Title: Monetizing Labrador Shelf Gas
1Monetizing Labrador Shelf Gas Group Project
- Master Oil and Gas Studies
- Memorial University
- December 16, 2004
By Lloyd Button Randy Hiscock Penny
Norman Luis Serrano
2Purpose
- Technical and economic feasibility of
commercializing stranded gas development offshore
Labrador
3World Energy Demand Trends
Demand warrants serious consideration for
Provinces future economic growth
4Field Locations
5Geology
Labrador Shelf Stratigraphic Chart
Labrador Shelf Cross-section Hopedale Area
Source CNOPB
6Resources
Potential Resources
GAS (TCF) Condensate (MMBL)
Potential Resources 18.99 500.1
Discovered 17.2 9.2
Discovered Resources
FIELD Proven Gas (TCF) Proven Condensate (MMBLS)
North Bjarni 2.247 82
Gudrid 924 6
Bjarni 24.3 31
Hopedale 105 2
Snorri 105 2
TOTALS 4,244 123
7Exploration History
Labrador Shelf Significant Discoveries
8Methods for Transportation
- Gas gathering and transmission via pipeline.
- Volume reduction (liquefaction (LNG) or
compression (CNG)) followed by marine
transportation. - Conversion to other products by changing from
methane molecule (GTL) followed by marine
transportation and - Conversion to other energy forms such as electric
power and transmission via subsea cable.
9Production Volume verses Distance to Market
10Process Facilities
- CNG is the most viable method of transporting gas
from Labrador - The processing and conditioning will depend on
CNG requirements ( most likely they will have the
same as pipelines) - Requirements will depend on the flow rate,
composition, temperature, and pressure of the
produced gas and the components/impurities
11Main Processing Considerations
- Remove water vapor to avoid the hydrate formation
and corrosion - Removal of solids
- Removal of gas condensate
- No H2S or CO2
- Heating Required
12Options Considered
- Floating production storage offloading (FPSO)
with CNG tankers - Caisson / Island - CNG tanker and
- Concrete gravity based structure (GBS) - CNG
shuttle tanker
13Option 1 FPSO-CNG
Wells Drilled from separate MODU
14Option 2 Caisson/Island-CNG
15Option 3 GBS-CNG
16Economic Analysis Assumptions
- Field Size
- Base Case 2.3 TCF (Bjarni North field)
- High 5.0 TCF
- Low 1.5 TCF
- Price
- Base Case of US 4.30 / MCF
- High US 5.45 / MCF
- Low US 3.20 / MCF.
- Economic sensitivities
- Royalties 5 10,
- CAPEX high and low models
- Exploration risk assumed to be zero
- Operational down time assumed to be the same for
all three assessed options (100 days/year)
17Economic Analysis - Results
- FPSO CNG gave most favorable economic based on
- Cashflow
- NPV discounted at 10 15
- ATROR
- GBS-CNG produced marginally more attractive
economics vs. Caisson/Island-CNG
18Economic Analysis - Findings
- Only FPSO-CNG is feasible with gas prices of US
5.00 / MCF or less - Other options require 4.0 TCF or higher and / or
the significant higher gas prices
19Economic Analysis - Sensitivities
- Development costs (most sensitive)
- Pricing
- Reserve Size
20Results
21Economic Analysis - Royalty
- Royalty of 5 and 10 had modest sensitivity
impact - However, base reserve and price, 5 and 10
royalty result in marginal to sub-marginal
economics - Given political sensitivity with foregoing
royalty revenue, other revenue methods must be
considered
22Other Revenue Sources
- Randy any ideas??
- Confirm higher reserves (exploration)
- Higher Prices likely
23Benchmarking
Source IHS Energy
24Fiscal System Benchmarking
- Benchmarked with the following countries
- Netherlands
- Ireland
- Norway
- Trinidad
- Alaska
- Canada Nova Scotia
25Benchmarking Recommendations(1)
- Pricing tied to NE US price and linkage to price
of competitor fuels - No domestic market obligation or export
restrictions (i.e. lack of infrastructure, small
dispersed population - no local market) - Consider State involvement for direct marketing
of its share
26Benchmarking Recommendations(2)
- Local content quota, with focus on Labrador
people, in the issuance for future exploration
licenses and SDLs. - Province must be innovative and flexible in
making new gas legislation to promote
exploration. - Gas fiscal terms and tax incentives need to
balance restricted operating environment with
accrued economic value
27Significant Discovery License (SDL)
- Issued by CNOPB
- SDL have no prescribed date for expire
- No economic trigger for operator to move forward
when market conditions allow - No requirements for company to periodically
revisit economics if pricing environment changes
28SDL - Recommendation
- Requirements should be designed to place onus on
operators to revisit the economics on a
bi-annual basis - The trigger could be when the gas price exceeds a
specific threshold
29Market Analysis NE US
30Justification for NE US Market
- Reserve Size
- Proximity to NE US
- US gas pricing (vs Europe pricing)
- Low local domestic consumption
31Local Benefits
- The people of Labrador should be the ones who
benefit most - Best opportunities in marine transportation
- Particular emphasis should be on training in
marine sector - Other opportunities at the offshore facility and
onshore support
32Local Labour Content
Overall Project
33Local Labour Content
Drilling
34Local Labour Content
Facilities Construction
35Local Labour Content
Facilities Installation
36Local Labour Content
Transportation
37Local Labour Content
Management
38Local (Labrador) Stakeholders
- The Innu Nation
- The Labrador Inuit Association
- Labrador Métis Nation
- The Newfoundland and Labrador Association of
Municipalities - Individual Communities on the south Labrador
Coast not included above - Labour Organizations (collective agreements)
39Adjacency Principle
- People of Labrador should have first chance for
the competitive supply of labour and services - Members of the Innu Nation and Labrador Inuit
Association - Members of Labrador Métis Nation.
- Other residences of Labrador who are members of
collective bargaining agencies - Other residences of the Province of Newfoundland
and Labrador.
40Diversity
- In addition to First Nations people, commitment
to provide fair and equal opportunities should be
given to - Women
- People with disabilities
- Other visible minorities
41Local Contracts
- Onshore base including Port Development and
infrastructure (buildings, roads, utilities etc) - Temporary Services for Port Development
- Environmental Monitoring
- Onshore site surveying
- Helicopter Transportation
- Others
42Corporate Social Responsibility
- Centre for Marine CNG in Harsh Environments
- Co-ordinated Training Plan for Labrador
- Centre for Marine Training
- Quebec/Labrador North St. Lawrence Road
- Scholarships
43QHSE - Policy
- Protection of workers
- Protection of environment
- Desirable quality
- Modest Profit
44QHSE
- Design of QHSE Process
- Loss Avoidance vs Max Profits
- Human Element
- Investor/Owners
- Management
- Workforce
45QHSE System Integration
- Us and Them Gap
- Demonstrative actions (physical behaviour)
- Communications (face to face meetings, focus
groups, personal written notices, a vehicle for
bottom up communications as well as top down) - Consistent reactions to all incidents
- Regular follow-up and closeout
- Safety training and drills
46Environment Impact - Exploration
- Reported effects in mammals
- Reported effects in fish
- Seismic guns deployment (determine environmental
effects, horizontal Vs downward) - Other means of exploration and data acquisition
are less harmful to environment (electrical
surveys, gravity, magnetic, satellite, etc.)
47Environment Impact - Drilling
- Drilling fluids
- Impacts water column and seafloor differently
- Reduce light penetration
- Decrease in sea life
- biological changes in fish larvae
- Technology and advances in drilling fluids can
reduce impact
48Environment Impact - Drilling
- Drilling Cuttings
- Impact is proportional to solids discharge
- The fate of the drilling cuttings piles depends
on thickness, ocean condition, conditions of
discharge and fluids retention on cuttings - Estimate1-2 years for initiation of recovery
after discharge has stopped - Limits for discharge imposed by law
49Environment Impact - Production
- Most significant contaminant is the produced
water - Produced water is composed of dispersed oil and
dissolved organic compounds, metals, including
aromatic compounds, organic acids, phenols,
inorganic compounds, and also of chemicals added
in the production/separation line. - Its chemical composition varies over a wide range
and depends on attributes of the reservoirs
geology. - The produced water and any other discharge are
closely monitored to minimize adverse effects
50Environment Impact De-comissioning
- Disposal in deep waters can impact sea life
- May be considered for an artificial reef
- Removal and dismantling of the installation is an
option
51Environment Impact Spills
- Operator company must submit contingency plans
for environmental emergencies to CNOPB - CNOPB liaisons with environmental advisory
agencies - CNOPB helps to design and implement the process
through which the public may participate in the
review
52Conclusion (1)
- 4.3 TCF of gas, potential of 19 TCF
- FPSO CNG option most favorable
- Base reserve and price, 5 and 10 royalty result
in marginal to sub-marginal economics - Given political sensitivity with foregoing
royalty revenue, other revenue methods must be
considered
53Conclusion (2)
- Exploration to confirm reserves required
- Gas Clause Required
- Market NE US
- Local Benefits Agreements required, other local
initiatives that could be taken