Venezuela
opens international bidding on offshore gas blocks

Venezuela's Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez
AFP
CARACAS
Petroleumworld.com
09 08 06
Venezuela Tuesday launched international bidding for licenses to explore
and operate four potentially gas-rich offshore blocks identified by
the state energy group, Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said.
The announcement comes as Venezuela, home to the largest gas reserves
in South America, becomes more active in gas production, processing
and transportation, with partners as near as Brazil and as far as Russia.
The three Caribbean blocks are 320 kilometers (200 miles) north of Las
Margaritas islands, and a fourth is in Punta Pescador, in the Orinoco
River delta, 500 kilometers (300 miles) east of the capital, and were
identified by state-owned Petroleos de Venezuela, known by its Spanish
initials as PDVSA.
Ramirez called the parcels "potentially high-yield and low-risk"
deposits of "in the order of 11 billion cubic feet of gas",
or 311.5 million cubic meters.
In addition to its mammoth gas reserves, Venezuela is the world's ninth
producer of crude oil and the only South American member of the Organization
of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cartel.
Ramirez said Tuesday that Venezuela's proven reserves would soon reach
196 trillion cubic feet, and would reach 11 billion cubic feet by 2023.
"The Great Southern Gas pipeline will require large amounts of
gas," he said, to serve customers in Argentina and Uruguay.
He said that between 2009 and 2010, Bolivia and possibly Peru would
contribute 30 million cubic feet of gas to fill the pipeline. Bolivia
has South America's second-largest gas reserves.
Ramirez expects investments in the four PDVSA blocks to total at least
172 million dollars, from exploration to drilling and production.
PDVSA offered the foreign companies 65 percent ownership of the three
blocks and 30 percent in the fourth, all lasting 20 to 35 years.
Thirty-six companies were invited to bid, including Chevron, ConocoPhillips
and Exxon Mobil of the United States; the British-Dutch giant Royal
Dutch Shell; Gazprom and Lukoil of Russia, Petropars of Iran, Petrobras
of Brazil, Statoil of Norway and Teikoku of Japan.
Late last month, at a Venezuelan-Russian summit, Gazprom signed a contract
with Venezuela to help develop of the South American country's gas sector.
Also on Tuesday, Brazil's state energy giant Petrobras announced plans
to invest two billion dollars in a natural gas project in Venezuela
sometime this year, with PDVSA to jointly develop natural gas deposits
in the Mariscal Sucre region and build a liquefied natural gas processing
plant, to be operational in 2011.
The entire project will cost five billion dollars, according to local
reports, with PDVSA holding 65 percent and Petrobras 35 percent of the
operation.
AFP
08 2319 GMT 08 06
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