Colombia
a hot spot for oil and gas investors
Mercopress
MONTEVIDEO
Petroleumworld.com
08 31 06
Colombia
has become a hot spot for oil and gas exploration in Latin America as
energy multinationals face increasingly hostile business conditions
elsewhere in the region, industry experts say.
A
steep and sustained fall in guerrilla attacks under President Alvaro
Uribe, who began a second four-year term this month, and a reduction
in tax rates are key attractions.
The favourable investment climate contrasts with those of other countries
in the region, such as Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador, where governments
have as much as doubled the tax and royalty rates levied on foreign-owned
operations and, in some cases, expropriated assets.
“Contrary
to the rest of the region, there is no strong resource nationalism driving
petroleum policy in Colombia,” said Roger Tissot, Latin America
director at PFC Energy, a consultancy based in Washington. “Instead,
the government has adopted a business-friendly strategy aimed at increasing
exploration activity.”
This
month, India’s Oil and Natural Gas Corporation and China’s
Sinopec jointly bought, for $800m, a 50 per cent stake in Onimex de
Colombia, a subsidiary of US-based oil exploration and production company
Onimex Resources.
Swiss-based
Glencore International also outbid Petrobras of Brazil for a majority
stake in a company that will operate the Cartagena refinery, Colombia’s
second-largest. Glencore offered to pay $630.7m for a 51 per cent stake
in the new company, which will help finance the $800m expansion of Cartagena.
Colombia
has 1.4bn barrels of proven reserves but it will be self-sufficient
in oil only until about 2010, which makes the discovery of new fields
a national priority.
The
Uribe government has offered better fiscal terms to boost exploration
and reverse a decline in oil output. Production fell from 800,000 barrels
per day in the late 1990s to 526,000 b/d last year but it has already
begun to increase.
The
National Hydrocarbons Association predicts that the improving conditions
will attract $750m in exploration in 2006, 50 per cent more than last
year.
Ecopetrol,
Colombia’s state-owned oil company, is meanwhile preparing to
sell off a 20 per cent stake to finance what is already a dramatic increase
in exploration activity.
Mauricio
Salgar, Ecopetrol’s chief operating officer, said the number of
wells drilled last year was the highest in two decades, and the company’s
exploration budget for 2006 is $150m – five times its historical
average.
“For
more than a decade exploration activity was very timid,” he said.
“But there has been a complete resurgence as a result of the combined
effect of improved security and better fiscal terms.” Ecopetrol
is increasing production from mature oilfields and ramping up the output
of heavy crude, which has become profitable thanks to high oil prices.
Mr
Salgar said the partial flotation of Ecopetrol would allow it to overhaul
the way it is run. While it is profitable, its investment budget is
constrained by having to pay high dividends to the government.
“The
aim is that with a share offering of up to 20 per cent, the state will
retain control but Ecopetrol will be run 100 per cent as if it was a
private company,” he said.
Exploration
is gathering pace offshore, as well as in Colombia’s still largely
unexplored interior. ExxonMobil, Petrobras and Ecopetrol are jointly
exploring the Tayrona bloc, a promising deep-sea area off the Caribbean
coast.
Dirceu
Abrahão, president of Petrobras’s operations in Colombia,
said the change in conditions had enabled the company to quadruple its
exploration budget from $20m last year to more than $80m in 2006.
Petrobras
currently produces 47,000 barrels a day in Colombia. (FT)
Mercopress
31 08 06
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