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Monday, August 31, 2020

#Chile wants to export as much green #hydrogen by 2050—$30bn worth—, as it does today #Copper.

Chile seeks to turn solar boom into green hydrogen bonanza
Financial Times 

"a green technology revolution has pushed the cost of producing solar power down 80 per cent, and renewables now make up 44 per cent of the mix in a nation no longer dependent on imported energy. 

"Chile is now hoping this will allow it to achieve a similar feat with green hydrogen, a clean alternative to fossil fuels that — unlike solar and wind energy — can be used at any time of day or night and in any weather conditions.

"Chile could be exporting $30bn of green hydrogen by 2050," said Juan Carlos Jobet, the country's energy minister. "That's how much copper we export today."

Read the whole article online here: https://www.ft.com/content/16481d72-1495-4b24-9c59-97ea9a856cc1

MasterEnergy


Monday, August 17, 2020

The bet is that #electricity will be the prime means of delivering #CleanEnergy in the future and will grow rapidly.” #Europe’s Big #Oil Companies Taking the Lead In Turning Electric

A floating solar installation in Britain, a project of BP’s joint venture with Lightsource.

Under pressure from governments and investors, industry leaders like BP and Shell are accelerating their production of cleaner energy.

From the NY Times:

Europe's Big Oil Companies Are Turning Electric


The Italian oil company Eni's Green Data Center. The chief executive of Eni said he wanted it to rely more on green energy.
Nadia Shira Cohen for The New York Times

This may turn out to be the year that oil giants, especially in Europe, started looking more like electric companies.

Late last month, Royal Dutch Shell won a deal to build a vast wind farm off the coast of the Netherlands. Earlier in the year, France's Total, which owns a battery maker, agreed to make several large investments in solar power in Spain and a wind farm off Scotland. Total also bought an electric and natural gas utility in Spain and is joining Shell and BP in expanding its electric vehicle charging business.

At the same time, the companies are ditching plans to drill more wells as they chop back capital budgets. Shell recently said it would delay new fields in the Gulf of Mexico and in the North Sea, while BP has promised not to hunt for oil in any new countries.

Prodded by governments and investors to address climate change concerns about their products, Europe's oil companies are accelerating their production of cleaner energy — usually electricity, sometimes hydrogen — and promoting natural gas, which they argue can be a cleaner transition fuel from coal and oil to renewables.

Wednesday, August 5, 2020

The Last #Oil Drilling Rig Leaves #Venezuela

The Last Oil Drilling Rig Leaves Venezuela
With production for for June reported at 300'000 Bbl/d by the IEA, it can only continue to decline with no rigs in operation...


The Last Oil Drilling Rig Leaves Venezuela

The last oil rig has officially left the premises. In Venezuela, that is. There, Nabors said it had shut down its final active drilling rig as of Monday. As reported by Sergio Chapa at the Houston Chronicle, this action now brings the active rig count in that formerly prosperous socialist nation to zero. A complete flatline.

Think about that for a moment: Venezuela is home to larger oil reserves than any other nation on earth, including the United States, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Russia. Yet, because of the brutal nature and, frankly, stupidity of the Nicolas Maduro regime, not a single company is any longer willing to try to explore for that massive sunken treasure. Contrast that stark reality to Venezuela's neighboring nations of Guyana and Suriname, democracies in which international companies like ExxonMobil XOM +0.9%, Hess, CNOOC, Apache Corp. APA +2.3% and Total continue to invest billions in new capital in highly-successful offshore oil exploration efforts.

The final Nabors rig had been operating in the prolific Petropiar Field at the behest of a joint venture between Chevron CVX +0.8% and PdVSA, the national Venezuelan oil company. But as the situation in Venezuela has spiraled into chaos over the past half-decade, the operations there had been plagued by delays, equipment theft and power failures.

Chevron's decision to halt its drilling program came months after the Trump Administration had initiated a new round of harsher sanctions on the Venezuelan government. According to the Congressional Research Service, as a part of a comprehensive set of sanctions on the Maduro regime, the U.S. government has sanctioned:

  • PdVSA, the Venezuelan national oil company;
  • 144 Venezuelan or Venezuela-connected individuals;
  • The Maduro government and its central bank;
  • Two subsidiaries of the Russian government-controlled Rosneft Oil Company for facilitating exports of Venezuelan crude; and
  • Four other shipping companies for transporting Venezuelan oil.

The Trump Administration has also revoked the visas of hundreds of Venezuelans and their familiies. Despite those and other sanctions, the U.S. had issued licenses that allowed Chevron, Nabors, Schlumberger SLB +1.4%, Halliburton HAL +1.4% and Baker Hughes BHI +3.5% to continue doing business in the country.

The breakdown of Venezuelan society at the hands of the Maduro regime has cost Chevron dearly: The company reported an operating loss of $8.3 billion for the second quarter, $2.6 billion of which was due to a forced write-down of the value of its Venezuelan reserves.

Bernadette Johnson, Vice President of Strategic Analytics at Enverus, said in an email that the exit by Chevron and Nabors was not unexpected: "Venezuelan production for June was reported at 300 MBbl/d by the IEA. This is decline from May 2020 and a continuation of the downward spiral the market has observed since 2012 when the country was producing 2.6 MMbbl/d (mid-year data point) and before the economic collapse and general upheaval in the country. The loss of the last remaining rig as a result of concerns that the Venezuelan government could seize it is an unfortunate but not unexpected development."

At its peak in 1998, Venezuela produced almost 3.5 million barrels of oil per day. Perhaps coincidentally, that was the year that Hugo Chavez, Maduro's socialist predecessor in office, was first elected. As Johnson notes, the country's production had collapsed to just more than 300,000 bopd in June. The foothold gained by China in the country in recent years could now become the only factor that might prevent production levels from eventually flat-lining entirely.

The absolute disintegration of the country's once-booming oil and gas industry is just one of many elements in the story of Venezuela's sad collapse under Chavez and Maduro. But it's a big one, since the collapse of the country's oil and gas wealth is directly tied to the collapse of its entire economy. I would flippantly say that someone should turn out the lights as the last oil rig leaves the once-wealthy nation, but sadly for the people of Venezuela, that has already happened across vast swaths of their land.

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#Caribbean Islands find #PdVSA easier to evict than replace


From Aruba & Curaçao to Jamaica & St. Croix, getting rid of PDVSA was the easy part, finding a replacement, however, has been all but impossible.

Saddled with aging installations that traditionally depended on Venezuela, the islands were orphaned by the Opec country's commercial and operational decline, 
     
This from the Curaçao Chronicle. 

Caribbean finds PdV easier to evict than replace

LOCAL | By Patricia Garip July 22, 2020

Caribbean islands that once formed the bustling near-shore oil refining and logistical network of Venezuela's state-owned PdV are finding that the distressed company was easier to evict than to replace.

The nagging void is most conspicuous in Curacao and Aruba, part of the Dutch Caribbean island chain that hugs Venezuela's coast. Saddled with aging installations that traditionally depended on Venezuela, the islands were orphaned by the Opec country's commercial and operational decline, including the loss of Venezuelan crude feedstock for which several of the facilities were originally designed. Venezuela today is only pumping around 400,000 b/d of crude, a fraction of the 3mn b/d that it produced in the 1990s. And PdV's own refineries inside Venezuela are nearly all out of service.

Since 2017, escalating US sanctions on Caracas have posed another challenge. Islands that relied on Venezuela's oil business, including transshipment and offshore support and financial services, were forced to sever most ties under threat of sanctions themselves.

For islands that relied on oil assets for economic sustenance as a complement to tourism, the relationship with Caracas was fruitful but frustrating once Venezuela's oil star began to flicker. Faced with lukewarm investor interest in the unprofitable refineries abandoned by PdV, the islands are now promoting terminal and storage opportunities, and exploring industrial alternatives such as petrochemicals and LNG. The results have been mixed at best.

Curacao's conundrum

The government of Curacao long relied on PdV to operate its 335,000 b/d Isla refinery and Bullen Bay terminal that are critical to the local economy. After years of neglect, PdV was not allowed to renew its long-term lease when it lapsed in December and Curacao pinned its hopes on a potential partnership with European refiner and commodities trader Klesch.

But a preliminary sale agreement signed in December proved to be fleeting after the collapse in oil prices and pandemic hit demand in March. Curacao's state-owned RdK, which owns the assets, announced late last week that the Klesch deal was terminated, leaving the island to restart the uphill search for a new partner. In a sign of the island's precarious economic conditions,unrest broke out in Willemstad last month.

The short-term upside for Curacao is the potential to lease storage at deepwater Bullen Bay, where only part of the tanks are ready for use in an ongoing tender. RdK is also hoping to monetize PdV's 10mn bl Bopec terminal on Bonaire that it seized in a debt-related action in March.

Better known for its white sands, Aruba is also seeking to lease storage after the withdrawal of PdV's US subsidiary Citgo from a refinery refurbishment project. Aruba's mothballed 235,000 b/d San Nicolas refinery, formerly owned by US firm Valero, was supposed to be renovated into a heavy crude upgrader to process Venezuela's heavy crude under a contract signed in 2016. Unlike Curacao, the Aruba project was tied to PdV Holding, the Venezuelan company's US subsidiary that came to be controlled by the country's US-backed political opposition in 2019. The ambitious $1.1bn project, which PdV's US refining arm Citgo had been carrying out, barely got underway before it ran aground on the rocks of Venezuela's political turmoil. PdV Holding signed a final termination agreement in May.

As in Curacao, government officials in Aruba say they are relieved to have shaken off the unreliable PdV, but they are at odds to find a substitute partner.

Satellite islands

On St Croix in the US Virgin Islands, repeated delays are casting doubt on a $2bn project by Limetree Bay Ventures to convert the mothballed Hovensa refinery into a leaner and more modern 200,000 b/d plant. Hovensa, formerly one of the world's largest and most advanced refineries with a design capacity of 525,000 b/d, was a strategic project of PdV and US independent Hess before it closed amid financial losses in 2012.

Elsewhere in the Caribbean, PdV has been replaced but commercial progress has been halting following years of Venezuelan largess. Under late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez, PdV forged downstream alliances even where there was little commercial logic in a bid to cement regional support. That strategy, coupled with subsidized oil supply, succeeded in keeping several of the islands in Venezuela's political orbit, frustrating Washington's regional effort to isolate the Venezuelan government of President Nicolas Maduro that it is seeking to force out.

In Jamaica, the government expropriated PdV's minority stake in the 35,000 b/d Petrojam refinery, but the plant is likely to be shut down after state-owned operator PCJ folded earlier this year. PdV still owns a nominal 49pc stake in the Dominican Republic's 34,000 b/d refinery, but the plant does not make commercial sense either.

Read the article online here: 
https://www.curacaochronicle.com/post/local/caribbean-finds-pdv-easier-to-evict-than-replace/

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