Friday, July 16, 2010

Oil Drilling Activities Shift To Asia

This should be an interesting development in the oil frontier.

The BP oil spill and the attendant political squabble over the drilling moratorium sanctioned by the Obama administration but contravened by the Federal Courts have prompted oil rigs and or drilling activities to shift to Asia.

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According to Bloomberg’s chart of the day,

The CHART OF THE DAY shows monthly totals in the Middle East and Asia Pacific, with the 271 rigs deployed on and and sea in Asia, the most since December 1991, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from Baker Hughes Inc. The lower panel tracks China’s crude imports since December 2003.

“Asia is looking more and more attractive because of a rush for natural gas,” said Tony Regan, a consultant in Singapore with Tri-Zen International Ltd. “Oil companies are wary about the Gulf of Mexico after the drilling ban, and the Atlantic basin doesn’t look good because of lower gas prices.”

Explorers deployed 14 percent more rigs in Asia in June, compared with January last year as China, India, Australia and Indonesia opened up areas. China and India are seeking fuel for economies growing at more than 8 percent a year. The almost doubling of crude prices since January 2009 has also spurred the quest for oil and gas, said Regan, a former executive at Royal Dutch Shell Plc.

Reliance Industries Ltd. discovered India’s biggest gas field in 2002, and LNG projects in Australia valued at more than A$80 billion ($71 billion) are scheduled for final investment decisions in 2010, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in February. The A$43 billion Gorgon LNG project was approved last year by partners Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and Shell.

Asia’s oil-demand growth has risen 27 percent since 1999, compared with a 2 percent decline for North America and Europe, according to data from BP. Oil-product demand in Asia’s emerging-market nations will rise by about 3.8 percent a year on average to 23 million barrels a day in 2015, the International Energy Agency said in a report. The number of rigs in the Gulf of Mexico plunged to the lowest level in 16 years last week, Baker Hughes, a Houston-based oilfield-services firm, said last month.

Some thoughts:

This is an example where the cost of interventionism means a redirection of the use of resources to where it is more “valued”.

Nevertheless what has been “lost” for the US should translate to “gains” for Asia.

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From BBC

Although Asia isn’t much of a big player in terms of oil and conventional gas reserves, Asia is the largest in terms of unconventional gas as previously discussed.

The other implication is that more drilling activities should bring life to the stocks of Asian oil-gas exploration companies.

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