Russia’s
Energy giants to tap into Colombian fields
Mosnews
Moscow
Petroleumworld.com 05 28 06
Russian
energy giants LUKoil and Gazprom are jockeying for position to tap into
Colombian oil fields, estimated to hold some 3 billion barrels, the
UPI news agency reported Thursday.
Russian and Colombian
energy officials met earlier this month in Moscow to discuss the possibility
of ’expanding cooperation’ between the Russian firms and
Colombia`s state-owned Ecopetrol.
’In discussing
the prospects for mutual action in the oil and gas sectors, the parties
agreed to discuss expanding cooperation with Russian companies, including
between LUKoil, Ecopetrol and the National Hydrocarbon Agency to jointly
implement new projects on search and exploration in Colombia,’
read a joint statement.
But the deal is
far from set in stone. LUKoil and Gazprom are among eight companies
— including BP, Chevron and ExxonMobil —-vying for the rights
to explore the country’s still untapped potential.
The Russians must
still present a proposal that includes everything from developing the
oil fields from scratch to building refineries, as well as producing
liquefied natural gas. The winner of the contract is scheduled to be
announced in July.
Moscow’s interest
in Colombia has been renewed, said analysts, by Bogota`s commitment
in recent years to cracking down on both leftist rebels and right-wing
paramilitaries, both of which were blamed for the decline of the country’s
oil sector during the 1990s.
That, and record
high prices per barrel, are prompting energy giants worldwide to reconsider
the Colombia option.
Compared to the
world’s most productive oil nations, Colombia`s output is small,
producing some 526,000 barrels per day. Ecopetrol is responsible for
about 60 percent of that production. But what also makes Colombia enticing
these days is Bogota’s decision to do away with the prohibitively
high taxes on foreign firms that during the last decade were set at
50 percent.
’Colombia
now has policies that are very business friendly,’ Roger Tissot,
director for Latin American countries at PFC Energy, told United Press
International. ’In term of the investment ... the Colombian government
is in a hurry to improve production to slow decline in the industry.’
Tissot noted that
for decades Colombia was aware of its attractiveness to foreign investors.
For years, Colombians knew they had piqued the interest of foreign investors
with their own self-sufficiency; the country does not import any oil.
And with geologists prognosticating there are plenty more places to
drill, Colombia appeared ready to accept the highest bid from any suitable
foreign investor.
Two significant
fields — the Cano Limon and Cusina — were made during the
1990s. Industry leaders Occidental and BP were given the right to explore
them, respectively. But within the next few years, the tariffs on foreign
oil investors went up, prompting other investors to look elsewhere.
During that time, the leftist rebel group ELN was also waging a terror
campaign against big oil, blasting pipelines and attacking refineries.
Although taxes were
reduced after President Alvaro Uribe entered office in 2002, the new
president cracked down on rebels and militants, and the country’s
oil once again became a hot commodity.
Another choice field
near the Venezuelan border is also up for grabs. The Tibu field project
would cost an estimated $200 million and is drawing bidders from all
over, including neighboring Brazil`s state-run energy company Petrobras.
Violence, however, still ’remains a significant concern’
for would-be investors, noted Tissot.
Last week, rebels
bombed the Cano Limon pipeline and halted pumping, part of a recent
increase in attacks ahead of presidential elections later this month.
Uribe is a strong favorite to win re-election. Despite the increasing
violence in recent months, high prices at the pump are what will continue
to draw oil companies to Colombia for years to come, Tissot said.
’Knowing that
higher prices are likely to be sustained in the middle term ... oil
companies are really desperate to look for other options,’ he
said.
Mosnews
25
05 06
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