View from Louisiana

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July 27, 2012 Dr. Loren C. Scott Loren C. Scott & Associates, Inc. www.lorencscottassociates.com

description

Loren Scott's presentation at the 4th Annual Rocky Mountain Economic Summit

Transcript of View from Louisiana

Page 1: View from Louisiana

July 27, 2012

Dr. Loren C. Scott

Loren C. Scott & Associates, Inc.

www.lorencscottassociates.com

Page 2: View from Louisiana

Natural Gas

An economic civil war

underway

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PGA PGAL PGAH

Figure 11: Price of Natural Gas

Pe

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MB

TU

2012 2013

PGA $2.00 $2.00

Low $1.50 $1.50

High $2.30 $2.30

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Logistical Issues

• Each hydraulic fracking stage requires:

– 300,000 gallons of water

– 200 tons of sand

• 20-40% of fluid solids used in fracking flow back to the surface as hazardous waste and require transportation to other well sites or treatment and/or disposal sites

Page 6: View from Louisiana

Michael Economides in Offshore

Engineer 11/11

• 2011:

– 35,000 wells drilled in U.S.

– 120,000 hydraulic fracturing treatments executed; 4

stages per well on average

– Zero cases of drinking water contamination

• 60 years of fracturing

– 1.2 million wells

– No scientific cases of drinking water contamination

Page 7: View from Louisiana

John Deutch, Former CIA Chief,

Chair of President Obama’s Panel

on Hydraulic Fracturing

“…economic benefits of natural gas production massively outweigh

environmental and public health concerns.”

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Manufacturers (especially

chemicals) and power plants very

happy

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Industrial Uses Of Natural Gas

• Ammonia fertilizer

• From natural gas liquids like ethane we get ethylene which is the foundation of

– Food packaging, toys, house wares

– Swimming pool liners, vinyl pipes

– Pantyhose, clothing, carpets

– Bottles, cups

– Tires, foot ware, auto antifreeze

• Clean burning boiler fuel

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Two Major Benefits to

Chemical Producers

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Plus: Naphtha v. Ethane

• Ethylene made of

– In Europe:

• naphtha derived from oil

• Oil @ $100 $1,400 to make ton of ethylene

– In U.S.

• Ethane, derived from natural gas

• $730 to make ton of ethylene

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Potential Problem:

European Shale Gas Plays

• Cuadrilla Resources: September 2011

– Bowland Shale

– 200 TCF play in northwest England

• Potential salvation:

– Extreme greens in Europe

– Environmental group WWF has called for moratorium on shale gas exploration in the UK, with more focus on renewable energy.

– UK parliamentary committee has investigated & will not introduce restrictions

Page 15: View from Louisiana

Thank God for France!

• May 11, 2011 National Assembly voted to

prohibit hydraulic fracing in the country

• France now imports 98% of its natural

gas

• Ranks 2nd among European states in

shale-gas potential according to the EIA.

• Bulgaria recently disallowed as well

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Power producers happy as well

EPA attacks on coal-fired power

plants: an alternative low cost fuel

is great

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Power Use of Natural Gas

• Next 2-3 years little change

• After that, between 35-75 gigawatts of

coal-fired power plants will be shut down

• Amount depends on how rapidly EPA

regulations on cross-state pollution &

mercury emissions are implemented

• 60 gigawatts will power 35 mm homes

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One estimate:

Industrial & Power needs will

increase demand by 2-3 TCF a

year

Presently: 22 TCF per year total

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So where’s the

“economic civil war”

The producers are not happy.

They want more demand

Guess where they are looking?

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Page 21: View from Louisiana

LNG Retrofit

• Re-Build for Export Terminal: Cheniere Energy

– Sabine Pass LNG: $4.5-$5 billion project – convert import/export terminal (7/11); start construction II-12; Done 2016. $4.5 -$5 billion to build first 2 of 4 trains

– Approval from DOE given to export LNG (5/11) to non free trade partners of U.S. (valuable asset); Japan & Spain not free trade partners & import 4.12 tcf per year.

– Got FERC approval 4/12.

– Now has three 20-year contracts for 10.5 bcf annually. (1/12); BG Group – Britain; Gas Natural Fenosa – Spain; GAIL – India

– Received $2 billion from Blackstone Group 2/26/12

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LNG Retrofit • Re-Build for Export Terminal

– Cameron LNG (Sempra) asked FERC for 2-year authority

to re-export; Inked deals w Mitsubishi and Mitsui Corps to

work together in exchange for 1.7 bcfd (620 bcf annually)

of export capacity to Japan. Plus GDF Suez of France

agreed to about 0.4 bcfd im 5/12. Start construction late

2013; operate 2016. $6 billion project; 130 jobs(4/12)

– Lake Charles Exports, LLC (Trunkline)

• Received DOE permission to export domestic gas from its terminal

7/11; 2 bcfd for 25 years (8/11)

• Applied to FERC to start construction by 2014; ship by 2018 (4/12)

• Financial support from BG Group & Southern Union

• All 3: about 2 tcf per year (+10%)

• Note: LNG export price - $18 mmbtu

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Oil: Lots of potential

Watch the Gulf & the shale

plays

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Fig. 7: Oil PricesP

ric

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er

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2011 2012 2013

Average $100 $90 $85

Low $70 $70

High $110 $110

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The Permitatorium

• As of 12/1/11:

– Average approval time pre-moratorium: 61 days

– Average approval time 2011: 213 days

• Average Approval rate:

– Pre-spill: 73.4%

– Post-spill: 34%

• Permits issued for deepwater:

– 2009: 163

– 2010: 74

– 2011: 79

– 2012-I: 44 (176 annual rate)

Page 26: View from Louisiana

The Permitatorium

• CFO of ATP Oil & Gas Corp: One permit that

used to take 30-40 pages took 3,600 pages.

• Pre-spill: 33 rigs in deep waters

• Post-spill: 11 rigs

• 11 deepwater drill ships left the GOM after

spill

• Good news: As of 5/12---24 rigs in deep waters

• Good news: 9 new drill ships or semi-

submersibles on way & in place by 2013-II

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Benefits of the Gulf?

• Elephant finds

• Straddles world’s biggest consumer

• Politically stable area (Argentina alarm)

• Cost of taxes, royalties, and regulations

among lowest in world

• Vast network of pipelines & refineries

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Closed NE Refineries

• Need to get gasoline from Gulf coast refineries

• Need 100,000 b/d over pipeline capacity---need tankers/barges

• EIA: U.S. has fewer than 40 tankers and 270 barges meeting these requirements

• American Maritime Partnership: told U.S. officials they can meet the needs

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U.S. – Mexico Western Gap Treaty

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Western Gap Treaty

• Needs to be ratified by legislatures in both countries

• Gap is beyond 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone that surrounds both countries

• Law of Seas---if mineral deposits there, can go out 350 miles

• How to split up? Border agreement in 2001: banned drilling buffer zone of 1.4 miles from Gap

• U.S. industry and Pemex to jointly develop reservoirs straddling the gap

• BOEM says contains 172 mmb oil and 304 bcf of natural gas

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“Shale Gale”

Fracking applied to oil shale

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North Dakota’s Bakken Field

• 2003: 10,000 b/d produced

• 3/2012: 575,400 b/d produced---57-fold increase

• ND surpassed Alaska as 2nd largest source of

domestic oil 3/12

• Biggest Field ever in U.S.? Potential-O&G Journal

4/12:

– Prudhoe Bay: sustained a 1.5 mmbd rate for 9 years

– Bakken: May sustain 1.5 mmbd rate for 25 years

• Strange result: First time ever oil price

differentials

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US-Europe Price Divergence

• Bakken is pushing large amounts of oil into Cushing Hub in Oklahoma

• Logistical constraint; Not enough pipelines flowing out to handle inflow – In 2011 only 395k of 456k bpd are moved by

pipeline; going to 1mm+ by end of 2012

– New pipelines, rail tripled shipping capacity by end of 2011.

• Cushing is settlement point for NYMEX futures contracts based on WTI-like light sweet crude

Page 40: View from Louisiana

Cushing to Houston Pipeline

• Enterprise Products partners and Enbridge : 50-50 joint venture: Wrangler Pipeline

– 500-mile pipeline from Cushing to Texas Gulf Coast Refining Complex

– Ready mid-2013

– Adds south-bound capacity to largest crude oil market on Gulf Coast

• TransCanada (11/11)

– Cushing Marketlink crude pipeline to Gulf Coast

• Enterprise Products partners and Enbridge : 50-50 joint venture: (11/11)

– Reverse Seaway Pipeline;

– First shipment South 6/7/12 @150,000 bd; adding pumping capacity for 400,000 bd

– May cause Wrangler to be dropped

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Pipeline Side Note

• Build natural gas pipeline – Permits from FERC; significant oversight

• Rate setting

• Barriers to entry & exit

– Negotiate with landowners with federal eminent domain powers

• Oil pipeline – No FERC regulation

– Permits from multiple state regulators

– Different states have different certificate procedures

– No federal eminent domain powers; Different states have different eminent domain procedures

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Bazhenov Shale Play:

Western Siberia (6/12)

• ExxonMobil in joint agreement with

Russian-owned oil company Rosnet

• Covers area, roughly 80X massive

Bakken Play

Page 43: View from Louisiana

July 27, 2012

Dr. Loren C. Scott

Loren C. Scott & Associates, Inc.

www.lorencscottassociates.com