Showing posts with label ITGI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITGI. Show all posts

10/04/2012

Greece looks out to sea for gas wealth salvation


Πηγή: Reuters
By Oleg Vukmanovic and Stephen Jewkes
Oct 3 2012

Offshore natural gas could dramatically change Greece's fortunes, should early estimates of $600 billion worth of reserves be confirmed, according to a study presented to Prime Minister Antonis Samaras in June and seen by Reuters.

The study, collating existing scientific data, says that geological similarities indicate that reserves offshore Crete may match the prolific Levantine Basin where recent Israeli and Cypriot discoveries are clustered.

It points to strategically significant reserves in Greek waters south of Crete in the range of 3.5 trillion cubic meters (Tcm), enough to cover over six years of EU gas demand, and the equivalent of about 1.5 billion barrels of oil.

While it will take years to explore and develop any offshore gas sector,Greece has launched a licensing round and has commissioned a seismic survey company to pin down the extent of hydrocarbon deposits. The results are expected in mid-2013.

Presenting their findings, study authors Antonis Foscolos, Elias Konofagos and Nikos Lygeros said they expected the reserves to generate $599 billion in state earnings over 25 years.

"We feel this is a very conservative figure," Konofagos, whose Athens-based company Flow Energy informally advises the government on energy strategy, told Reuters.

Foscolos, professor emeritus at the Technical University of Crete and the Canadian Geological Survey, said that subsea methane emissions and the presence of gas hydrate mounds on the seabed indicate the presence of large reservoirs.

Another study published in the Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering in June estimated that Greece had 4 Tcm of gas and a further 3 billion barrels of crude oil.

Taking into account savings from fuel imports - Greece spends five percent of GDP on energy imports - discoveries on the scale envisaged could clear the country's debt and bring billions in annual cost savings.

LITTLE-EXPLORED REGION

Geologists say that the little-explored region, riven by converging tectonic plates that form folds or petroleum traps, displays promising geology that now requires surveying to confirm any actual deposits.

One of the world's biggest seismic surveyors, Petroleum Geo-Physical (PGS), which recently won a tender to scan Greek waters, told the country's Department of Energy and Climate Change during a sales pitch in July 2011 that waters south of Crete had significant hydrocarbon potential.

"Hydrocarbon analyses of mud from ODP (Ocean Drilling Program) cores suggests the presence of an active hydrocarbon system at depth," according to a presentation seen by Reuters.

PGS goes on to say that there are also potential analogues to proven hydrocarbon provinces in the Mediterranean, including Libya.

"Hydrocarbon systems don't recognize international boundaries, proven extensions of the Greek hydrocarbon systems exist in Albania, Turkey and Libya," it said.

PGS suggests that the Mediterranean Ridge near to Crete is a productive accretionary prism.

"So a good hydrocarbon kitchen, the proof of which is that some of the many mud volcanoes along it are emitting gas of thermogenic (deep, cooked) origin," geologist Daniel Praeg from Italy's Institute of Oceanography and Experimental Geophysics said in an email.

Exploration successes in Albania could also be replicated in waters to the west of Greece, PGS adds, a licensing area that was recently opened to bidding by the government.

With its potential wealth, Greece could also become a transit hub for gas to Europe if it establishes an exclusive economic zone allowing it to legally extract hydrocarbons, which it currently lacks south of Crete and in other areas.

Finds off Israel, Cyprus and Lebanon have spurred a broader prospecting frenzy across the region, and there are now plans to combine exports via a pipeline to Europe.

The head of the ITGI pipeline, which lost out in the race to carry Caspian supplies to Europe, hopes to convert his project into a conduit linking East Mediterranean discoveries with the gas-thirsty continent.

Despite high hopes, geologists caution that estimates alone mean nothing, and that only drilling can determine the facts.

Poland, which slashed its wildly optimistic estimates of shale gas reserves this summer, saw its hopes of achieving energy self-sufficiency in tatters.

Comparisons between the East Mediterranean and the North Sea may be vindicated if reserve estimates turn out to be accurate, petroleum geologist David Peace said.

Total gas volumes in the East Mediterranean Sea are estimated at over 10 trillion cubic meters, according to U.S. Geological Survey estimates but excluding south of Crete, enough to meet Europe's gas demand for more than 15 years.

That could breathe new life into Mediterranean Europe's flagging, mostly onshore, oil and gas industries as harsh economic realities rekindle interest in domestic exploration long neglected by policymakers.

Prospects in the West Mediterranean Sea, which the U.S. Geological Survey says holds 1.4 Tcm of gas, also look brighter after Italy relaxed a two-year drilling ban and promised to reduce red-tape.

"If you look at the offshore license map of Italy, about two-thirds of it is open...Italy is one area that has been overlooked, especially the south," Peace said.

Spanish policymakers, desperate to plug an energy sector deficit of $31 billion, are repositioning towards developing their natural resources sectors with a view to offshore exploration.

As well as bolstering local economies, the burgeoning gas province gives Europe ammunition against Russian gas giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM), now the subject of an EU antitrust case, with an opportunity to diversify supplies.



3/14/2012

ITGI Plans to Link with Cyprus and Israel


Πηγή: Natural Gas Europe
March 13 2012

The Interconnector Turkey-Greece-Italy (ITGI) pipeline project, which recently effectively lost the Southern Corridor pipeline race to the rival Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) project, is unveiling a new strategy, with plans to link itself with the prospective natural gas reserves offshore Cyprus and Israel.

Speaking at the CERA Week energy conference in Houston, Charis (Harry) Sachinis, President of Greece's DEPA, a major shareholder in the project, proposed that ITGI was not merely a pipeline route but an integral energy system that can easily be used for the transfer of Mediterranean gas from the Leviathan, Tamar, Field 12 and other new projects into Europe.

In this system, as he called it, an additional subwater pipeline from Cyprus to Greece could be linked, as well as LNG stations in Greece.

Southern Corridor 2

Sachinis plan aims to make a way for a 'Southern Corridor 2' that instead of transferring Azeri gas, will be used for transporting Israeli and Cypriot-Greek gas into EU markets.

Plans partially leaked by DEPA's officials envisages a pipeline 1,100 kilometers in length from Cyprus to Crete that could transfer 8 billion cbm of natural gas per year.

Crete would be linked to mainland Greece, a short distance of around 50 miles and be integrated to the Greek domestic gas system with one main branch of the pipeline transferring gas to Italy via thePoseidon pipeline that is the offshore part of the ITGI. Other quantities of gas will be transported via the Natural Gas Interconnector Greece Bulgaria (IGB) to Bulgaria, which recently agreed to also interlink its systems with those of Romania.

Potential Offshore Crete

DEPA believes there is still more gas to be found in the Greek exclusive economic zone (EEZ), south of the coast of the Island of Crete, which could be fed into its proposed plan.

Noble Energy, which drilled the first exploration in Field 12 in Cyprus, plans to sends top officials to meet with the Greek Minister of Energy on the 28th of March in Athens in advance of a planned visit by Noble Energy's President in late May in order to discuss exploration south of Crete. Israel's Delek Drilling, Gazprom, Total and BP are also reported to be interested in exploration offshore Crete.

Challenges

Sachinis' plans for a Cyprus-Greece pipeline faces several major issues.

Firstly, the overall commercial viability for the exploitation of all natural reserves gas fields in East Mediterranean has to be established. That will take some time.

Secondly, no Greek or Israeli company has the know-how for such a large undertaking, therefore partnerships with major players such as BP, Shell, Exxon. etc., would likely have to be established in order to proceed.

Thirdly, the original Southern Corridor is a mature plan, fully backed by EU and US and constitutes as one of the cornerstone projects for BP and the Azeri state. There would undoubtedly be resistance to emergence of new sources of gas appearing out of Cyprus and Israel impacting the Shah Deniz consortium.

Fourthly, the expense of undertaking such a project is most certainly higher than those projected for the Southern Corridor. Moreover, the project is located in territory of considerable political risk: right beside Syria-Lebanon and within a short distance from Turkey which opposes vehemently such initiatives.

Lastly, DEPA is about to privatized and such a significant undertaking may impact how the company is viewed by prospective investors.

On the other hand, if East Mediterranean gas can be exploited at commercially sound prices and if international energy conglomerates show practical interest, then a new source of EU gas supplies maybe of great importance for the European energy security and can also assist into easing peripheral tensions in the region.

All depends on many political and economic parameters and changes of variables that can affect the course of investments one way or another.

In short, a new round negotiations concerning the Southern Corridor seems to be at hand, this time not related to the culminations between Baku-Ankara-Brussels but rather between Tel Aviv-Nicosia and Athens.