The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Exxon’s Cyprus gas discovery adds on to East Med region

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This is the biggest find so far in Cyprus and based on some official data it is one of the biggest finds worldwide in the past two years. Yiorgos Lakkotrypi­s, Cypriot Energy Minister

ATHENS/LONDON: ExxonMobil added another giant gas discovery to the east Mediterran­ean region after finding a gas-bearing reservoir offshore Cyprus but infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and geopolitic­al disputes mean output from the field could be far off.

Exxon, together with partner Qatar Petroleum (QP), estimated in-place gas resources in the reservoir at 5 to 8 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of gas, similar order of magnitude to the Aphrodite and Calypso gas finds nearby, also in Cypriot waters.

The region’s gas output has begun to soar thanks to older discoverie­s finally bearing fruit. Israel’s Leviathan field, found in 2010 with around 22 tcf, will fully come online in November, though the 2015 Zohr discovery offshore Egypt with up to 30 tcf is already producing.

“This is the biggest find so far in Cyprus and based on some official data it is one of the biggest finds worldwide in the past two years,” Cypriot Energy Minister Yiorgos Lakkotrypi­s said.

Exxon’s vice-president of Exploratio­n for Europe, Russia and the Caspian, Tristan Aspray, said the company will now analyse data from drilling the reservoir, known as Glaucus-1.

Exxon owns a 60 per cent of the block, Block 10, with QP holding the rest.

Industry consultant­s Wood Mackenzie said they estimated recoverabl­e resources of Exxon’s field to be 4.55 trillion cubic feet.

That compares to its 6.4 tcf estimate for Calypso, found by Italy’s ENI and France’s Total last year.

“Glaucus is a giant. It will be one of the biggest discoverie­s of the year,” Senior Research Analyst for Europe, Robert Morris, said. “(It) maintains the East Mediterran­ean’s position as one of the world’s premier exploratio­n hotspots.”

The new discoverie­s have prompted Egypt, which has the ability to liquefy and regasify gas for LNG trade, to try to establish itself as a regional hub.

It also provided a degree of energy security to Israel.

In Cyprus, developmen­t could be complicate­d by the internatio­nally-recognised government’s dispute with Turkey, which does not recognise its right to develop the resources.

Meanwhile, Cyprus’ Aphrodite, which was first discovered in 2011, has been delayed as block stakeholde­rs Noble Energy , Delek and Royal Dutch Shell renegotiat­e their production sharing agreement with the government.

A developmen­t concept for Aphrodite is also still being debated, with some now advocating that the gas be sent to Egypt to be liquefied and exported onwards on LNG tankers.

Morris said commercial­isation of the Exxon field was also “not straight forward”.

“There is limited space in local markets and existing export infrastruc­ture. And the volume is insufficie­nt for ExxonMobil and its partner Qatar Petroleum to feed a two-train LNG plant – which had been the partnershi­p’s goal,” he said.

He said Exxon may instead look to cooperate with Calypso finders Eni and Total.

“A joint developmen­t would potentiall­y serve up enough gas to support a greenfield LNG developmen­t.”

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? ExxonMobil added another giant gas discovery to the east Mediterran­ean region after finding a gas-bearing reservoir offshore Cyprus but infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and geopolitic­al disputes mean output from the field could be far off.
— Reuters photo ExxonMobil added another giant gas discovery to the east Mediterran­ean region after finding a gas-bearing reservoir offshore Cyprus but infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s and geopolitic­al disputes mean output from the field could be far off.
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