
1,395.2
1,120.4
516.8
1,125.8
1,404.7
773.9
1,060.3
1,305.0
1,178.5
1,320.9
1,312.7
1,461.9
2,100.1
1,528.4
2,038.2
1,435.4
990.2
2,041.0
Computed
Code 13
Code 1342
Code 135
Code 1015
Code 134
Code 132
Code 133
Code 117
Code 1173
Code 1175
Code 1174
Code 1194
Manufacturer
Manufacturer
Manufacturer
Manufacturer
Computed
Code 1042
Computed
Manufacturer
Code 81
Code 81102
Code 811-0332
159.9
165.9
161.9
159.0
278.5
324.4
269.1
231.8
1,434.7
1,752.3
1,904.6
1,278.4
1,480.2
1,824.2
1,956.2
1,399.3
1,540.5
1,899.9
2,017.8
1,424.6
1,559.5
1,921.7
2,012.2
1,423.6
Code 114
Code 112
Code 1191
Code 621
195.0
182.7
166.5
187.1
198.7
187.0
177.0
169.0
193.4
180.0
147.3
123.0
197.0
346.9
319.9
337.5
330.6
349.4
365.5
225.9
221.2
386.7
265.5
246.4
125.3
350.9
3,244.7
3,162.6
2,108.7
1,907.6
1,407.3
2,089.3
1,086.7
1,160.2
2,308.5
3,204.8
1,130.0
712.8
2,234.7
3,343.8
3,227.7
2,170.6
1,837.6
1,387.7
1,984.2
1,031.9
1,101.8
2,211.1
3,270.2
1,154.5
699.2
2,331.4
3,392.1
2,895.4
2,271.9
1,775.9
1,419.2
1,969.8
1,024.5
1,093.8
2,153.6
2,933.8
1,181.8
692.8
2,445.5
3,391.6
2,854.0
2,306.7
1,699.1
1,426.9
1,847.5
961.0
1,026.0
2,018.1
2,892.0
1,186.1
676.2
2,461.9
Code 1015-0239
Code 1017-0611
Code 1141
Code 1017
Code 1017-0831
Code 1017-0711
Code 1017-0733
Code 1017-0755
Code 1017-0400
Code 1017-0622
Code 1072
Computed
Code 1149
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 76
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 76
No. 29, May 5, 1949
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
Apr. 1, 1963, p. 119
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
Jan. 3, 1983, p. 73
No. 5, Nov. 18, 1949
Oct. 1, 1962, p. 85
No. 46, Sept. 1, 1940
438.5
2,435.6
2,465.2
2,555.2
2,552.2
OGJ
88.7
118.5
651.9
637.5
688.5
661.9
OGJ
147.0
814.7
739.0
865.3
758.0
OGJ
1954
*Code refers to the index number of the Bureau of Statistics, US Department of Labor, Wholesale Prices Itemized Cost Indexes, Oil & Gas Journal.
99
TECHNOLOGY
100
E.ONs purpose-built salt cavern storage in Cheshire, UK, stores up to 160 million cu m of gas, with withdrawal and gas dewpointing
rates up to 22 million cu m/day (Fig. 1).
bcf York field in the Southern North Sea that saw first gas
in 2012.
York field development included a new 120-MMscfd onshore processing plant at Centricas existing Easington terminal. Maximum reuse of existing equipment minimized
capital cost but directly engaged the UKs Control of Major
Accident Hazard (COMAH) top-tier regulations. A modular design approach, with unit bundles constructed offsite
before installation minimized both contractor exposure to
hazards and effects on terminal operation.
UK natural gas
UK gas production peaked in 2000 at 115 billion cu m
(bcm). It declined to 39 bcm in 2013. The UK has moved
to being a net importer (45 bcm, 2013) from a net exporter
(9 bcm, 2000). With future gas fields likely to be of lower
quality, optimizing ageing gas terminals is crucial and will
require reconfiguration of existing sites.
The Langeled pipeline began operations in 2006, measuring 1,166 km (about 725 miles) long with a 42-44 in. OD.
The pipeline ships gas to the UK from Nyhamna, Norway,
and can supply up to 26 bcm of the UKs 77 bcm/year consumption. Other pipelines connect the UK to Belgium, the
EQUATIONS
WobbeIndex (WI) = calorific value (HHV) / specific gravity
Netherlands, and Norwegian gas fields; the UK-Belgium Interconnector (IUK), the UK-Netherlands pipeline (BBL), and
the Vesterled pipelines, respectively.
LNG arrives at three UK terminals: Isle of Grain in
Kent and the Dragon and South Hook terminals in Pembrokeshire, Wales. These terminals can import a combined
54 bcm/year, but only 25% of this capacity was used in 2012
due to increasing Asian demand for LNG, including surging Japanese demand following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear
incident.
LNG is typically used globally for local power generation,
and a wide heating value range is acceptable. UK imports,
however, enter the NTS, which has stringent specifications
for heating value and WI. To avoid LPG removal or ballasting with nitrogen to meet specifications, LNG imported
from Qatar is processed to remove NGL, including some of
the ethane, before liquefaction, with the removed products
101
TECHNOLOGY
Development of Centricas 106-bcf York field in the southern North Sea included a new 120-MMscfd onshore processing plant
inside the boundary of the companys existing Easington Terminal (Fig. 2).
Brownfield modification
With maturing assets and declining production, the profitability of gas in the UK is declining; 2014 saw profits slide
to near 5-year lows, as the cost of extracting diminishing reserves increased. Extensions to design life, compliance with
environmental legislation, and changing gas composition
102
Environmental legislation
Environmental legislation prompts change within the gas
processing industry and often results in substantial modifications. The Montreal Protocol affected the industry globally, enforcing restrictions on use of hydrochlorofluorocarbons
(HCFC) from Jan. 1. The UK, among others, commonly used
HCFC refrigerant R22 (freon) in gas dewpointing plants because it provides effective low pressure drop dewpointing,
reducing costly sales gas compression.
The protocol prevents the charging of HCFC refrigerant
into existing systems, forcing terminals to invest in alternative technology to meet dewpoint specification. Two projects
at UK gas terminals (Dimlington and Barrow-in-Furness),
sought to remove reliance on R22 refrigeration, design and
build alternatives, bring them into accordance with the pro-
TECHNOLOGY
tocol, extend asset life, and minimize
capital cost.
Decreasing offshore reservoir pressures require additional field compression to maintain system throughput and
achieve contractual discharge pressures.
The increasing need for compression
faces challenges from legislation such as
the European Unions (EU) Large Combustion Plant Directive (LCPD), affecting existing and future compressor installations with a thermal output greater
than 50 Mw. The directive enforces
stringent emission limits for NOx, SO2,
and particulates, with compliance set to
begin in 2016 and 2018.
The directive also requires a bestavailable technology (BAT) assessment
to establish the best solution for minimizing environmental emissions. Similar techniques are in place worldwide, The 400-MMscfd Teesside gas processing plant (TGPP) produced more than 900
with the US Environmental Protection tonnes/day (tpd) of NGL from dense rich gas produced in the central North Sea. A
second 400-MMscfd processing train, shown here under construction, boosted NGL
Agency (EPA) deploying best-available production to more than 2,000 tpd in 1997 (Fig. 3).
control technology assessment program.
The Industrial Emissions Directive
(IED), which came into force in 2011, is the culmination of
er process design which removed the need for a sales gas
the LCPD and six other directives that govern, among other
compressor, substantially reducing capital cost, as plant
topics, the emission of solvents and pollutants to the envidischarge pressure remains above that of the transmission
ronment.
pipeline. It also optimized propane recovery to maximize
investment return (OGJ, Jan. 3, 2000, p. 37). Design also
NGL extraction
provided the ability to respond to changes in NGL prices by
UK NGL production decreased to 2.2 million tonnes in 2013
adjusting extraction rates.
from 6.2 million tonnes in 2008,5 mostly due to a decline
in natural gas production. As a result there has been a net
Cryogenic nitrogen rejection
increase in NGL imports. UK demand for ethane is set to
All UK gas must meet a pipeline specification of less than 5%
increase, with plans for ethane import sites and ethylene
nitrogen. Nitrogen occurs naturally in the North and Irish
cracker conversions to ethane feedstock at Ineos and SabicSea, with concentrations of as much as 10% in developed
owned plants at Grangemouth and Teesside, respectively,
areas. Cryogenic nitrogen removals high thermodynamic
designed to capitalize on low-cost US ethane.
efficiency results in low power consumption, low operating
Natural gas arriving from the north and central North Sea
costs, and high hydrocarbon output. Other nitrogen-removis often rich, requiring NGL removal to meet WI and hydroal technologies, such as rubbery membranes and pressurecarbon dewpoint. NGL recovery also increased profit. The
swing adsorption, are better suited to small plants up to 30
optimum liquids recovery to maximize return should balMMscfd, their high sales-gas compression costs being unance an incremental increase in NGL recovery rate over the
economical for larger projects.6
minimum needed to meet heating value or WI against the
Process design of nitrogen removal must consider the enincremental revenue obtained. This also applies to debottletire gas handling system, as the nitrogen rejection part may
necking existing plants.
typically be only 25% of project cost. The remaining cost
The 800-MMscfd Teesside gas processing plant (TGPP)
stems from feed-gas compression, pretreatment, and prodproduces more than 2,000 tonnes/day (tpd) of NGL from
uct gas compression. Pretreatment must remove sufficient
dense rich gas produced in the central North Sea. The origiwater and carbon dioxide to avoid freezing and is more capinal 400-MMcfd plant supplied a 1,875 Mw power plant and
tal intensive than typical gas processing.
was completed at its initial 900-tpd capacity only 20 months
Process selection and optimization of cryogenic plants reafter engineering, procurement, and construction award.
quire balancing of capital cost against compression cost, the
The second 400-MMcfd train used a twin turbo-expandprincipal operating expense. Design will aim to minimize
103
TECHNOLOGY
compression through sensibly and pragmatically maximizing thermodynamic efficiency.4
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Terry Tomlinson and Grant
Johnson for their help in preparing this article.
References
1. Finn, A.J., and Tomlinson, T.R., A Case for Dehydration, Hydrocarbon Engineering, December 2007, pp. 71-75.
2. Kane, A., Lorenzo, M., and Luciano, G., Adapt Silica
Gel Adsorption Technology: Reasons for Selection on Gas
Conditioning Plants, GPA Europe Annual Conference, Berlin,
May 24-25, 2012.
3. Mayer, M., and Crowe, T., The North Morecambe
Onshore Terminal, GPA Europe Meeting: Production and
Processing Difficult or Marginal Fields, London, Sept. 28,
1995.
104
The authors
Adrian Finn ([email protected]) is process
technology manager at Costain, Manchester,
UK, with responsibility for process technology
development and commercialization, process
technology selection and supervision of feasibility studies, pre-FEEDs and FEEDs. He has
spent 32 years with Costain, mainly on cryogenic
gas processing projects including NGL extraction, natural gas
liquefaction, and nitrogen rejection. He holds a BS in chemical
engineering and fuel technology from the University of Sheffield, UK, and an MS in integrated design of chemical plant
from the University of Leeds, UK. He is a fellow of the Institution
of Chemical Engineers, a chartered engineer in the UK, a member of both the management and program committees of GPA
Europe, and is on the editorial review board for the 14th Edition
of the GPSA Engineering Data Book.
Zak Loftus ([email protected]) is a
process engineer at Costain in Manchester. He
has spent 3 years with Costain working on the
detailed design and management of brownfield
modification projects for gas terminals around
the UK and conceptual studies within the gas
processing industry. He holds an MS in chemical engineering with industrial experience from the University of
Manchester, UK, and is an associate member of the Institution
of Chemical Engineers.
Manuscripts welcome
Oil & Gas Journal editors are happy to consider for publication manuscripts about exploration and development, drilling, production, pipelines, LNG, and processing (refining, gas
processing, and basic petrochemicals). These papers may be
highly technical in nature and appeal or they may analyze oil
and natural gas supply, demand, and markets. OGJ accepts
manuscripts submitted exclusively to it or those adapted from
oral and poster presentations. An Author Guide is available
at www.ogj.com; click Home, then Submit an article. Or,
contact Managing EditorTechnology ([email protected];
713/963-6211; or, fax 713/963-6282), Oil & Gas Journal, 1455
West Loop South, Suite 400, Houston TX 77027 USA.
JULY
2015
VOL
61,
NO.
OGPE.COM
OIL, GAS
&petrochemequipment
W H AT S N E W F O R O N S H O R E & O F F S H O R E : U P S T R E A M , M I D S T R E A M , D OW N S T R E A M O P E R AT I O N S
P2
Products
FROM
THE
OG&PE
EDITOR
Thanks for opening this OG&PE section of Oil & Gas Journal.
Our July edition highlights fndings
at the recent International Liquid
Terminals Association 35th annual conference and
tradeshow. As always an impressive array of equipment, products, and services was presented. Beginning
on Page 10 is a sampling of the specialties showcased at
this years ILTA. Most offer free literature which you are
welcome to request at OGPE.com.
Our front-of-the-issue before the ILTA followup highlights free literature and product information for all segments of upstream, midstream, and downstream operations. Of note this month are sulfur-in-fuels analysis on
which a free application brief is offered, along with a
celebration of one companys 10 years of separation solutions, and the addition of mass fowtubes to an established line of Coriolis products.
This months Page 1 announcements are particularly
signifcant with newly developed and just-announced
drilling motors and casing gas compressors, as well as
free information on an established line of pipeline and
coating inspection products. Several surveillance aiding
cameras and imaging developments are also presented
from Italy and Israel. These once again reinforce the ongoing innovations and developments of global companies specifc to oil, gas, and petrochemical operations.
Please feel free to go to OGPE.com homepage Click
Here for Product Information button to request free
information or literature on all items of interest.
J.B. Avants, Publisher & Editor
[email protected] / 918 832 9351 / OGPE.com
Editor
Production Director
Digital Product Manager
Production Manager
Art Director
JULY 2015
J.B. Avants
Charlie Cole
Kristine Duran
Shirley Gamboa
Clark Bell
Nick Erdogan
Ron Kalusha
Marketing Manager
Daniel Bell
PENNWELL CORPORATION
Chairman
Frank T. Lauinger
Robert F. Biolchini
Mark C. Wilmoth
Jim Klingele
ADVERTISING SALES:
North America
AD INDEX
Italy
Ferruccio Silvera
Tel. 39 02 28 46716
[email protected]
PennWell do Brasil
Deny Tenenblat
55 21 3932 5557
[email protected]
France, Spain, Portugal, Belgium
and Southern Switzerland
Daniel Bernard
33 (0) 1 30 71 11 19
[email protected]
Singapore
Michael Yee
+65 9616 8080
[email protected]
OGPE.com
July 2015
Month
2015
Oil, Gas & Petrochem Equipment makes every reasonable effort to verify its content.
However, neither Oil, Gas & Petrochem Equipment nor our parent firm,
PennWell Corporation, assume responsibility for validity of manufacturer claims or statements made in published items.
Need Reprints of your ad or recent editorial?
Contact Foster Printing for a quote:
866 879 9144 / [email protected]
P3
In August OG&PE:
Extreme
Conditions
& Pressures
Nobody Does it Better
Count on our proven
valves, fittings &
tubing for ALL
your oil, gas &
petrochem needs
High Pressure
Equipment
Company
HiPOur Name is High Pressure
July 2015
OGPE.com
#403 at ogpe.hotims.com
SPOOL PIECEMOUNTED
WATER CUT MONITOR
# #
cells are available in a wide range of path
lengths, and a reference cell for laser line-lock
eliminates measurement errors caused by laser wavelength shifting as ambient temperature varies. Gas sampling accessories allow
customization, the back lit LCD displays four
20-character lines of data, and a membrane
keypad makes parameter input and display
selection easy. The unit weighs only 11 lb.,
has a battery life of eight hours, and a USB
2.0 interface. The 5100 is factory calibrated
and calibration is NIST traceable. AMETEK
Process Instruments. Tel: 412-828-9040.
www.ametekpi.com
#405 at ogpe.hotims.com
#404 at ogpe.hotims.com
#407 at ogpe.hotims.com
#406 at ogpe.hotims.com
2015 AMETEK Inc. All rights reserved.
P5
#409 at ogpe.hotims.com
1
<
<
;<
< <
2 <
< 1 <
-&,
".- ' -&,
345 $3!()($3!( 34 )5
0.+
3455 < .- & *67
<
<
& -&8
,%#-. /%0% 1
<
-,&9+ <
&':(
(45*www.grabner-instruments.com
#410 at ogpe.hotims.com
#411 at ogpe.hotims.com
Fluke 810 Vibration Testers now have a free frmware upgrade to help maintenance teams more
quickly identify and prioritize mechanical problems.
Testers combine a powerful diagnostic engine with
a simple step-by-step process to report on specifc machine faults and their severity the frst measurements
are taken without prior measurement history.
The frmware features overall vibration level data,
more intuitive maintenance recommendations, fexible machine speed confguration, detailed diagnostic reports and spectral
diagrams, along with more precise machine-train images.
Fluke Corporation: Everett WA
For FREE Information, select #7 at ogpe.hotims.com
July 2015
OGPE.com
P6
Communications in
explosive environments
OGPE.com
July 2015
M
oore IIndustries
ndustries IIs
sT
here
Moore
There
Like a good goalkeeper, a Safety Instrumented System (SIS) is
your dependable last line of defense. This means you need
reliable Functional Safety products to anchor your team.
You can count on Moore Industries with FS Functional Safety Series
products designed for Safety Instrumented Systems and to IEC
61508 standards. Our alarm trips, relays, isolators and splitters help
your SIS perform at its highest level. With approval from exida for
use in SIL 3 and SIL 2 environments, you can install our products
with condence.
Looking to add more reliability to your SIS roster? Our FS Functional
Safety Series products...
Great teams are condent their keeper will make the big save with
the game on the line. Shouldnt you feel the same about your safety
instrumentation?
Get A FREE White Paper
on Tank Overll Protection
P8
Regulated and effective discharge pressure of inert gas clean agent is delivered
by iFLOW system for engineered fre
suppression.
The new delivery system eliminates potential for peak pressure and fow spikes.
Its controlled fow enables use of smaller
diameter, low pressure piping and reduced pressure relief venting equipment. This minimizes piping complexity plus reduces costs associated with
providing pressure venting.
iFLOW combines proven fre extinguishing properties
with environmental benefts of inert gas technology to
overcome pipe size, venting design, and overall installation challenges.
Tyco Fire Protection Products:
Enschede The Netherlands
Sentinel system delivers continuous unattended equipment and remote locations monitoring where
Internet or Ethernet connectivity
isnt available.
When the cellular system detects
a problem (leaks, temperature
change, power outage) it immediately sends alerts by phone, text, or email over standard
cellular networks provided by AT&T or Verizon. Instant
notifcation enables quick corrective action to save critical assets and address possible costly situations.
A single Sentinel monitors up to 12 different environmental and equipment status conditions including -109
to +115F., humidity, water, and power.
Sensaphone: Aston PA
For FREE Information, select #19 at ogpe.hotims.com
OGPE.COM
Online all the time
OGPE.com
July 2015
P9
ULISSE RADICAL PTZ cameras like this aid outdoor surveillance as factory assembled with
motorized zoom lenses.
Models require only power and
network connectivity to operate.
The camera and lens are preconfgured during production
so you only need connect up to
power supply and network, then
carry out simple fnal set-up to adapt to requirements.
ULISSE RADICAL integrates a full HD network camera, 1/2-in. CMOS sensor, 1080p/60fps, with outstanding low light sensitivity at up to more than 300 m away.
VIDEOTEC SpA: Schio, Vicenza Italy
July 2015
OGPE.com
P10
ILTA Highlights
recently exhibited at the 35th Annual International Liquid Terminals Association Conference & Tradeshow and participated as media sponsor
in Houston.
Here are highlights representing equipment manufacturers and service providers on which we gathered information.
To request free information or literature on products and services of interest go to OGPE.com, right
hand side homepage click Product Information
the yellow button. Or you can click the items right
here on the pages if you receive OG&PE digitally as an
Oil & Gas Journal section.
OG&PE
Speed Funnels highlight this free pamphlet to help feld personnel to pull samples quicker and cleaner.
Besides saved time and money, plus
eliminated waste the funnels get samples back to the lab for analysis fast and
back to clients. They also allow operations
to start quicker and take any demerge
charges out of the equation.
Sampling times are emphasized to be
reduced from hours to minutes for shore tanks, barges,
or vessels.
PetroFunnels: Houston
OGPE.com
July 2015
ILTA Highlights
P11
Twister Locking Quick Connects are cited in this free datasheet as the only coupling in the
world guaranteed to not come off
when pressure is in the line.
It is physically impossible to disengage the coupling when pressure is in oil, fracing, LPG, acids,
ammonia, or lubricants lines.
Quarter-turn on/off functionality
provides rapid engagement and
reduces operator stress.
LQC series comes in 3/4, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 in. of stainless
steel, cold-temperature carbon and steel or aluminum.
OPW Engineered Systems: Lebanon OH
July 2015
OGPE.com
P12
ILTA Highlights
OGPE.com
July 2015
lagcoe.com
c
c
2015
Years
& Still
Climbing
Global
G
ba Collaboration
Co bo i
L
Local
a R
Resources
s rc
LAGCOEE proudly
udly celebrates
eleb t 60 years
e
supporting
p rtin th
tthe oil and
nd gas indust
industry
d
through w
world-class
a expositions,
s
technical
c
presentations,
r
i
and a commitment
t
ttr educationand
education
at
a
and
d were
we re S
Still Climbing
St
im
m
.
to industry
Climbing.
Attendees
e enjoy one
o of the
e most culturally
c
g areas in
n the U.S.,, Lafayette,
t Louisiana
a inspiring
r
e Corridor
r
gatewayy to Americas
Energy
Corridor.
lagcoe.com/register.
October 27-29, 2015
Lafayette,Louisiana USA
P14
The Carhartt Force FR T-shirt issues the heat a warning of its own.
Temperatures can rise but your crew will dominate in
the Force Flame-Resistant T-Shirt. With FastDry technology to wick away sweat plus odor fghting elements, it
empowers the work that fuels our nation. United. We
outwork them all.
Carhartt: Dearborn MI
Carhartt.com/category/carhartt-flame-resistant
OGPE.com
July 2015
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
RECRUITING
NOW!
with PennEnergy Jobs
July 2015
Visit PennEnergyJobs.com to
REGISTER
SERVICES | SUPPLIERS
ZION OIL & GAS
WEATHERFORD
SIEMENS
Siemens continues to develop its controller portfolio to handle sophisticated tasks
in the process industry. Users of the
flexibly configurable controllers, which
offer a high level of security and availability, will therefore benefit from long-
CEONA
Ceona, SURF contractor with deepwater
subsea construction capabilities, has
announced that the companys executive
vice president commercial and business development, Mark Preece,
has been appointed as
Chief Executive Officer.
Mark takes over from
current CEO, Steve Preston, who after 40 years in Preece
the industry has decided
to retire from operational
management and step down. Steve has
worked to establish Ceona as a key subsea
player over the last three years, having
been a prime mover and overseeing the
construction of the companys purposebuilt flagship, Ceona Amazon.
105
SERVICES | SUPPLIERS
Ceona is a SURF and heavy subsea
construction contractor in the deepwater
market, specializing in full-service engineering, pipelay and construction project
management and execution, including
floater installation (Semi, TLP, SPAR).
The company has already established an
impressive track record which has seen
it expand into West Africa, the Gulf of
Mexico and Brazil.
The Ceona Amazon is a powerful,
purpose-built hybrid vessel that can
execute complex logistical projects in
remote, harsh and deepwater territories
in one trip. Designed to deliver full flexible or full rigid pipelay, she can change
easily and quickly between each mode
within five days and is weather resilient.
Due to her on-board capacitythe
Amazon has a deck area of 4,600m2
and the ability to carry 9,500te of pipe
on deck and in her two holds she can
carry more product than any other of her
counterparts while the multiple, verticallay pipelay system features a top tension
of 600 tonnes and capable to lay rigid
pipe to 3,000m (10,000 ft) water depth.
Ceona, which is backed by majority shareholder Goldman Sachs
Capital Partners, has offices in London,
Aberdeen and Houston, with strategic
partners in Brazil and West Africa.
AFGLOBAL
AFGlobal Corporation announced that
Curtis Samford, the Companys Chief
Operating Officer, will assume the role of
President and Chief Executive Officer of
the Company. Samford succeeds Gean
Stalcup who has served in this capacity for
the past 5 years. Stalcup has been named
Chairman of the Board for AFGlobal.
Samford joined the Company in 2012
as President - Oil & Gas and was later
promoted to Chief Operating Officer in
July 2013. Samford began his career in
the oil and gas industry more than 30
years ago as a field engineer for Dresser
Atlas. Over the course of his career, he
has held escalating positions of responsibility for Shell Oil Company, Alcoa, and
Precision Castparts.
AFGlobal Corporation is a privatelyheld Houston-based company with
106
HALLIBURTON
Halliburtons Completion Tools business
line, a long-standing industry leader in
total composite plug technology, today
introduced the Illusion frac plug, the
only fully dissolvable frac plug on the
market. The new high-performance,
10,000 psi rated product shortens the
time to production by eliminating the
need to mill out plugs after fracturing,
saving time and money for operators.
The Illusion frac plug revolutionizes
plug-and-perf completions for fracturing
in unconventional markets. Plugs can
be installed at any position in the wellbore to enable optimal placement of perforations for improved fracturing, without
prepositioned locator subs or other
equipment that remains in the wellbore
post-frac. Illusion frac plugs dissolve
completely to leave an unrestricted bore
for production, and since no intervention
is required to clean the wellbore after the
frac, risk is reduced and production may
be brought on sooner to improve the net
present value (NPV) of the asset.
SPARROWS GROUP
The Sparrows Group has boosted its senior
management team with the appointment
of an experienced director to head up its
operations across the Americas. Steve
Bertone joins the global leader in the provision of engineered products and services
in the specialist areas of lifting and handling, cable and pipelay, and fluid power to
the offshore oil and gas industry, after 33
years with McDermott International.
In his new role, Mr. Bertone will be
based in Houston and will oversee all
of Sparrows Groups operations in the
US, Brazil, Mexico and the Caribbean.
Before joining Sparrows Group, Mr.
FUGRO
Fugro has successfully completed a
year-long wellhead monitoring project
for BP Americas Inc., measuring BOP
stack motions and calculating wellhead
fatigue during a deployment in the Gulf
of Mexico.
The drilling campaign was conducted
throughout 2014 in 6,000 ft of water
depth and utilized the Fugro Wellhead
and Riser Instrumentation Service
(WARIS). This installation included
transmission of motion spectra from the
BOP stack and riser using standard hydroacoustic modems and the automatic
processing of this data with topside environmental data to show levels of motion
and fatigue and their correlation with sea
states and ocean currents. This provided
BP with access to real-time subsea data
to aid their decision making throughout
the deployment. Communications from
the lower marine riser package (LMRP)
and riser remained successful even with
surface wave heights greater than 3
meters at times during the campaign.
The DeepData subsea motion monitoring pods, the main component in the
system, were deployed to positions on
the BOP stack and riser by a remotely
SERVICES | SUPPLIERS
operated vehicle (ROV). The pods were
integrated with hydroacoustic modems
and had battery capacity to last for one
year of deployment. A topside system
was supplied that included vessel motion
monitoring and links to existing environmental monitoring systems.
To ensure that the data could be
accessed and utilized by BP engineers
anywhere in the world, Fugros onshore
data delivery system was used to plot
and display all the processed data from
the WARIS system. Summary plots were
also distributed by email to a designated
list of client recipients.
The success of the project indicated
the technology could be deployed on
other wells where fatigue capacity and
potential loading is of interest.
IWCF
The International Well Control Forum
(IWCF), the independent organization
that sets international well control standards, has appointed David Conroy as its
first Chief Technical Officer (CTO).
Based at the organizations UK headquarters, Mr. Conroy will be developing
this new role to lead changes to the
technical aspects of IWCFs services,
including exam quality, programme development, curriculum and training.
Mr. Conroy has 20 years experience
in the international oil and gas industry.
He will join IWCF in July from Schlumberger where he has held a variety of positions for over 10 years, latterly serving
as Drilling & Drilling Engineering Director
of Curriculum in Dubai.
Mr. Conroy holds a PhD in Geology
from The Queens University of Belfast,
which initially led him to roles in geological surveying. Since joining the oil and
gas industry in Aberdeen, he has worked
in a variety of positions in Norway, Oman
and Houston.
IWCF has recently invested in new
facilities at its headquarters in Montrose,
UK to improve training for well control
assessors and instructors who address
drilling operations and well intervention
activities. The organization is actively recruiting for new members, anyone who is
interested in having a say in well control
CIRCOR ENERGY
Statoil has chosen CIRCOR Energy | Instrumentation products as part of a significant supply package awarded to MRC
Teamtrade, a Norwegian unit of MRC
Global Inc., distributor of pipe, valve
and fitting products and services to the
energy and industrial markets. The package consists of all tube products and a
complete range of high pressure valves
and fittings, which includes CIRCORs
Gyrolok instrumentation tube fittings and
HOKE valves and manifolds. The project
will be using smart NORSOK compliant
metallurgy to resist the potentially cor-
107
STATISTICS
770
749
123
142
12
73
677
596
589
141
137
66
91
925
127
124
6
66
97
10
(3)
85
82
7
60
75
10
112
897
873
129
208
109
83
674
681
671
148
197
141
101
1,037
507
481
83
112
196
53
661
1,797
1,956
303
349
2,100
2,305
1,612
5,592
5,897
1,173
1,169
6,765
7,066
7,341
7,389
7,853
1,476
1,518
8,865
9,371
8,953
Total US
5-1-15
4-24-15
*5-2-14
1,000 b/d
547
547
399
188
188
122
988
988
901
378
378
391
470
470
314
945
945
877
3,516
3,516
3,004
467
467
71
3,983
3,983
3,075
4,093
(1,981)
6,074
5,993
(986)
6,979
SPOT PRICES
Product value
Brent crude
Crack spread
*Revised.
Source: US Energy Information Administration
Data available at PennEnergy Research Center.
5,782
(1,032)
6,814
*Revised.
Source: Oil & Gas Journal
Data available at PennEnergy Research Center.
Motor gasoline
Blending
Jet fuel,
Fuel oils
PropaneCrude oil
Total
comp.
kerosine
Distillate
Residual
propylene
1,000 bbl
PADD 1 .....................................
PADD 2 .....................................
PADD 3 .....................................
PADD 4 .....................................
PADD 5 .....................................
17,075
137,733
230,432
21,590
56,163
59,578
48,186
75,010
7,295
28,425
54,424
41,565
65,625
5,240
25,761
11,865
6,837
12,810
650
7,570
43,284
32,394
43,032
4,316
12,402
9,212
1,150
23,798
204
5,453
5,048
22,175
51,955
1
2,790
462,993
467,927
388,091
218,494
217,814
214,977
192,615
191,476
185,930
39,732
40,505
37,799
135,428
133,591
120,566
39,817
40,285
38,538
81,968
80,660
53,671
REFINERY
OPERATIONS
Gross
Crude oil
inputs
inputs
1,000 b/d
REFINERY OUTPUT
Total
motor
Jet fuel,
Fuel oils
Propanegasoline
kerosine
Distillate
Residual
propylene
1,000 b/d
PADD 1 ..............................................
PADD 2 ..............................................
PADD 3 ..............................................
PADD 4 ..............................................
PADD 5 ..............................................
1,221
3,646
8,792
605
2,530
1,220
3,645
8,662
609
2,397
3,241
2,524
2,031
280
1,678
79
255
874
34
430
365
1,005
2,805
192
603
51
40
140
17
132
226
333
894
1
179
16,794
16,648
15,872
16,533
16,283
15,672
9,754
9,933
10,130
1,672
1,672
1,476
4,970
5,012
4,876
380
370
396
1,632
1,652
1,489
108
STATISTICS
OGJ GASOLINE PRICES
Price
Pump
ex tax
price*
6-24-15
6-24-15
/gal
358.9
363.4
364.4
366.8
375.4
354.4
371.9
364.4
373.4
368.9
370.4
366.6
Chicago .........................
Cleveland ......................
Des Moines ....................
Detroit ...........................
Indianapolis ..................
Kansas City ...................
Louisville .......................
Memphis .......................
Milwaukee .....................
Minn.-St. Paul ...............
Oklahoma City ...............
Omaha ..........................
St. Louis ........................
Tulsa .............................
Wichita ..........................
PAD II avg .................
252.8
232.3
240.3
218.3
209.5
224.0
248.8
221.9
234.4
231.7
227.3
217.7
243.0
224.3
219.3
229.7
310.3
278.7
280.7
278.7
269.7
259.7
299.7
261.7
285.7
278.7
262.7
263.4
278.7
259.7
261.7
275.3
412.1
396.3
367.3
370.8
373.3
362.3
376.3
378.3
379.3
372.3
343.3
358.3
345.9
340.8
365.8
369.5
Albuquerque ..................
Birmingham ..................
Dallas-Fort Worth ..........
Houston .........................
Little Rock .....................
New Orleans ..................
San Antonio ...................
PAD III avg ................
225.4
214.5
224.1
216.1
219.1
219.8
215.3
219.2
262.7
253.8
262.5
254.5
259.3
258.2
253.7
257.8
356.4
346.1
344.4
348.1
345.9
349.2
348.4
348.4
Cheyenne.......................
Denver ...........................
Salt Lake City ................
PAD IV avg ................
218.4
225.4
252.4
232.1
260.8
265.8
295.3
274.0
353.7
365.9
359.1
359.6
316.4
241.3
244.8
303.5
316.4
210.3
272.1
232.1
229.5
219.7
195.3
303.4
384.5
278.7
294.2
371.7
384.5
266.2
330.0
279.5
276.9
267.0
242.6
350.7
418.9
389.9
399.9
405.9
412.9
380.9
401.4
369.1
367.9
365.0
6-26-15
6-27-14
Alabama............................................
Alaska ...............................................
Arkansas ...........................................
California ..........................................
Land................................................
Offshore ..........................................
Colorado ............................................
Florida ...............................................
Illinois ...............................................
Indiana..............................................
Kansas ..............................................
Kentucky............................................
Louisiana ..........................................
N. Land ...........................................
S. Inland waters ..............................
S. Land............................................
Offshore ..........................................
Maryland ...........................................
Michigan ...........................................
Mississippi ........................................
Montana ............................................
Nebraska ...........................................
New Mexico........................................
New York............................................
North Dakota .....................................
Ohio...................................................
Oklahoma ..........................................
Pennsylvania .....................................
South Dakota.....................................
Texas .................................................
Offshore ..........................................
Inland waters ..................................
Dist. 1 .............................................
Dist. 2 .............................................
Dist. 3 .............................................
Dist. 4 .............................................
Dist. 5 .............................................
Dist. 6 .............................................
Dist. 7B ...........................................
Dist. 7C ...........................................
Dist. 8 .............................................
Dist. 8A ...........................................
Dist. 9 .............................................
Dist. 10 ...........................................
Utah ..................................................
West Virginia .....................................
Wyoming............................................
Others NV-1 .......................................
0
10
5
11
11
0
38
1
2
0
13
1
75
27
7
13
28
0
0
3
0
2
44
0
74
17
105
47
0
361
0
0
50
39
18
22
5
19
2
33
144
12
2
15
8
20
21
1
6
10
11
48
48
0
69
2
2
2
30
3
107
25
18
15
49
0
0
14
7
1
90
0
171
41
208
59
0
889
3
0
117
92
61
33
7
33
13
104
323
36
14
53
27
25
51
0
Total US ........................................
Total Canada ................................
859
135
1,873
236
994
628
228
28
1,155
2,109
1,558
314
55
1,816
2
6-26-15
6-27-14
1,000 b/d
US CRUDE PRICES
Alaska-North Slope 27 .........................................
Light Louisiana Sweet ...........................................
California-Midway Sunset 13 ..............................
California Buena Vista Hills 26 ...........................
Wyoming Sweet .....................................................
East Texas Sweet ...................................................
West Texas Sour 34 ..............................................
West Texas Intermediate........................................
Oklahoma Sweet....................................................
Texas Upper Gulf Coast .........................................
Michigan Sour .......................................................
Kansas Common ...................................................
North Dakota Sweet ...............................................
Research Center.
186.30
177.00
187.80
169.80
Propane
No. 2 heating oil
New York Harbor ......... 173.80 Mont Belvieu .............. 35.10
US Gulf of
Mexico. . . . . .
South
America
Northwest
Europe. . . . .
West
Africa. . . . . .
Middle
East. . . . . . .
Southeast
Asia. . . . . . .
Worldwide. . . .
Marketed
Marketed
supply
Marketed utilization
of rigs contracted rate (%)
109
73
60
82.2
74
70
62
88.6
100
94
84
89.4
77
70
56
80.0
159
152
137
90.1
94
852
85
769
61
655
71.8
85.2
Wkly. avg.
$/bbl
6-26-15
59.74
Mo. avg., $/bbl
Apr. -15
May -15
6-19-15
/gal
6-26-15
$/bbl*
51.94
55.00
53.85
61.13
52.38
53.00
51.00
56.00
56.00
49.75
48.00
55.25
47.50
27
531
606
232
7
26
130
1,324
19
67
81
326
1,093
41
340
16
3,433
115
24
209
49
8,696
57.30
57.73
55.61
60.65
58.40
61.12
56.26
55.96
58.51
49.49
61.66
52.73
59.75
62.16
62.62
60.40
65.30
63.22
65.51
61.38
60.92
63.26
55.09
66.18
58.04
64.12
58.55
58.55
59.10
59.50
59.70
62.98
63.54
63.78
64.32
64.33
(5.07)
0.95
(5.04)
0.78
6-12-15
6-19-14
bcf
1,018
1,003
652
1,053
1,000
848
437
430
313
2,508
2,433 1,813
Change,
Apr.-15
Apr.-14
%
1,804
1,066
Change,
%
56.1
24.2
39.6
38.3
69.2
109
STATISTICS
PACE REFINING MARGINS
US Gulf Coast
Composite US Gulf Refnery..............
Mars (Coking) ..................................
Mars (Cracking) ...............................
Bonny Light ......................................
US PADD II
Chicago (WTI)...................................
US East Coast
Brass River ......................................
East Coast Comp .............................
US West Coast
Los Angeles (ANS) ............................
NW Europe
Rotterdam (Brent) ............................
Mediterranean
Italy (Urals) ......................................
Far East
Singapore (Dubai) ............................
Apr.
May June
June
2015 2015 2015
2014
Change
$/bbl
Change,
%
14.22
14.02
10.56
11.22
14.96
14.86
11.29
10.55
15.98
16.49
13.30
14.09
13.50
15.02
12.15
6.40
18.3
9.8
9.5
120.2
16.73
19.79 20.49
19.13
1.36
7.1
11.74
12.22
15.09 18.57
19.58 21.95
6.16
7.70
12.41
14.25
201.5
185.0
20.81
28.22 16.69
11.20
5.50
49.1
5.52
5.11
6.33
2.47
1.47
1.15
7.69
(0.70)
7.02
7.67 (1,088.9)
6.45
6.17
6.96
(0.70)
4.57
5.65
5.87
0.74
5.13
3 month
Change vs.
average
previous
Mar.
Feb.
production
year
2015
2015
2015
2014
Volume
1,000 b/d %
(1,007.0)
694.5
2,044
405
123
52
71
-2,572
2,636
181
163
89
74
-2,980
1,975
323
122
65
57
-2,420
69
82
1
(13)
14
-152
10,780 10,535
718
629
563
545
279
323
278
219
6
3
12,061 11,709
245
89
18
(44)
59
3
352
SUPPLY
Production (dry gas) ........
Supplemental gas............
Storage withdrawal..........
Imports ............................
Canada..........................
Mexico ...........................
LNG................................
Total supply .....................
2,239
5
84
205
202
-3
2,533
2,299
4
375
257
242
-15
2,935
2,058
5
105
201
198
-3
2,369
181
-(21)
4
4
--164
8,885 8,164
19
20
2,059 2,465
995
976
954
957
-1
41
18
11,958 11,625
721
(1)
(406)
20
(3)
(1)
23
334
Brazil ...................................
Canada................................
Mexico .................................
United States ......................
Venezuela ............................
Other Western
Hemisphere .......................
Western
Hemisphere..................
100
632
340
3,181
213
100
632
346
3,100
213
100
632
346
3,087
213
83
696
364
2,705
213
17
(64)
(19)
382
19.8
(9.3)
(5.1)
14.1
246
241
243
245
(2)
(0.9)
4,712
4,633
4,620
4,308
313
7.3
Norway.................................
United Kingdom ...................
Other Western
Europe ...............................
372
47
332
52
349
53
317
66
32
(13)
10.2
(19.7)
10
(1)
(10.0)
428
393
411
393
18
4.7
Russia .................................
Other FSU ............................
Other Eastern
Europe ...............................
Eastern Europe ..............
470
178
467
176
457
177
447
185
10
(8)
2.2
(4.6)
15
634
14
634
12
634
10
640
2
(7)
21.1
(1.0)
Algeria .................................
Egypt ...................................
Libya....................................
Other Africa .........................
Africa..............................
340
174
50
83
647
340
174
50
83
647
340
174
50
83
647
340
174
48
82
644
2
1
2
3.4
0.7
0.3
Saudi Arabia........................
United Arab Emirates ..........
Other Middle East ................
1,830
400
691
1,830
400
691
1,830
400
691
1,830
400
646
45
7.0
Middle East.....................
2,921
2,921
2,921
2,876
45
1.6
Australia..............................
China...................................
India ....................................
Other AsiaPacifc ...............
AsiaPacifc ...................
TOTAL WORLD .................
72
100
315
487
9,828
72
100
315
487
9,714
72
100
315
487
9,720
66
103
337
507
9,368
(3)
(22)
(20)
352
8.5
(2.9)
(6.7)
(3.9)
3.8
OXYGENATES
4,364
1,804
6,168
4,364
1,482
5,846
4,363
1,677
6,040
4,357
1,066
5,423
Apr.
Mar.
YTD
YTD
2015
2015 Change
2015
2014
Change
1,000 bbl
2,477
738
3,215
Fuel ethanol
Production ..................
Stocks .........................
27,910
20,787
MTBE
Production ..................
Stocks .........................
1,368
704
29,489 (1,579)
20,865
(78)
823
889
545
(185)
113,942 109,698
20,787 17,356
3,708
704
4,430
671
4,244
3,431
(722)
33
US HEATING DEGREEDAYS
May
2015
May
2014
Normal
2015 %
change
from
normal
163
99
160
213
29
43
19
239
177
253
165
207
215
40
66
35
188
106
281
217
238
208
61
76
17
233
182
(42.0)
(54.4)
(32.8)
2.4
(52.5)
(43.4)
11.8
2.6
(2.7)
6,818
6,116
6,791
6,642
2,878
3,736
2,362
4,260
2,243
6,881
6,213
7,194
7,402
2,932
3,910
2,655
4,621
2,538
6,545
5,872
6,447
6,701
2,846
3,597
2,286
5,127
3,152
4.2
4.2
5.3
(0.9)
1.1
3.9
3.3
(16.9)
(28.8)
US average*............................................................
116
128
159
(27.0)
4,411
4,668
4,485
(1.6)
Total degreedays
July 1 through May 31
2015
2014
Normal
% change
from
normal
110
MARKET
CONNECTION
WHERE THE INDUSTRY GOES TO CLASSIFY
Employment? HIRE
Services Offered? ACQUIRE
Equipment/Products/Land? SELL
GRACE JORDAN
713-963-6291
[email protected]
Twitter: @ogjmarket
The Oil & Gas Journal has a circulation of over 100,000 readers and has been the worlds most widely read petroleum publication for over 100 years
P R O DUC T S & E QU IPME NT
FOR SALE:
WE WANT YOUR
PROPANE/
BUTANE TANKS
www.procoproducts.com
3D PDF CAD performance drawings are
available for download. Visit:
http://www.tracepartsonline.net/ws/proco
REFRIGERATION
PLANTS
100 MCF 20 MMCF
JT PLANTS: 1 MMCF 20 MMCF
AMINE PLANTS: 0.5 GPM 6 GPM
PRODUCT STORAGE TANKS:
12,000 30,000 GALLON
318-425-2533, 318-458-1874
[email protected]
List your
product, service or
business opportunity:
g ra c e j @ p e n n w e l l . c o m
111
MARKET
CONNECTION
WHERE THE INDUSTRY GOES TO CLASSIFY
The Oil & Gas Journal has a circulation of over 100,000 readers and has been the worlds most widely read petroleum publication for over 100 years
P R O DU C T S & E QU IPME NT / EMP L OYME N T
Equipment
FOR SALE
LB 40-60 EXP
Electric Steam Generators for
Cleaning/Degassing
Operations Prior
toHot Work
CONTACT:
[email protected]
Toll-Free: 1/866-617-0764
Equipment has never been installed nor used. All equipment is still in
original packaging that it was shipped in, preserved, and in a climate
controlled storage facility since delivery, with the exception of the
casing tubulars. The casings have been preserved with desiccant,
capped, covered, and stacked.
713-466-1535
[email protected]
FACULTY POSITION
IN THE VOILAND SCHOOL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING AND BIOENGINEERING,
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY
The Gene and Linda Voiland School of Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering at Washington State University invites
applications for the B. Wise Distinguished Professor in Energy Production.
This is a 12-month per year, non-tenure track professor of practice (clinical) position. The successful
munication skills. Preference will be given to applicants with an advanced degree (MS or PhD) in chemical
The successful applicant will develop and teach elective courses for chemical engineering students
focused on upstream and midstream processing, as well as traditional chemical engineering courses
such as process design, process safety, and/or unit operations laboratory, and will advise undergraduate
students. The successful candidate will also work with major petroleum companies and support organizations to enhance employment opportunities for students and build relationships with these corporations. Individuals with a strong background in funda
Voiland School and petroleum corporations engaged in upstream and midstream processing are encouraged to apply. This position
will be based in Pullman, WA. Applications should include a letter of application, curriculum vitae, teaching statement, and contact
information for three references.
For additional information on Washington State
To apply, please visit:
University and The Voiland School of
Chemical Engineering and Bioengineering,
www.wsujobs.com/postings/19205
WSU is an EO/AA Educator and Employer.
112
MARKET
CONNECTION
WHERE THE INDUSTRY GOES TO CLASSIFY
Employment? HIRE
Services Offered? ACQUIRE
Equipment/Products/Land? SELL
GRACE JORDAN
713-963-6291
[email protected]
Twitter: @ogjmarket
The Oil & Gas Journal has a circulation of over 100,000 readers and has been the worlds most widely read petroleum publication for over 100 years
E MPL OY ME NT
113
MARKET
CONNECTION
WHERE THE INDUSTRY GOES TO CLASSIFY
The Oil & Gas Journal has a circulation of over 100,000 readers and has been the worlds most widely read petroleum publication for over 100 years
E MPL OY ME NT
Te Company is seeking a permanent Refnery Manager to enhance the Companys senior management team and to lead the refnerys performance improvement and capacity expansion. Te
Refnery Manager will be responsible for the leadership and overall management of the refnery
facilities and workforce and for the safe and efcient operation of the North Atlantic Refnery.
Te successful candidate will possess strong operations, leadership, stakeholder management and
communication skills. An undergraduate degree in chemical engineering, or related discipline,
as well as a Masters degree in business or engineering is required. Tis position requires 15-20
years of experience in refnery operations in a technical and supervisory capacity. Several years
of refnery experience in a senior management role coupled with an engineering and technical
background is desired.
Priorities for this position include:
Ensure the health and safety of all operations personnel through the establishment of
efective HSSE policies
Manage operations, asset integrity, maintenance and technical activities in terms of
HSSE, organization, budget, product delivery, and quality
Oversee day-to-day refnery operations to ensure the plant is operating in a safe and efcient manner and in compliance with all applicable environmental licenses and permits
Oversee day-to-day logistics, including the tank farm, dock and terminals, and coordinating with external parties
Develop and execute planning processes, metrics and KPIs, and refning operational
excellence / continuous improvement for operations, asset integrity, maintenance, and
technical support activities
Coordinate and contribute to the annual budget setting process by submitting cost
proposals, detailed investment projects and spending patterns for each of the facilities
constructed and under development
Assure that government and municipal codes, standards, permits and licenses are efectively maintained, and that the relationships with these entities are supportive
Lead the operations and engineering teams, including establishing, monitoring, and
communicating performance objectives and participating in recruiting to fll vacant
positions within the organization.
Manage relations with the local union workforce
Plan and execute the plant turnaround, scheduled for 2016
Contribute to the planning and execution of North Atlantics growth capital expenditure
program to increase facility capacity.
Tis is a full time permanent position ofering a competive salary and an attractive benefts program including a company vehicle, Defned Beneft Pension Plan, Extended Health Care, Vision
and Dental Plans. Te company operates a shuttle bus service from St. Johns to the refnery and
return daily, and would also cover reasonable relocation costs, if necessary.
If you are a highly motivated team player, meet the described qualifcations and
are prepared to meet the challenges of this senior management position,
you are invited apply in strictest confdence to:
NARL Refning Limited Partnership
Human Resources Department
1 Refnery Rd, Box 40
Come By Chance, NL, A0B 1N0
Fax: (709) 463-8122 or Email: [email protected]
114
NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY given that an application
for the appointment of a liquidator to Baghlan
Group Limited whose registered offce is located
at Trinity Chambers, PO Box 4301, Road Town,
Tortola, British Virgin Islands, VG1110 was presented to the High Court of Justice on 17 June
2015 by BNP Paribas Trust Corporation UK
Limited, c/o Walkers, 171 Main Street, PO Box
92, Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin Islands.
The application will be heard on 13 July 2015
at the Commercial Court, Road Town, Tortola,
British Virgin Islands.
Any person intending to appear on the hearing
of the application (whether to support or oppose it) must give written notice of intention
to do so to the applicant or its legal practitioners in accordance with Rule 162 of the Insolvency Rules, 2005 by 4.00pm on the business
day before the date fxed for the hearing of the
application. A copy of the application will be
furnished by the undersigned to any director,
member or creditor requiring the same on payment of the prescribed fee.
Dated this 17th day of June 2015
WALKERS
Legal practitioners for the Applicant
PO Box 92, 171 Main Street
Road Town, Tortola
British Virgin Islands, VG 1110
Tel: 284 494 2204
Fax: 284 494 6683
(Ref: MN/OC/B09569)
Find MORE
employment
opportunities
online at
www.ogj.com/
market-connection.html
or contact
[email protected]
Oil & Gas Journal | July 6, 2015
ADVERTISING SALES
ADVERTISERS INDEX
US Sales
COMPANY NAME
American
P4, P5
www.arielcorp.com
www.assuredflowsolutionsllc.com
Carhartt
www.carhartt.com
Italy
23
43, 45, 47
Drager Safety AG
EGAS Egypt
Emerson Process Management
17
19
Fidelity Investments
41
www.fishbonesafetysolutions.com
25
13
21
P15
96
www.pipelineweek.com
C3
www.deepoffshoretechnology.com
Petroperu
Fishbone Safety
P7
www.PennEnergyJobs.com
PennWell Corporation
52
49
www.konggloves.com
PennWell Corporation
7
73
www.miinet.com/safetyseries
PennEnergy Jobs
www.emersonprocess.com/projectcertainty
www.glenguard.com
P13
www.mechanixwear.com
www.egas.com.eg
Japan
63
www.ranchland.com/williamsfork
Moore Industries
www.draeger.com/passion
20
www.petroperu.com.re
Schweitzer Engineering
Laboratories
www.selinc.com/7965-og7
Sierra Hamilton
73
www.Sierra-Hamilton.com
www.gwdc.com.cn
Halliburton
www.halliburton.com/Complete1/Illusion
Lagcoe 2015
Mechanix Wear
38-39
Ariel Corporation
Assured Flow Solutions, LLC
Kimray
PAGE
www.lagcoe.com
www.aramco.jobs/ogj
Canada
COMPANY NAME
www.kimray.com
Ametek
www.ametekpi.com
29
www.american-usa.com
PAGE
11
P3
TIPRO
97
www.tipro.org
Turbomachinery Laboratory
P16
www.tps.tamu.edu
www.HighPressure.com
Honeywell
Tyco-Scott Safety
C2
www.UniversalByScott.com
www.honeywellprocess.com/oilandgas
West Africa
www.kenwood.com/usa
15
Weatherford
www.weatherford.com/wireline
www.iri-oiltool.com
JVCKENWOOD
Weatherford
C4
www.weatherford.com/secureview
OGJ Reprints
Rhonda Brown, Foster Printing Co., Reprint Marketing
Manager; 866.879.9144 ext 194, Fax: 219.561.2023;
4295 Ohio Street, Michigan City, IN 46360;
[email protected]. www.fosterprinting.com
Custom Publishing
Roy Markum, Vice-President/Custom Publishing, roym@
pennwell.com, Phone: 713-963-6220, Fax: 713-9636228
PennWell
This index is provided as a service. The publisher does not assume any liability for errors or omission.
115
Emerging producers
offered guidelines
for governance
by Bob Tippee, Editor
Like most worthy endeavors, governing oil and
gas activity at the national level is easier said
than doneespecially where oil and gas never
before have been produced.
Chatham House, The Royal Institute of
International Affairs, of London, offers help in
a research paper, Guidelines for Governance
in Emerging Oil and Gas Producers, compiled
under auspices of the New Petroleum Producers Discussion Group.
The document describes these objectives
and elaborations, summarized mercilessly here:
Attract the most qualified investor for the
long run. Governments should invest in geological data before licensing, set prequalification
criteria tough and transparent enough to preclude corrupt bidders, and adopt laws covering
transfers of license interests.
Maximize economic returns to the state
through licensing. Fiscal terms should provide
the state early revenue for urgent development
while ensuring long-term economic benefits.
Taxes should be simple and defined in tax
codes rather than contracts.
Earn and retain public trust, and manage
public expectations. To avoid misunderstandings and overcome mistrust, governments and
industry should engage meaningfully with communities, the document says. This involves
real listening.
Increase local content and benefits to
the broader economy. Laws should require purchases by foreign and national oil companies of
domestic goods and services to the extent possible or at least provide timetables for shifting
from foreign to domestic sourcing.
Build capable national organizations to
participate in and oversee the development
of the resources. Governments should seek
technical advice for capacity-building yet avoid
becoming overloaded with unsolicited help.
The roles of national oil companies should be
shaped strategically and in accordance with
discovery sizes and likely production lives.
Increase accountability. Early in resource
development, one credible body should manage all aspects of work. Checks and balances
can be introduced over time as capacity builds
in other branches of government. But mechanisms for public accountability, including
audits of agencies and state-owned companies,
should be introduced immediately.
The guidelines fill 44 pages. Theyre easy
to find at www.chathamhouse.org. History suggests implementing them is more difficult.
(From the subscription area of www.ogj.com,
posted June 26, 2015; authors e-mail: bobt@
ogjonline.com)
116
WATCHING GOVERNMENT
Nick Snow
Washington Editor
A balanced approach
Manufacturers depend on affordable, reliable energy supplies to
remain competitive, and face other
pending regulationssuch as ozone
and greenhouse gaseswhich will
impose further burdens, Kelly said.
We need a balanced approach to
regulations that considers both costs
and benefits to continue to create
jobs and economic growth, she said.
The American Petroleum Institute
has warned that EPAs proposal to reduce National Ambient Air Quality Standards to 65 ppb came as several US
metropolitan areas were having trouble
meeting the current 70 ppb limit.
It said that a recent NERA
Economic Consulting study found
a stricter ozone regulation could
reduce US gross domestic product
by $270 billion/year and $3.4 trillion
from 2017 to 2040, and result in 2.9
million fewer jobs or job equivalents
annually on average through 2040.
Those seem like potential costs
EPA may have to consider now.
HOSTED BY:
PRESENTED BY:
THE WOODLAND
NDSS WATERWAY MARRIOTT HOTEL & CONVENTION
ON CENTER
HOUSTO
TON,
N, TTEXAS USA | WWW.DEEPOFFSHORETECHNOLOG
GY.
Y.COM
SUPPORTED BY:
IS REAL
Lets shine a light on
cased-hole well integrity.
His bite can be costly, but addressing him reduces his power.
Our SecureViewSM wireline cased-hole diagnostic service gives
the monster a name, location, and a path to banishment.
We deliver a clear and complete evaluation of your cement and
budget than you might expect.
Well Construction
Production