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When Will Russia Run Out Of Oil?
By Viktor
Katona
Oil Price, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 10, 2017
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Russia's Oil Production 1970-2020 and Russia's Deep-Hole Oil &
Gas Exploration Drilling.
Source: Russian Central Bank,
IEA, Russian Statistics Agency. |
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On a global level, 2015 and 2016 marked the lowest level of new
conventional oil discoveries since 1952. In 2016, only
3.7 billion barrels of conventional oil were discovered, roughly 45
days of global crude consumption or 0.2 percent of global proved
reserves. Globally, exploratory drilling fell by almost 20 percent in
2015 and fell even further in 2016. Russia's exploration activities,
which were hit not only by plummeting oil prices but also by a targeted
sanctions regime, suffered a double blow during this period. In 2015,
only seven new hydrocarbon discoveries were made in Russia, three of
them in the Baltic Sea. In 2016, oil and gas companies in Russia
discovered 40
prospective fields, however, the 3P reserves of the largest among
them, Rosneft's Nertsetinskoye, amounted to 17.4 million tons. This
stands in stark contrast with pre-sanction period achievements, for
instance, 2014's largest find, Pobeda, is believed to contain 130
million tons of oil and 0.5TCm of gas.
It is only logical that
against such depressive trends, that people start to question the
sustainability of Russia's current oil-producing renaissance (Graph 1).
When will Russia run out of oil? Were Sheikh Yaki Zamani's "Stone age"
simile to materialize, would Russia still be among the top producers
when oil started its descent towards obsolescence?
The Ministry
of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection of Russia states that
not accounting for new discoveries, current oil reserves in Russia stand
at 29 billion tons and under current consumption rates
would be depleted by 2044 (its 2P gas reserves' depletion would come
about in more than 160 years). To this end, it would like to implement
business-easing measures, e.g.: facilitate the issuance of licenses and
to increase the size of the allotted subsoil block to a maximum of 500
km2 (which would mean a fivefold increase compared to existing
regulations). The Ministry's stimulating measures, however, should not
obfuscate the fact that Russia still has vast amounts of untapped
reserves waiting to be discovered. But where?
Frontiers
The future of Russian crude lies in oil that is more
expensive, more geologically complex and further away from traditional
regions of production. Just as West Siberia replaced the Volga-Urals
Region in the 1970s as the Soviet Union's main producing region,
East-Siberia and offshore regions will overtake West-Siberia (which saw
its share in the national output diminish from 71 percent in 2004-2005
to 57 percent currently). This change of "leaders" is long overdue as
West-Siberia oil output was already expected to plummet in the 1990s,
yet thanks to extended oil recovery methods and slower-than-expected
development of other oil-rich regions it has managed to keep stable
output numbers. Russia's oil sector has been consistently hoodwinked by
analysts, who, beginning
from the
early 1980s predicted an imminent production slump. The production
fall did happen, reaching a low-point between 1996 and 1999 when
production foundered to 301-305 million tons per year. The cause was to
be sought in Russia's overall economic depression, not in its dearth of
resources.
Today, Russian companies are similarly constrained in
tackling Russia's three new oil frontiers – shale, Arctic and
deep-water. It is no coincidence that U.S. and EU sanctions targeted the
sales of technologies related to these sectors and not conventional –
whilst Russian companies are well-equipped to deal with conventional
fields, they relied heavily on Western know-how. Yet it is very unlikely
that even a tightening of sanctions could stall Russia's Arctic
exploration activities for a longer period of time. Russia's continental
shelf contains most of the Arctic's oil formations and approximately 60
percent of its undiscovered reserves. So far, the 3P reserves of
Russia's Arctic stand at 585 million tons and 10.4 TCm, yet most of its
Arctic Seas were only superficially appraised. The Kara Sea, whose
fields are almost exclusively gaseous, has been in the spotlight since
the 1983 of the Murmanskoye gas field (120 BCm), yet the northern parts
of the adjacent Barents Sea, which Russia's Federal Agency on Subsoil
Usage
deems the most likely to yield top hydrocarbon discoveries in the
next few years, are relative newcomers in prospective surveys.
Western oil & gas companies should be aware that the Russian government
treats Arctic formations as resources of "federal significance" and it
is unlikely to provide them a role other than that of a minority
shareholder. There is more maneuvering room for oil formations in the
riskier part of the Arctic – the as of yet impossible-to-assess Laptev
and Chukchi Seas, where no large-scale surveying has been done.
Moreover, after the UN Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf
acknowledged the Okhotsk Sea as a Russian enclave, the
least-researched Russian sea can now be prospected and appraised. Still,
the Russian Arctic, along with frontier zones like the Timano-Pechora
Basin and the Yenisey-Khatanga Basin, will play an important role in
keeping Russia among world's top 3 oil producers in the next 40-50
years. Yet there is more, Russia's oil future is not only more Arctic,
but also more shale-related.Russia has been sitting on vast shale/tight
oil reserves, which according to present data are
second
only to the United States. Yet it might easily surpass all its
rivals, as the development of gigantic tight-oil formations, such as
Bazhenov Suite, the largest shale deposit in the world covering a
territory of more than 1 million km2 and assumed to contain at least 20
billion tons of oil, is still in its infant phase. The potential of the
Abalak Suite underlying the Bazhenov, the Domanik Suite, stretching
asymmetrically across the Volga-Urals Region from Perm to Orenburg, as
well as many others, is still difficult to assess, yet virtually all of
them are located in traditional oil-producing regions with a
fully-established oil infrastructure. Although the first Bazhenov
oil gush dates back to 1969, several factors have hindered the
development of Russian tight oil, yet the principal among them was the
availability of other, less-costly variants of production. The
preference for easier-to-access, less costly formations is aptly
reflected in Russia's curbing of deep-hole exploration drilling (Graph
1).
As Russia's tight oil needs at least an oil price level of
55-60 USD per barrel, bringing the first fields on-stream is still some
way off as conventionals' breakeven levels are in the 20-30 USD per
barrel range. Despite a significant lag compared to the U.S. shale
revolution, this might not be that unfavorable for Russia. It is
expected that under the aegis of "import substitution", Russian service
companies might be fully up to the task to exploit Russia's shale bounty
by the 2020s, moreover, they are likely to work in an environment with
significantly lower drilling costs, time and efficiency rates than their
American counterparts in late 2000s (thus yielding more oil). By that
time, perhaps, anti-Russian sanctions will be a yesteryear affair.
Lastly, one should not underestimate the tenacity of Russia's
conventional oil reserves, which thanks to enhanced oil recovery
techniques and supplementary exploration will remain a force to be
reckoned with. As demonstrated by the discovery of the Velikoye field in
the Astrakhan Oblast (reserves estimated at 330 million tons of oil),
Russia's pre-salt layers, even in regions previously thought to be on
the verge of depletion, might kickstart a new development vector in its
energy matrix. As Russia's Natural Resource Ministry cannot account for
events that are still yet to happen, its 2044 depletion assumption
reflects merely its inherent conservatism, not the country's realistic
capabilities. By all accounts, Russia will remain a major oil-producing
nation throughout the entire XXIst century, with oil production moving
to places that are further (north and east), deeper (both deepwater and
pre-salt) and generally more costly.
Link to original article:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/When-Will-Russia-Run-Out-Of-Oil.html
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