TNK-BP Seeks ‘Game Changing’ Unconventional Gas in Eastern Europe

BP Plc’s Russian venture, TNK-BP, is considering unconventional gas opportunities in eastern Europe, as hard-to-extract deposits start to “make sense” with available technology and pricing conditions.

“That’s a game changer,” Chief Operating Officer Bill Schrader said in an interview. “It will have an impact globally. As economic activity recovers, that gas will be developed.”

TNK-BP, owned equally by BP and a Russian group of billionaires, is looking at former Soviet republics “where we can bring technology that we have, or even BP has, in exploiting tight gas,” Schrader said. Ukraine and other eastern European countries are possible areas, and the company is assessing the geological potential, he said.

BP, Europe’s second-largest oil company, said in November it plans to produce the world’s first coal-bed methane for liquefaction with Italy’s Eni SpA. In 2008, the British oil producer bought Arkansas shale assets from Chesapeake for $1.9 billion and assets in Oklahoma for $1.75 billion.

Record prices for natural gas pushed the U.S., the world’s biggest energy consumer, to tap unconventional sources of the fuel, Schrader said. U.S. success in extracting gas from shale, or rock formations, has spurred interest in Europe, which may compete with liquefied natural gas, or LNG, and pipeline supplies.

TNK-BP’s gas output is mostly a byproduct of crude oil production, as its natural-gas developments in Russia are restrained by access to OAO Gazprom’s pipeline network.

Strategic Sense

Gas makes up about 12 percent of TNK-BP’s total production, Schrader said in the interview late yesterday on a flight to Moscow from Nizhnevartovsk, the western Siberian region that accounts for about 51 percent of the company’s crude output.

“We would like to do more gas,” Schrader said. “We would like to do it even outside Russia where the technology and the experience we have actually make strategic sense.”

Potential gas projects will depend on the cost of access, operating environment and available connection to customers, according to Schrader. While investors seek to develop cheaper resources first, it is important to look at the economics of delivering the fuel to the market, he said.

European shale could be sufficient to displace the equivalent of about 20 million tons a year of LNG by 2015 and about 60 million tons a year of capacity by 2020, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a report on Feb. 9.

TNK-BP plans to produce about 11.6 billion cubic meters of gas this year. Of that, only 2.7 billion cubic meters will be produced at its ZAO Rospan International natural-gas unit. That is the volume granted by Gazprom in the Russian pipeline network. TNK-BP could pump 3.2 billion cubic meters this year while the potential is estimated as much as five times higher, Schrader said.

“The cost curve on gas is very interesting,” Schrader said. “It goes from very inexpensive, delivered in terms of costs to producer, up to something quite high for LNG that moves around the world. If you can break into that curve somewhere, you are in the business.”

Reported by Anna Shiryaevskaya in Moscow

Source: Bloomberg

Short URL: http://naturalgasforeurope.com/?p=234

Posted by C_Ladd on February 27th, 2010. Filed under Natural Gas, Shale Gas. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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