The National - News

ADNOC AWARDS CHINESE OPERATOR MAJOR SEISMIC SURVEY CONTRACTS

Dh5.88bn deal completed with CNPC affiliate to undertake studies onshore and offshore by 2024

- JENNIFER GNANA

Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (Adnoc) has awarded one of the world’s largest seismic surveys for hydrocarbo­ns assets to a unit of China National Petroleum Corporatio­n as the UAE looks to engage its biggest consumers in exploratio­n.

BGP, a subsidiary of stateowned CNPC, was awarded contracts associated with the surveys onshore and offshore the emirate in a deal estimated to be worth Dh5.88 billion, Adnoc said on Thursday.

“The scale of the project shows our commitment to upstream investment and to bolstering our oil and gas reserves and production for the longterm,” said Adnoc group chief executive Dr Sultan Al Jaber.

“The award, following a highly competitiv­e bid process, also represents another key milestone in Adnoc’s thriving partnershi­p with CNPC as well as the UAE’s strategic energy partnershi­p with China.”

Adnoc produces much of the UAE’s crude, which accounts for 4.5 per cent of the world’s total, and has launched its first licensing round this year. The company has awarded about $8bn worth of upstream concession stakes to companies from its rising consumer base of China and India as well European majors including Total and Eni. The award of seismic data surveying for an acreage of around 53,000 square kilometres comes amid efforts by the UAE and countries in the region to develop hydrocarbo­n assets at a time of reviving crude prices.

BGP, which is represente­d in the UAE through local firm Al Masood Oil Industry Supplies & Services, will acquire 2D and 3D seismic data on Abu Dhabi, covering up to 30,000 sq km offshore and 23,000 sq km onshore.

BGP will complete the subsurface survey by 2024 using high-resolution 3D imaging to probe reservoirs up to 25,000 feet below the surface. The firm, a leading internatio­nal survey contractor, will use seismic streaming vessels and ocean bottom nodes to gather data in Abu Dhabi waters and will employ specialist vibrator trucks to survey onshore desert areas.

The award to the Chinese firm comes during the threeday visit of President Xi Jinping to Abu Dhabi, which is expected to result in the two countries extending their co-operation further on issues relating to energy security.

China is the world’s biggest importer of crude, with about 42 per cent of it sourced from the Middle East.

The UAE sells about 7 per cent of its crude to China, whose biggest suppliers are Saudi Arabia, Iran and Iraq. Chinese firms have, however, increasing­ly scouted for stakes in Abu Dhabi to offset increasing political vulnerabil­ities associated with exploring for oil and gas assets in Iran and Iraq.

Abu Dhabi and the UAE are some of the more stable places where India or China can look for an upstream oil asset, said Amit Bhandari, senior fellow, energy and environmen­t with Mumbai think tank Gateway House.

“One part of it is simply that China continues to import a large amount of oil. That will continue and also as the price of oil has started recovering, there’s a realisatio­n that the assets are not such bad deals after all,” he added.

In March, CNPC was awarded a 40-year rights agreements worth Dh4.3bn by Adnoc for concession­s offshore Abu Dhabi.

The Chinese state oil company company also has a 40 per cent stake in Adnoc subsidiary Al Yasat Company for Petroleum Operations, from whose concession the first batch of crude, a 50,000 barrel-per-day shipment, was loaded and shipped to China in June.

Chinese state-backed companies have become one of the largest foreign investors in Abu Dhabi’s energy sector, as Adnoc renewed its efforts to engage the biggest consumers of its crude to become co-investors across its value chain.

In May, Tayba Al Hashemi, Al Yasat’s acting chief executive, told an audience in Beijing that the company had received significan­t interest in the ongoing Adnoc licensing round from Chinese firms.

 ?? Adnoc ?? Dr Sultan Al Jaber, the chief executive of Adnoc, and CNPC chairman Wang Yilin watch preparatio­ns for a Chinese ‘lion dance’
Adnoc Dr Sultan Al Jaber, the chief executive of Adnoc, and CNPC chairman Wang Yilin watch preparatio­ns for a Chinese ‘lion dance’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates