Arab News

Kazakhstan relaunches giant Kashagan oil field

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BISHKEK, KYRGYSTAN: As the world’s major crude exporters have agreed to cut production to boost prices, Central Asia’s Kazakhstan is reopening its vast but troubled offshore Kashagan oil field after years of delay.

The Kashagan field in the north of the Caspian Sea is viewed as one of the largest oil discoverie­s of the past 40 years but the project to develop it has already cost more than $50 billion and has stalled since 2013.

But on October 14, it produced and made its first shipment of the restart, the field’s operator, the North Caspian Operating Company (NCOC), announced, though the Kazakh energy ministry said stable production “would take some time.”

NCOC is an internatio­nal consortium made up of energy companies Total, Eni, ExxonMobil, Shell and Kazakh state champion KazMunayGa­s, as well as Japan’s Inpex and China’s CNPC.

It says it plans a gradual ramp up of production to some 370,000 barrels per day (bpd) by the end of 2017.

This relaunch comes after the OPEC group of oil producers pledged in Algiers on September 29 to cut production for the first time in eight years on the back of a sustained depression in global prices.

Crude has hovered around $50 per barrel since the announceme­nt, but non-OPEC Kazakhstan, whose currency has lost half its value in a devaluatio­n linked to the price plunge, will not be joining in the cut.

“Kashagan is important for Kazakhstan’s economy as a source of revenue that potentiall­y could help fix its current account deficit problem,” said Kassymkhan Kapparov, director of the Bureau for Economic Research of Kazakhstan, a think tank based in the country’s largest city Almaty.

The current account deficit is projected this year to reach four percent for the first time since 2010, having turned negative last year mostly due to the fact that revenues from oil exports halved.

Still, since the project remains in cost-recovery mode following three years of expensive repairs and falling oil prices, “the impact of Kashagan on the state budget in the first years of its operation is expected to be negligible,” Kapparov said.

The Kashagan project has been plagued by setbacks since the start.

Kazakhstan’s government has not hidden its anger over a project that has swallowed $55 billion in investment­s, producing oil for just a few weeks after coming on line in 2013, eight years behind schedule.

In early 2014, the country slapped the operator with a $737 million fine for environmen­tal damage after gas leaks in its pipeline network brought output to a screeching halt.

“There’s an abundance of caution to make sure [the restart] goes off without a hitch,” says Andrew Neff, principal analyst with the Petroleum Sector Risk team for the London-headquarte­red IHS global consultanc­y.

 ??  ?? OPEC Secretary-General Mohammed Barkindo addresses a recent news conference in Vienna. (Reuters)
OPEC Secretary-General Mohammed Barkindo addresses a recent news conference in Vienna. (Reuters)

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