Wednesday, 16 October 2019
Zohr natgas production to exceed 3 bcf/d this month: Production from the 13 wells at the giant Zohr natural gas field is expected to surpass 3 bcf/d by the end of October, up from 2.7 bcf/d in August, Eni IEOC JV boss Luca De Caro said on the sidelines of the Mediterranean Offshore Conference in Alexandria, the Oil Ministry said in a statement. Eni originally estimated that production would peak at 2.7 bcf/d, but the ministry said earlier this year that output would rise above 3 bcf/d in 2019.
More wells on the horizon: Eni plans to drill 11 exploration wells in the Nile Delta, Western Desert and the Gulf of Suez regions this year and nine other wells in the coming year, De Caro said. Eni has also been producing 1.2 bcf/d of natural gas from its Nooros gas field since the end of 2017 when the two phases of the project were completed. High profile representatives from BP, Wintershall DEA, Shell and Edison also attended the conference, which kicked off yesterday.
EMC 2021 . 2021 SEPT 14-16 . NICOSIA
Wednesday, October 16, 2019
Zohr natgas output to surpass 3 bcf/d this month - ENTERPRISE
Sunday, October 13, 2019
Gas has a future but must cut costs, Cyprus could see delay amid EEZ furore - CYPRUS MAIL
October 13, 2019
Dr Charles Ellinas
DURING this week I participated in three important conferences in London, which covered global gas and LNG developments and markets, including developments around the East Med. The key conference was Oil & Money, addressed by the CEOs of Shell, BP, Total, Saudi Aramco, ADNOC, Qatar Petroleum and the Secretary-General of OPEC.
Bob Dudley, CEO BP, summed up the challenges and opportunities facing natural gas. He said that gas can play a vital role in the transition towards cleaner energy, helping to meet energy demand, but it will need to be decarbonised. However, he also warned that “one of my concerns is that gas is being increasingly marginalised, even vilified, and demonized.”
While gas is cleaner than oil and coal, it is still a fossil fuel and is coming under attack from environmentalists who are calling for a rapid shift to renewable energy to prevent global warming. If the oil and gas industry does not propose and support solutions to climate change, the climate activists will dictate the policies of the future.
DURING this week I participated in three important conferences in London, which covered global gas and LNG developments and markets, including developments around the East Med. The key conference was Oil & Money, addressed by the CEOs of Shell, BP, Total, Saudi Aramco, ADNOC, Qatar Petroleum and the Secretary-General of OPEC.
Bob Dudley, CEO BP, summed up the challenges and opportunities facing natural gas. He said that gas can play a vital role in the transition towards cleaner energy, helping to meet energy demand, but it will need to be decarbonised. However, he also warned that “one of my concerns is that gas is being increasingly marginalised, even vilified, and demonized.”
While gas is cleaner than oil and coal, it is still a fossil fuel and is coming under attack from environmentalists who are calling for a rapid shift to renewable energy to prevent global warming. If the oil and gas industry does not propose and support solutions to climate change, the climate activists will dictate the policies of the future.
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