Shotgun Marriage

Published: 19 October 2003 y., Sunday
Western companies have been contemplating whether to accept or reject Ashkhabat's offers to develop the hydrocarbon reserves on the Turkmen shelf of the Caspian Sea. Turkmenistan has insisted that its 32 blocks totaling over 70 thousand square kilometers contain 16.5 billion tons of oil equivalent. Investors are daunted not only by the insufficient extent of the blocks' exploration but also by the absence of export prospects. Dragon Oil and Petronas are showing investors one way out of this blind alley with their plan to concede their project shares to the Russian company Zarubezhneft and international gas trader Itera in exchange for access to export trunks. Russian Zarubezhneft and Itera are planning to set up a joint venture to participate in at least two oil-and-gas projects on the Turkmen shelf of the Caspian Sea. A source close to Zarubezhneft executives told RusEnergy.com that these are projects to develop the Cheleken Block and the neighboring Block-1. A little earlier, Zarubezhneft CEO Nikolai Tokarev affirmed it in an interview to the Oil & Capital magazine (№ 11 - 2001). Official representatives of the operators, however, refuse to confirm the existence of the deal with Russian companies. An agreement on the Russian joint venture unifying the projects will be signed in the coming months, a source in Zarubezhneft reports. The joint venture will allegedly acquire an unspecified part of the present participants' shares. Currently, these projects are already being implemented in accordance with the production sharing agreement (PSA) between Turkmenistan and foreign companies. Dragon Oil is the Cheleken operator with its controlling stock owned by the United Arab Emirates (through the Emirates National Oil Company). Malaysia's Petronas is the operator of the Block-1 development project. The intention of the Zarubezhneft-Itera alliance to join the projects has received an enthusiastic response from both foreign companies and Turkmen authorities. After meeting with the heads of the Russian companies Turkmenistan's president Saparmurat Niyazov declared his support of their plans.
Šaltinis: RusEnergy.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

The Connection of Kazakhstan to the Baku-Ceyhan Pipeline

Russian deputy foreign minister Viktor Kalyuzhny believes that the reason for the connection of Kazakhstan to the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline is the rigid tariff policy of Russia more »

A logical next step

Lithuania’s stock exchange now controlled by OMHex, the Swedish-Finnish exchange more »

Bank of America to cut 12,500 jobs

Bank of America Corp., newly merged with FleetBoston Financial Corp., said Monday it will cut 12,500 jobs - or nearly 7 percent of its work force - over the next two years more »

TDI to invest EUR 100 million in Central Europe

Trigon Direct Investments (TDI), the private equity fund set up by a Scandinavian investment bank Trigon Capital (TC), intends to invest up to EUR 100 million in Central and Eastern Europe more »

Bank PKO BP poised to invest zł.400 million on IT

PKO BP, the largest national retail bank will devote zł.400 million this year on IT related investments more »

Cameco Corp. and partner to develop Inkai uranium deposit in Kaz

Cameco Corp. and the National Atomic Co. of Kazakhstan announced Thursday that they will develop a uranium deposit in Kazakhstan more »

The Gold and Foreign Currency Reserves

Russia's gold, forex reserves were at $83.7 bln on March 26 more »

BS/2 will play the master role at ATMIA conference

Penkių kontinentų bankinės technologijos (BS/2) will play the master role at ATMIA Central and Eastern Europe conference, which is organised for the first time in Lithuania in September. more »

The Battle

The court-room drama will take place in the Court of Justice in Luxembourg more »

The criteria for euro adoption

Czech central bank governor calls for change in euro adoption criteria more »