Perfil (Sabado)

Vaca Muerta gets Us$5.1-billion lifeline

New subsidy programme hopes to lure US$5 billion of investment­s and a dozen drill rigs, says Energy Secretary Darío Martinez.

- BY JONATHAN GILBERT @JONGILBERT­9

Argentina’s cashstrapp­ed government says it can find US$5.1 billion to give to natural gas drillers in a bid to resuscitat­e the country’s Vaca Muerta shale patch and prevent a jump in imports of the fuel.

The four-year subsidy programme that was announced last week will cost Argentina more than US$1 billion annually, including US$1.5 billion in 2021, at a time when the government is struggling to recover investor confidence following a debt restructur­ing and hasn’t posted a monthly fiscal surplus in a year.

Drillers may be wary after previous subsidy programs saw producers encounter difficulti­es in receiving payments and confusion over the rules. Energy Secretary Darío Martínez said spending on subsidies is still better than the alternativ­e of buying cargoes of liquefied natural gas, even though LNG is cheap at the moment.

“We’ve done the analysis and we really benefit from doing this,” Martínez told reporters in Buenos Aires on Wednesday. The government incorporat­ed the LNG slump into its calculatio­ns and estimates it will still save US$2.6 billion from 2021 to 2024 by subsidisin­g drillers instead of importing fuel.

Vaca Muerta in Patagonia is the world’s second-biggest shale gas formation. Production there was flounderin­g even before Covid-19 roiled markets because of supply gluts and pipeline restrictio­ns. Soaring gas output from Tecpetrol SA, a unit of billionair­e Paolo Rocca’s Techint empire, came just as the economy began to shrink, slashing prices and putting the breaks on drilling.

The latest subsidy programme hopes to lure US$5 billion of investment­s and a dozen drill rigs, Martinez said. Companies that compete in an auction next month for three-year supply contracts can receive a maximum of US$3.70 per million British thermal units, with the government covering the difference between the winning bids and prices currently paid by consumers of US$2.30. Other natural gas basins, not just Vaca Muerta, are eligible.

State-run YPF SA will probably be one of the biggest beneficiar­ies, and the government has also held talks with Pan American Energy LLC, Total SA, Cia General de Combustibl­es SA and Pampa Energía SA, Martínez said. It is also in discussion­s with Tecpetrol since it’s unclear whether the company will be able to take part while it pursues a legal battle to receive a better rate under a previous program. Tecpetrol says it is waiting for full details of the new program to be published to know where it stands.

Other highlights from the interview:

– Argentina plans to improve two existing gas pipelines from Vaca Muerta through an investment of US$600 million before reviving any plans for a third

– Martínez didn’t rule out bringing back a second regasifica­tion tanker to supply Argentina in the winter of 2021. A decision will depend on the auction next month for subsidised production

– Argentina needs to know for how long, and at what price, Brazil will commit to buying gas before progressin­g with a plan to build a pipeline to supply its neighbour

– A bill to spur oil investment­s is still being drafted. Martínez says drillers with overseas debt should be able to freely access dollars to service those borrowings

– The Energy Secretaria­t has given companies that won renewable energy projects in government tenders but haven’t started building them until next month to explain why. The projects will be reassigned if the companies can’t commit to them.

 ?? SOURCE: BLOOMBERG, ARGENTINA ENERGY SECRETARY ??
SOURCE: BLOOMBERG, ARGENTINA ENERGY SECRETARY
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