The Oklahoman

Aramco’s shale gas basin to rival Texas’ Eagle Ford

- BY WAEL MAHDI AND BRUCE STANLEY

Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil exporter, is set to join the shale revolution with plans to start producing unconventi­onal natural gas this month and exploit a deposit that could rival the Eagle Ford formation in Texas.

Saudi Arabia’s gas resources from shale and other alternativ­e supplies are “huge,” Khalid Al Abdulqader, general manager of unconventi­onal resources at Aramco, said Wednesday in Manama, Bahrain. Production at the kingdom’s North Arabia basin will start by the end of March and reach its target by the end of this year, he said, without giving details.

Aramco is also drilling for unconventi­onal gas in the South Ghawar and Jafurah basins, he said. Jafurah in eastern Saudi Arabia is similar in size to Eagle Ford, the secondbigg­est U.S. shale play for gas, Al Abdulqader said, without giving an estimate of the gas contained at Jafurah.

“It’s completely believable,” Robin Mills, chief executive officer of Dubaibased consultant Qamar Energy, said of the comparison. “Can they make a commercial propositio­n of it? That’s the question.”

State-run Aramco, formally known as Saudi Arabian Oil Co., plans to spend $300 billion on projects over the next 10 years to maintain its spare production capacity for oil and boost exploratio­n for and output of convention­al and unconventi­onal gas, CEO Amin Nasser said in July. Any increase in supplies of gas drilled from shale and other hard-to-access rocks would free up crude that Saudi Arabia uses in its power plants, enabling the country to export the oil for a bigger profit.

Eagle Ford in Texas had 22.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves from shale in 2016, according to a U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion report in February. Aramco plans to double its production of gas resources to 23 billion cubic feet a day over the coming decade, Nasser said.

Jafurah is located between Ghawar, the world’s largest oil field, and the Persian Gulf, near the hub of the Saudi energy industry. Pipeline networks and other facilities needed for Aramco to produce unconventi­onal gas at Jafurah are nearby, and this existing infrastruc­ture should help expedite the basin’s developmen­t, Mills said.

Aramco plans to develop the entire basin, using improved technology to reduce fracking costs, Al Abdulqader said. The company will focus on cutting costs at Jafurah before proceeding with plans to produce gas there, he said.

Saudi Arabia traditiona­lly pumped gas only as a byproduct of crude. The nation began its hunt for gas in the early 2000s after oil sank below $10 a barrel and unemployme­nt worsened. It invited Exxon Mobil Corp., Chevron Corp. and others in the hope of attracting $100 billion of investment. Many pulled out following years of talks, and dry holes forced Total SA, Eni SpA and Repsol SA to exit ventures with Aramco.

Lukoil PJSC, one of Aramco’s last remaining partners in a gas exploratio­n venture, planned to leave the project in the kingdom’s Empty Quarter desert after finding no commercial­ly viable deposits of the fuel, Gati Al-Jebouri, Lukoil’s head of upstream for the Middle East, said in January 2017 in Dubai.

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