Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Egypt’s Zohr gas field could boost other east Mediterranean projects: GlobalData | World Oil

Egypt’s Zohr gas field could boost other east Mediterranean projects: GlobalData

11/24/2015
The company’s latest analysis indicates that Zohr will yield an internal rate of return of 25%, assuming a flat gas price of $5.88 per thousand cubic feet and recoverable reserves of 22 Tcf, justifying a fast-track development. 
GlobalData’s base case analysis assumes an initial production rate of 50 MMcfgd, consistent with other producing wells in the vicinity, and that approximately eight wells will be brought onstream annually until 2026. Peak production would be achieved in 2026 at 3,052 MMcfgd.
The base case estimate for capital expenditure is $7.69 billion, which is in line with the operator’s expectations of $7–10 billion. In comparison, Leviathan gas field in Israel, which has 12.5 Tcf of estimated recoverable reserves, is expected to cost $8.9 billion over the full cycle of a standalone project.
Regional hub
“Reduced exploration risk and the potential to share infrastructure could see the eastern Mediterranean blossom into a key development area for international oil companies,” Matthew Jurecky, GlobalData’s Head of Oil & Gas Research and Consulting, said. “With the resource potential more clearly established, above-ground issues, such as political challenges and collaboration between operators, become key.”
Lydia Pearson, GlobalData’s Upstream Oil & Gas Analyst, says that high-profile political challenges have paralyzed other regional projects, such as West Delta Deep Marine in Egypt and Leviathan in Israel, but there are reasons for other nations in the east Mediterranean to be optimistic going forward.
“In Cyprus, a route to commercialization for the 4 Tcf Aphrodite field has yet to be found. A proposed floating LNG facility has struggled with commerciality, but leveraging scale and infrastructure with Zohr would boost returns and mitigate risk at both projects,” Pearson said. “In Israel, GlobalData estimates Tanin and Karish to have poor project economics, hovering around a full-cycle value of negative $1 billion when considered as standalone projects. However, if a regional gas hub were developed, these projects would yield much more favorable economics.”