The Latvian government announced last week that it will invite tenders next April for long-awaited offshore oil exploration licenses.
Published:
5 December 2000 y., Tuesday
The Latvian government announced last week that it will invite tenders next April for long-awaited offshore oil exploration licenses on a
2,675-square-kilometer tract of its Baltic Sea waters.
The tract will be divided into seven parcels and lies well north of the
proposed Latvia-Lithuania sea border, a point of disagreement between
the two countries that has scared off oil companies in the past.
Industry estimates have put the possible volume of Latvia's offshore
reserves, though not commercially proven, at 250 million barrels. But a
senior government geologist cautioned that previous estimates are
inaccurate, saying that only drilling will establish the real quantity.
Meanwhile oil exploration further to the south is being delayed by Latvia's
failure to ratify a new sea border treaty with Lithuania.
The oil tender process is being publicized at a major oil industry
conference in London between Nov. 28 and Nov. 30.
The government made the announcement now to meet with Latvian law,
which requires that notice be given to the public and environmental
groups.
Offshore drilling in Latvia, to the west and south of Liepaja, broke off with the collapse of the Soviet Union. The drilling results, and the results of geological tests suggest there are "prospects," according to Maris Seglins, deputy director of Latvia's State Geological Survey, who added that there is still much uncertainty.
The Cabinet of Ministers has established guidelines for the creation of a
national oil company from which the state would get a share of offshore
production.
Oil drilling to the south has been held up by delays in the Latvian
Parliament over ratification of a sea border treaty with Lithuania. Latvian
MPs, fearing Latvia may be sidelined by Lithuania's more advanced oil
industry, have expressed concern that Latvia should receive a share of
revenue generated by extraction of oil from possible reserves straddling
the border.
But the dispute led BP Amoco, which along with Swedish OPAB received
an exploration license in the mid 1990s on a parcel abutting the proposed
border, to abandon oil exploration plans there.
Latvian fishing groups have been lobbying Parliament, saying the
proposed border gives Lithuania territory which was Latvia's prior to the
Soviet era. They have threatened to blockade ports if Latvia ratifies the
treaty. While the treaty has been approved by Latvia's foreign affairs
committee, opposition to ratification has come from MPs in Latvia's Way
party, which is central to the governing coalition, says Guntars Krasts,
head of the foreign affairs committee and an MP from the For Fatherland
and Freedom Party.
Once the two countries join the European Union, fishing boats from other
EU countries will be able to operate freely in the territory anyway, he says.
In comments to the press, Lithuania's new Prime Minister Rolandas
Paksas has expressed frustration at the hold-ups.
Šaltinis:
The Baltic Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.