世界石油


(彭博社)“埃克森美孚公司正式批准在圭亚那近海进行第六次石油开发,这将使这个拉丁美洲国家成为比欧佩克成员国委内瑞拉更大的原油生产国。

埃克森美孚周五在一份声明中表示,Whiptail项目将耗资127亿美元,最快到2027年底产量约为25万桶/日。在圭亚那开始石油生产仅仅八年后,其每日原油总产能将攀升至 1.3 兆桶。

圭亚那的繁荣正值邻国委内瑞拉(石油输出国组织联合创始人)努力应对多年来投资不足和国际制裁导致石油产量和政府收入大幅削减的问题。

圭亚那作为主要石油生产国的崛起也对这个只有 80 万人口的国家产生了巨大的社会和经济影响。石油收入使政府能够释放一波福利和基础设施支出,同时扩大原油供应,这是欧佩克最近决定维持产量上限以支撑价格的一个因素。今年国际原油价格已上涨近 20%,达到每桶 90 美元左右。

埃克森美孚计划在圭亚那近海约 120 英里(190 公里)处钻探 48 口井,为一艘浮式生产储油卸油船 (FPSO) 提供原料,该船名为“ 美洲虎”,是该国的国兽。

负责建造该船的 SBM Offshore NV 在另一份声明中表示,该 FPSO 将拥有 2 MMbbl 的原油储存能力。 SBM 股价在阿姆斯特丹上涨 1.7%。

埃克森美孚预计 Whiptail 最终产量将超过 750 MMbbl。该缓存于 2021 年被发现。

一旦 Whiptail 于 2027 年上线,圭亚那的海上石油产量不太可能继续以惊人的速度增长。埃克森美孚已发现足够的石油和天然气来支持多达 10 艘 FPSO,但仍为第七个项目留下了选择余地,该项目现已建成重大发现30余项。

埃克森美孚圭亚那国家经理阿利斯泰尔·劳特利奇在接受采访时表示,“从水库角度来看,有些事情并不那么容易,但这里有很多资源”。 “我们正在清查该清单,并找出下一步可能的开发内容。”

一个选择是圭亚那第一个以天然气为重点的项目,该项目受到政府的青睐。其他选择包括将最近的发现连接到现有生产船,而不是调试新的 FPSO。

自埃克森美孚于 2015 年在圭亚那首次发现石油以来,该国的已知储量已扩大至超过 11 桶,引起了委内瑞拉的不受欢迎的兴趣。总统尼古拉斯·马杜罗加强了围绕该国历史上对埃塞奎博地区的主权主张的言论,该地区占圭亚那国土面积的三分之二。

与此同时,雪佛龙公司正试图通过以 530 亿美元收购赫斯公司来购买圭亚那石油资源的一部分,赫斯公司持有埃克森美孚主导的开发项目 30% 的股份。拥有 45% 股份的埃克森美孚正在国际商会通过仲裁对易手事宜提出异议,称其拥有优先购买权。持有股份的中国石油巨头中海油上个月与埃克森美孚一起参加仲裁。


原文链接/oilandgas360

World Oil


(Bloomberg) – Exxon Mobil Corp. formally approved its sixth oil development offshore Guyana that will make the Latin American nation a bigger crude producer than OPEC member Venezuela.

The Whiptail project will cost $12.7 billion and produce about 250,000 bpd as soon as the end of 2027, Exxon said in a statement Friday. Guyana’s overall daily crude capacity will climb to 1.3 MMbbl just eight years after the advent of the country’s oil production.

Guyana’s boom comes as neighboring Venezuela, a co-founder of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, grapples with years of underinvestment and international sanctions that slashed oil production and government revenues.

Guyana’s emergence as a major oil producer also is having vast social and economic consequences for a country of just 800,000 people. Oil revenues have allowed the government to unleash a wave of welfare and infrastructure spending while expanding crude supplies factored into a recent OPEC decision to maintain production caps in a bid to support prices. International crude prices have risen almost 20% this year to about $90 a barrel.

Exxon plans to drill 48 wells about 120 miles (190 kilometers) offshore Guyana that will feed a floating production, storage and offloading vessel, or FPSO, named Jaguar, the country’s national animal.

The FPSO will have 2 MMbbl of crude storage capacity, SBM Offshore NV, which will construct the vessel, said in a separate statement. SBM shares rose as much as 1.7% in Amsterdam.

Exxon expects Whiptail to ultimately produce more than 750 MMbbl. The cache was discovered in 2021.

Guyana’s offshore oil production growth is unlikely to continue at breakneck pace once Whiptail is online in 2027. Exxon has found enough oil and natural gas to support as many as 10 FPSOs, but is leaving its options open for the seventh project having now made more than 30 major discoveries.

“Some of it is not quite so easy reservoir-wise, but there’s a lot of resource,” Exxon’s Guyana country manager Alistair Routledge said in an interview. “We’re working through that inventory and figuring out what could potentially be next in the development.”

One option is for Guyana’s first gas-focused project, which is favored by the government. Other options include connecting more recent discoveries to existing production vessels rather than commissioning new FPSOs.

Since Exxon’s first Guyanese discovery in 2015, the nation’s known reserves have expanded to more than 11 Bbbl, attracting unwelcome interest from Venezuela. President Nicolas Maduro has ramped up rhetoric around his country’s historic claims to the Essequibo region that makes up two-thirds of Guyana’s land mass.

Meanwhile, Chevron Corp. is attempting to buy a share of Guyana’s oil bounty through a $53 billion takeover of Hess Corp., which holds a 30% share in the Exxon-led development. Exxon, which owns 45%, is disputing the change of hands via arbitration at the International Chamber of Commerce, arguing that it has a right of first refusal. Chinese oil giant Cnooc Ltd., which also owns a stake, joined Exxon in arbitration last month.