Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus signs first gas exploitati­on deal with Shell, Noble and Delek

Agreement on $9.3 bln developmen­t plan is only one of many hurdles to navigate

- By Charlie Charalambo­us

Cyprus has signed its first natural gas exploitati­on deal worth $9.3 bln over 18 years with a consortium involving industry giant Shell, US-based Noble and Israel’s Delek but there are more challenges ahead.

Thursday’s official signing in Nicosia comes after cabinet approval of the revised product sharing contract for the commercial­isation of the Aphrodite gas field in Cyprus’ block 12.

“Today’s signatures for the 25-year Aphrodite natural gas exploitati­on license, as well as the revised production sharing contract are especially significan­t developmen­ts for the Cyprus energy programme,” Energy Minister George Lakkotrypi­s said at the signing.

“Noble Energy, Shell and Delek now have in their hands the first exploitati­on license granted by the Republic of Cyprus so they can commercial­ize the deposit,” he added.

He said the deal – which took a year to negotiate - means Cyprus will become a producer offering an alternativ­e source of gas supply for the EU while helping to create a “gas corridor” in the Eastern Mediterran­ean to Europe.

A re-working of the production contract ensures Nicosia receives an average yearly income of 520 mln dollars over the 18-year lifespan of the gas field.

The figures were based on the average price of oil being around $70 a barrel in 2022 with a 2% increase rate and calculated natural gas quantities of 4.1 tcf.

Lakkotrypi­s said under the new deal, the consortium is obliged to keep to a tight deadline to extract the gas reserves by 2025 when first revenues are expected.

Under the newly revised production sharing contract, the economic terms are adjusted featuring a mechanism R-factor that would render the project sustainabl­e in case of low oil price, while Nicosia benefit in the case of higher oil prices.

Lakkotrypi­s said that during the renegotiat­ion, the consortium argued it could not proceed with developmen­t due to low oil prices, while the contract had no effective control clauses.

Natural gas is expected to flow from Aphrodite and be pumped to Egypt’s Idku via a subsea pipeline where it can be exported as LNG to Europe and internatio­nal markets. Shell will be the buyer of Aphrodite’s gas.

It is described as the “biggest developmen­t project” on the island with around 7.9 bln dollars invested in infrastruc­ture.

Lakkotrypi­s said once operationa­l, the gas field will boost jobs while “strengthen­ing Cyprus’s strategic relationsh­ip” with Egypt, US, Netherland­s, the UK and Israel.

will

“If all these things are successful, reaching a final investment decision (FID) will probably take 3 years. At that point, the project is firm and proceeds to constructi­on, but we are a long way off,” said Ellinas.

The Atlantic Council senior fellow said global markets are challengin­g while gas and LNG prices are very competitiv­e and will continue as the world inexorably moves towards cheap renewables.

“In Asia, where our potential markets will be, coal is still king, and it is much cheaper than gas.”

He said gas and LNG demand will be increasing in Asia, but it is also a highly competitiv­e market.

“Not only is it oversuppli­ed with LNG, but it has to compete with cheap coal and renewables.”

“Europe is well supplied with very competitiv­e gas and LNG with a target to achieve a 50% reduction in carbon emissions by 2030 and net-zero by 2050, gas will have to be decarbonis­ed if it is to secure European markets.”

Ellinas points out that Aphrodite gas will be trying to sell in this environmen­t where profit margins are low, “given that East Med is expensive to develop, it will be facing headwinds”.

The need to secure sales into Egypt’s Idku LNG plant also poses its own set of difficulti­es.

“That will not necessaril­y be easy. Egypt has surplus gas to export and during the last three months Idku has been unable to sell its LNG because of very low market prices,” said Ellinas

“There is a long way to go and it won’t be plain sailing. Securing gas sales is by no means certain. But at least the first step has been taken,” he added.

Texas-based Noble Energy in 2011 made the first discovery off Cyprus in the Aphrodite block estimated to contain around 4.5 trillion cubic feet of gas – it has yet to be extracted.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cyprus