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OIL AND GAS
IEA boss says U.S. LNG won't change European landscape
by Zp Heller
Stavanger, Norway (UPI) Aug 26, 2014


Wood Mackenzie sees good things in Norway
Houston (UPI) Aug 26, 2014 - The Norwegian government could pull in $84 billion in taxes from the natural reserves yet to be developed in its territory, analysis from Wood Mackenzie finds.

Energy consulting group Wood Mackenzie said Tuesday it believes there are 10 billion barrels of oil equivalent discovered, but yet to be developed, in Norway. About 60 percent of that could be developed commercially, resulting in $84 billion in taxes and $22 billion in profits for the companies involved.

Norway has more oil reserves than any other European country and is one of the largest suppliers of natural gas to the region.

Wood Mackenzie analyst James Webb said "strict capital discipline" in Norway, however, means some large discoveries might not be developed.

"Despite the obvious obstacles for development, the pipeline for future projects in Norway is strong," he said in a statement Tuesday.

The National Petroleum Directorate, a government regulator, said preliminary production figures for July show an average daily production of 1.93 million barrels of oil, natural gas liquids and condensate, about 8 percent more than was produced in June.

Around 80 percent of that production volume was crude oil. The NPD said oil production was 2 percent higher than what it expected for July, but 3.5 percent lower year-on-year.

Liquefied natural gas sent from North America to European markets likely won't make much of a regional difference, the director of the IEA said from Norway.

International delegates are gathered for an annual energy conference in Stavenger, Norway. The theme for the ONS conference, organizers said, is change.

Maria van der Hoeven, executive director of the International Energy Agency, said the glut of natural gas from North American shale is changing the dynamics of a global energy sector where demand centers are pivoting toward Asian economies.

Van der Hoeven said time will tell how much of an impact exports in the form of liquefied natural gas will have on the global marketplace. For the European market, more LNG from North America is not the panacea "talked up by some" in Washington, she said.

"As I'm sure many of you in this room already know, a few tens of [billion cubic feet] of LNG will not make much difference, given that OECD-Europe production continues to fall by similar quantities," she said during her Monday address.

Measures passed in the U.S. House of Representatives that would facilitate LNG exports were touted by supporters as a means to boost European energy security in an era when Russia's role in the region's gas market is a growing cause for concern.

"Continued strong gas demand in Asia and competition for LNG mean that new volumes will be hard to come by in the case of supply disruption," van der Hoeven said.

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Long-term gas supplies top Russian, Chinese agenda
Moscow (UPI) Aug 26, 2014
Russian energy company Gazprom said its top officials met with the Chinese ambassador to Russia to discuss long-term natural gas supplies. Gazprom Chairman Alexey Miller hosted Ambassador Li Hui in Moscow. "The parties addressed the progress with and the prospects for strategic cooperation, placing a special emphasis on the Russian pipeline gas supply to China," the Russia compan ... read more


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