Russia's Gazprom skeptical of US-led shale gas boom
Washington (Platts)--23Jul2012/858 am EDT/1258 GMT
Russia's state-owned natural gas company says the US shale-gas boom
is economically unsustainable -- and it's buttressing its claim with
financial data collected by an American consulting firm located less
than 20 miles from the White House.
Moscow-based Gazprom, the world's largest gas company, has been working
with Pace Global Energy Services, a consulting firm in Fairfax,
Virginia, to analyze how much money US gas companies are spending on
hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling.
Because the two technologies are facilitating the production of so much
cheap gas from previously inaccessible shale formations in Pennsylvania
and other states, some US firms now want to export their gas to more
lucrative markets in Europe, Asia and elsewhere.
But Sergei Komlev of Gazprom Export, the Russian gas giant's exporting
arm, says those would-be exports are not likely to materialize for both
economic and regulatory reasons ... at least not on the grand scale that
American firms are hoping for.
"We think the current US gas market model is unsustainable in the
medium and long term," Komlev told Platts via email. "We forecast that
soon, the disparity between the shale gas costs and sales price will
disappear. When it happens, it will make the US plans to become a major
gas exporter economically unviable."
But notably, much of the data that Gazprom is using to make that
argument was collected by Pace Global, the Washington-area consulting
firm. Gazprom first hired Pace about 10 years ago, before the US
shale-gas boom began in earnest, when it saw what it believed was a
lucrative business opportunity: exporting Russian gas to the US.
According to an official US government lobbying disclosure form filed on
September 19, 2005, Pace's mission was to advocate for "Russian LNG
exports to the United States." Of course, the US never did import any
Russian gas, in part because American firms soon became more
accomplished in the realm of fracking and horizontal drilling.
But Pace Global, which was acquired earlier this year by Siemens, the
German-based engineering and construction conglomerate, is still helping
Gazprom with its global gas business.
Based largely on Pace's review of quarterly earnings reports and other
financial data from US gas companies, Gazprom says the true costs of
shale-gas production are upwards of 150% higher than the revenues its
practitioners have been reaping in the last few years.
But companies are continuing to use the approach for now, Komlev says,
because they are also producing some higher-priced gas liquids in the
process.
Gazprom also believes that shale-gas drillers will incur additional
costs to ensure that the chemicals they use in the fracking process will
not contaminate underground sources of drinking water.
Komlev, who heads Gazprom Export's contract structuring and pricing
division, concedes that fracking "is not the incarnation of evil," as
some environmental groups argue. He also acknowledges that the
US-instigated shale-gas boom has been "a godsend" for the gas industry
in certain respects.
Still, Komlev argues that due to its relatively higher costs,
fracking-based shale-gas drilling will eventually fizzle out in the US
and other countries that are considering adopting it.
"One can produce gold out of sea water, but does it make economic
sense?" he asked rhetorically, seeking to illustrate his point about
shale gas.
Critics decry Moscow's 'scaremongering'
But Gazprom's critics are deeply troubled by the company's actions,
saying it is using underhanded tactics -- with Moscow's blessing and
financial support -- to discourage European and Asian nations from
developing their shale-gas reserves.
Aviezer Tucker, the assistant director of the Energy Institute at the
University of Texas, says the Russian government is paying
public-relations firms to spread "myths and misconceptions" about
fracking so that Romania, Bulgaria, China and other countries will
remain viable export markets for conventional Russian gas.
"Where does the money come from to organize such [anti-fracking]
demonstrations and brochure writing?" he said in an interview. "All that
seems to point to a common source, which would be Moscow."
Tucker made the same point in a recent column published in the
Washington Times newspaper, charging that "Russian-financed
public-relations firms" are behind efforts to convince people in
Bulgaria, the Czech Republic and other Eastern European countries that
fracking will either poison or consume all of their drinking water.
"They use a fear of cutting their water; that's the bottom of it," he
said in the interview. "The issue is the scaremongering about a new
technology that the people in the East are not familiar with. And that
kind of scaremongering is something that you will find in articles, in
publications, in brochures, in chat rooms and so on."
Tucker, whose professional research interests include "social aspects of
shale-gas extraction through hydraulic fracturing," says the "holy
grail" for Gazprom would be a "European Union-wide ban or moratorium" on
the practice.
France and Bulgaria have already banned fracking due to environmental
concerns, and anti-fracking activists are pressuring other European
countries to follow suit.
Komlev staunchly denies that Gazprom is bad-mouthing shale-gas
production so that it can continue to export its conventional gas to
European markets. But he sidestepped a question on whether Gazprom wants
a European-wide ban on fracking, as Tucker claims.
"What Gazprom wants is fair-play rules and fair competition based on
economic rationale and not on political agenda, which unfortunately is
something we encounter while conducting business in Europe," he said.
"The decision either to allow or to ban either hydraulic fracturing or
any other technology rests within the competence of respective national
authorities."
But to be sure, Komlev has made it clear that Gazprom does not want to
see the US-instigated shale-gas boom replicated anytime soon in Europe,
where Gazprom sells a lot of its conventional gas.
In a meeting of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum in Qatar last spring,
for example, Komlev gave a presentation that included a slide captioned,
"Multiple Handicaps Will Retard Shale Gas Development Outside US." The
notes to the slide -- which bore Gazprom's logo -- showed that Gazprom
and other LNG exporters welcomed these "handicaps."
"Fortunately for LNG exporters, European shale gas development faces
numerous economic, regulatory and political barriers before there are
significant amounts of shale gas production, not sooner than in ten or
more years," the slide said. "For example, the lack of essential
specialized equipment and field services outside the US will retard the
rate of commercial shale development in Europe and Asia."
Why inspect China's shale?
Notably, Gazprom announced last week that it sent a team of "technical
specialists" to a shale-gas field in China that is being developed by
China National Petroleum Corporation, the country's largest state-owned
oil and gas company.
Gazprom, which has been negotiating with Beijing to export Russian gas
to China, did not say in its press release why it was sending technical
experts to inspect China's shale-gas field.
Leslie Palti-Guzman, an analyst at the Eurasia Group, a New York-based
research and consulting firm, speculated that Gazprom wants to get its
hands on any shale-gas know-how that the Chinese may have developed.
"Gazprom have been in denial [about the global shale-gas boom] for a
while," she said, noting that Gazprom, unlike other European oil and gas
companies, has no joint ventures with US gas-producing companies, no
market share in US gas production, and no expertise in shale-gas
development.
"They have an interest to maintain the relationship [with China] but ...
the primary purpose is they want to acquire the technology,"
Palti-Guzman said.
Gazprom's Komlev, for his part, said Russia has "enormous shale-gas
resources at its disposal," describing a sprawling swath of Siberia as
"one huge shale-gas El Dorado." But Komlev said it doesn't make any
economic sense to develop that gas now, since Russia has an abundance of
much cheaper conventional gas.
"So, Russian shale gas has been left intact to serve as the resource
base for the coming generations," he said.
But Komlev did not directly answer when asked why Gazprom would send
some of its technical experts to China to inspect that country's
shale-gas fields, when Gazprom has continually raised questions about
shale-gas development and fracking. He said Gazprom "welcomes" China's
decision to develop its shale-gas reserves because doing so will allow
Beijing "to make a proper evaluation of such gas."
But Komlev suggested that the Chinese might be disappointed with what
they find in their shale plays.
"China is in possession of large shale gas reserves, however, the cost
of its extraction could be much higher than in the US," he said, adding
that China's shale plays are located in areas of the country that may
not have enough water to successfully engage in hydraulic fracturing.
Asked directly if Gazprom will try to convince China not to develop its
shale-gas reserves so that Beijing would have a reason to buy more
Russian gas, Komlev said: "Gazprom Group is studying this issue with the
Chinese partners. No decisions have been reached yet."
--Benno Spencer,
Benno_spencer@platts.com
--Brian Hansen,
brian_hansen@platts.com
--Edited by Kevin Saville,
kevin_saville@platts.com
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