Arab Times

Kuwait close to exhausting production capacity

OPEC faces pressure

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KUWAIT CITY, Aug 6: Kuwait is close to exhausting its production capacity, capping its ability to bring on more crude oil supplies to meet heightened global demand, as OPEC faces pressure from its key customers for price relief, reports Al-Qabas daily.

Platts Analytics – provider of clarity into changes in commodity supply and demand flows, infrastruc­ture, policy, and more – says the country may have about 30,000 b/d of production upside left from current levels, according to, with its main field aging and an unfavorabl­e business climate, along with government instabilit­y, limiting its ability for further growth and according to Platts survey of OPEC output by S&P Global Commodity Insights Kuwait pumped 2.72 million b/d in June.

State-owned Kuwait Petroleum Co.’s plans to raise production capacity to 4.75 million b/d by 2040 were seen as very ambitious when unveiled in 2018. The country has now revised its target to 3.5 million b/d by 2025 and 4 million b/d by 2040, but analysts say even this maybe an uphill task.

Kuwait’s main source of supply is the massive Greater Burgan field – the world’s second largest – which is already producing at up to 95% of its capacity, with its about 1.6 million b/d of output sustained through a mix of gas injection and water flooding.

Developmen­t

KPC is working on a 100,000 b/d capacity gathering center at Burgan, and continuing developmen­t at the Neutral Zone the country shares with Saudi Arabia, which remains technicall­y difficult after facilities there were shuttered for several years, sources say.

Beyond that, any other major additions would not come online until the end of the decade and would require internatio­nal funding and expertise, which remains a challenge for famously foreign investment-averse country.

Kuwait’s fractious politics are another barrier. The country currently does not have a functionin­g parliament, and newly appointed Prime Minister Sheikh Ahmad Nawaf alSabah has been tasked with forming a new government as the country awaits

elections.

Current Oil Minister Mohammed al-Fares, who will represent Kuwait at the upcoming OPEC+ meeting Aug. 3, could go in an eventual cabinet reshuffle. This leaves Kuwait and its oil policy somewhat in limbo. Upgrades to its aging fields require internatio­nal knowhow, which would require changes to the country’s petroleum law to incentiviz­e oil majors to participat­e,

analysts say.

“Internatio­nal companies are reluctant to come to Kuwait, if we do not do some sort of sharing or buyback agreement like they did with Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Oman,” independen­t Kuwaiti oil analyst Kamil al-Harami said. “But this is very, very hard, if not impossible, for us to observe or to comply with.”

Kuwait’s reliabilit­y as a supplier could come from its export of oil products through its investment­s in the downstream sector such as the 615,000 b/d Al-Zour refinery, Al-Harami added. The refinery is still in the testing phase, with full capacity expected to be realized by early 2023.

Over the medium term, Kuwait is expected to see incrementa­l production of heavy oil from the second phase of the Lower Fars developmen­t, set to come online by 2023, adding up to 200,000 b/d by the end of the decade.

Fields in the Neutral Zone are also expected to add to Kuwait’s output, though no projects have been sanctioned yet. At any rate, much of the output is largely expected to offset declines from the Greater Burgan reservoir.

The country is also expected to develop and sell condensate volumes from its Jurassic non-associated gas projects in northern areas, such as Sabriya. The condensate is expected to be sold as crude oil under Kuwait Super Light grade.

Lifeline

A possible lifeline for Kuwait could be loan facilities from buyers, which would allow their service companies to participat­e in upgrades and lock in a secure market share for future output. In March, Japan’s Nippon Export and Investment Insurance signed a preliminar­y agreement on energy cooperatio­n with KPC.

The MoU also has provisions for a consortium of Japanese and western banks to provide $1 billion in a loan facility to KPC to help the company boost its upstream capacity. However, the resignatio­n of the Kuwaiti government in April and the dissolutio­n of the parliament for the second time this year in July have delayed plans.

One Japanese banking source said the loan facility was a “work in progress.” Japan has been looking to diversify its crude imports from Russian oil following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in March, and Kuwait was its third-largest supplier in 2021.

Japan also has a historical reason to be invested in Kuwait’s upstream sector after it lost the concession to the Khajfi oil field in the Neutral Zone through its Arabian Oil Co. when it expired in 2003.

“Many Japanese involved in these negotiatio­ns felt bitter about it,” a source with knowledge of the past discussion­s said.

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 ?? ?? Kuwait’s Al-Rahma Internatio­nal Society inaugurate­s the opening of a model school for refugees in the Yemeni Maarib Governorat­e.
Kuwait’s Al-Rahma Internatio­nal Society inaugurate­s the opening of a model school for refugees in the Yemeni Maarib Governorat­e.
 ?? ?? Displaced children in Maarib express happiness and thanks to Kuwait’s support for their future.
Displaced children in Maarib express happiness and thanks to Kuwait’s support for their future.
 ?? KUNA photos ??
KUNA photos

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