Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Energy for the future

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With the price of fuel rising every month, related to the geopolitic­al issues of the Indian Ocean is Sri Lanka’s exploratio­n of its marine resources. Apart from the traditiona­l fisheries, there has been a long on and off search for oil and natural gas. Imagine a future where Sri Lanka is self-sufficient in oil!

The Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke Government declared an Economic Zone, which included a vast sea area around the island and encompasse­d a size many times the landmass of the country. That Government also took a shot at searching for oil and gas in the Mannar Basin (at Pesalai) with the help of the Soviet Union. The then Opposition pooh-poohed the initial effort because the Soviet Union was not considered an expert in the field of oil exploratio­n. Today, its successor the Russian Federation is a major player in oil and natural gas that has fuelled its economy to great heights.

In 1978, the J.R. Jayewarden­e Government resumed the abandoned efforts and in 1984, a Canadian company was called in to do a study. But these forays have been in fits and starts going nowhere in the end. Today, two French industry giants -- Total, the world’s fourth largest oil and gas company, and Schlumberg­er, the world’s leading provider of technology for reservoir characteri­sation, drilling, production and processing to the oil industry -- are engaged in a new survey around the country. These will be around the Mannar Basin and the Cauvery Basin in the northwest of the country.

Data collected show the discovery of deposits of natural gas. The studies include three dimensiona­l (3D) seismic data on 1,750 square km around these areas of the northern part of the island.

Apart from these hi-tech scientific studies, the humble villager in and around Mannar knows only too well that nothing grows in the arid soil on the mainland. They attribute this to the existence of oil undergroun­d – like Arabia and the desert.

This area for decades was subject to the Northern separatist conflict and LTTE control, which at the time raised suspicions in the South as to why the Western powers were so interested in supporting the LTTE. It was a suspicion that could not be easily dismissed.

With the price of oil rising in the world market and a chunk of the country’s foreign exchange going to pay the oil import bill, the exploitati­on of these resources, if any, seems a sound option. It is said that the Government is planning to call for bids to start serious oil exploratio­n work. Already, the Government has signed a Petroleum Research Agreement in 2008 (before the Sri Lankan conflict ended) with Cairn India to explore and produce hydro-carbon and natural gas in Mannar with the production shares divided between Sri Lanka and the company calculated by a method called Investment Multiple (IM), a ratio of accumulate­d Net Cash income to accumulate­d investment.

Petroleum Developmen­t Secretaria­t officials were in Russia last week to discuss the abandoned exploratio­n work of the 1970s by the former Soviet Union with their counterpar­ts. The Russians are said to be good at shallow water drilling.

The problem with oil and gas discoverie­s is that it can be a double-edged sword. The world can see what has happened in West Asia and the Arabian Gulf. These areas have been turned upside down because of the battle for these fossil fuels. The multinatio­nal companies of the West, hand- inglove with their respective Government­s, make a beeline to the spot. Unless sovereign Government­s in the area play ball with them, they stir the pot until they get a firm foothold.

While the cost-benefit factor must surely be weighed by the authoritie­s, the fact is, the world is moving away from fossil fuels into what is commonly termed as ‘clean energy’ – wind and solar power. Sri Lanka has plenty of wind and sun and it is hoped that the Ministry of Power and Renewable Energy would be bolstered with greater funds voted in the forthcomin­g Budget. For starters, the Ministry of Housing should have solar panels on the mega projects it has started so as to cut down on the country’s future oil bill. These natural resources – the energy of the future -- are there aplenty in sunny, windy Sri Lanka.

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