UAE: ADNOC Expansion Projects Restrained
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Monday, 21 September 2009 |
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OPEC cuts, complex oil reservoirs and uncertainties over concession
renewals are hindering Abu Dhabi’s efforts to raise oil production
capacity, according to a leading investment bank.
Analysts at Morgan Stanley said the emirate had been “forced to
dramatically curb expansion projects” that were supposed to raise its
oil production capacity by 40 per cent to 4 million barrels per day
(bpd) from 2.85 million bpd by 2015. “The UAE’s foreign partners,
including Total, Shell, BP and ExxonMobil, are reluctant to invest in
further idle capacity expansion at a time when they cannot sell what
they produce [due to reduced OPEC quotas] and are facing an uncertain
outlook regarding the renewal of their concession agreements,” they
said in a recent report.
A number of long-standing concessions covering Abu Dhabi oilfields that
were signed in the 1930s will expire in 2014 and 2018. But the
Government has yet to inform the foreign partners in joint ventures
with Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) whether and on what terms
the contracts will be offered for renewal.
That has slowed progress on ADNOC’s previously announced plans to lift
capacity to 3.5 million bpd by next year, and senior executives of the
company have already acknowledged delays. Several projects that
would have added roughly 390,000 bpd of new oil output “have now
slipped beyond 2012”, according to Dr Sadad al Husseini, a former Saudi
Aramco executive who contributed to the Morgan Stanley report. He also
commented on ExxonMobil’s detailed reservoir study of the Zakum
oilfield, which is one of the biggest off Abu Dhabi’s coast.
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