Stort seems to be hitting the media again.
Feb 22, 2013 3:40pm
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Normally the announcement of a small find of natural gas by a small independent oil company wouldn’t rate much media coverage.
But the announcement by Turkey’s Merty Energy that a well it has drilled in Turkey’s European province of Thrace has tested positive for commercial quantities of natural gas made headlines in the local media.
Not because it was huge find – it wasn’t. According to Merty CEO Ongun Yoldemir, once testing is completed on this field and two others, he expects to have reserves of around 2bn cubic metres of gas to extract – small compared to Turkey’s gas imports which are this year expected to top 48bn cu m.
According to government figures, Turkey’s own gas production was only around 700m cu m in 2010, with reseves of around 6bn cu m. Oil output was 2.5m tonnes, with reserves of 43m tonnes.
Every discovery makes a splash because of Turkey’s high dependence on imported oil and gas means energy is the country’s single biggest import with a $50bn-plus bill for oil and gas, that accounts for pretty much the whole of the current account deficit.
Turkey is in a particularly difficult position, with ministers and officials regularly reminding critics of Turkey’s “unorthodox” monetary policy mix that a $10 per barrel rise in the oil price adds as much as $4bn to the current account deficit and 0.5 percentage points to the inflation rate.
With imported gas used to generate 42 per cent of Turkey’s electricity last year and power demand growing at up to 8 per cent pa – every little bit of domestic production helps.
Merty is not alone in prospecting for gas in Turkey. Last week saw Royal Dutch Shell sign a joint venture agreement with Turkey’s state upstream operator TPAO to prospect offshore from Turkey’s Black Sea coast.
TPAO has already drilled one well and reported finding gas but further seismic surveys and test drilling are needed to determine how much, and whether it can be extracted commercially.
It’s not a given. BP, Petrobras, ExxonMobil and Chevron have all partnered TPAO in prospecting deepwater blocks in the Turkish sector of the Black Sea, and all have left without reporting commercial finds.
With the most recent departee, Chevron, opting to pay a $100m penalty rather than incur the cost of drilling further wells their contract called for.
Shell though appears confident that Turkey does hold untapped reserves of something, somewhere, having last year signed joint ventures to work with TPAO prospecting offshore from Turkey’s Mediterranean coast and to drill for shale gas in the Dadas basin in Turkey’s south eastern province of Diyarbakir.
Not surprisingly given shale gas finds in the US and Europe, hopes are high that Turkey’s shale beds will prove more productive than its Black Sea littoral with estimates of possible reserves being discussed at a shale gas conference in Ankara this week varying wildly between a few billion cu m, up as far as 20tn cu m or more.
On the record, company and government officials are more circumspect, with Shell stressing that nothing will be known for sure until test drilling is completed later this year and Turkish energy minister Taner Yildiz commenting only that he is hopeful that gas can be found in Diyarbakir and in three other shale beds in Konya, Ankara and Kirsehir. Efforts by TPAO and the state mineral authority MTA to identify reserves are being fast-tracked.
If efforts at extracting shale gas prove unsuccessful Turkey still has other options in the shape of an estimated 13bb tonnes of low-grade coal.
Last year saw production start at a test facility for producing syngas from coal from the Kutahya basin in western Turkey, with plans for commercial operation at this and a second plant already underway.
Similarly the past year has seen intensified efforts to increase the use of coal for power generation.
The announcement lat last year by deputy prime minister Ali Babacan year that generous incentives would be offered to companies developing new power plants burning domestic coal, was followed in late December by the signing of a huge joint venture MoU between Turkey’s state power generator EUAS and Abu Dhabi power company Taqa for the
development of as much as 8GW of new plant burning coal from the Afsin-Elbistan coal field in south east Turkey, which holds around 40 per cent of the country’s reserves.
But with Turkey’s energy demand set to continue rising rapidly in line with economic growth expected to rise to 4 per cent this year many are warning that as well as diversifying its energy portfolio, Turkey desperately needs to learn to use the energy it has more efficiently.
A report released late last year by Turkey’s Koc University warns that in terms of energy efficiency Turkey lags behind OECD countries and suggests that better policies and better technology could improve efficiency by as much as 20 per cent over the next decade.
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