1. Cyprus Gas-Fired Power Plans Warming Up

    ...untry’s main port of Limassol. The jetty will be approximately 1.2km in length and will have a berthing position for the FSRU and mooring dolphins on either side for LNG tankers (see map). It is situated next to trading firm Vitol’s 545,000m³ VVTV oil products storage terminal which was built in 2014 (ME...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 14
    Published at Fri, 09 Apr 2021
  2. Iraq Passes 2021 Budget With Strong Emphasis On Power Projects

    ...penses. In 2014, when large swaths of the country’s northern and western provinces fell to ISIS, Iraq failed to pass a budget as well. 20% OF REVENUES FROM ‘NON-OIL’?…         Of course, as per every year, oil income is slated to make up the lion’s share of the total $69.88bn in revenues. The bu...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 14
    Published at Fri, 09 Apr 2021
  3. Egypt: Draft 2021/22 Budget

    ...rrent financial year. It also forecasts a primary surplus of 1.5% of GDP, which does not take into account interest payments, which have made up the largest portion of the budget’s spending allocation since 2014-15. The budget will now need to be approved by parliament before its final approval from th...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 14
    Published at Fri, 09 Apr 2021
  4. Qatar Petroleum Moves To Take Full Ownership Of LNG Facilities

    ...ctor in recent years, especially following Mr Kaabi’s appointment as Managing Director and CEO in 2014 (MEES, 19 September 2014). The state firm has taken a firm stance with IOCs, opting to either tighten contractual terms or take over concessions entirely upon expiry. When Total’s PSA for the 25...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 13
    Published at Fri, 02 Apr 2021
  5. Long Delayed Barzan Gas Project Starts Up

    ...ExxonMobil confirmed in its recently released 2020 Annual Report that “The Barzan project started up in 2020.” Qatar's $10.3bn, 1.4bn cfd Barzan project (QP 93%, Exxon 7%) development has been a lengthy saga, with start-up ultimately coming six years after its initially planned 2014 date (ME...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 13
    Published at Fri, 02 Apr 2021
  6. Tunisia Oil & Gas: Major Exodus Looms

    ...er. There have been no major exploration campaigns or projects of late. And if it wasn’t for the need to see Nawara, on which it took FID in 2014, through to start up, there is little reason to believe OMV would still be in Tunisia. Instead, would it not be better to have smaller but more en...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 13
    Published at Fri, 02 Apr 2021
  7. India Crude Imports: Saudi Slumps To No.5 With Volumes At 10-Year Low

    ...arterly figure in a decade or more is the Middle East share of the Indian market. This fell to 54.4% for February, the lowest monthly figure since 2015. January was only just higher at 54.7%. The lowest quarterly figure in the last 10 years was 56.0% for Q3 2014. For Opec the drop off is even more se...

    Volume: 64
    Issue: 13
    Published at Fri, 02 Apr 2021
  8. Services Firms Eye Mena Resilience Amid US Shale Collapse: Is This Realistic?

    ...venue resilience? They are evidently hoping for a repeat of the previous 2015-16 capex downturn (after oil prices collapsed in late 2014) when Mideast NOCs kept spending counter-cyclically whilst IOCs, in particular those focused on US shale, slashed their outlay (MEES, 29 April 2016). Indeed, lower co...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 17
    Published at Fri, 24 Apr 2020
  9. Israel Orders Noble & Delek To Play Fair

    ...osshairs. In 2014 Noble and Delek were ruled to be operating as a cartel in Israel. An eventual compromise deal  saw them forced to sell Karish and Tanin to Energean (MEES, 19 August 2018), whilst Delek must quit Tamar by the end of next year. It has a direct 22% and also a 23% stake in Tamar Petroleum, a sp...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 17
    Published at Fri, 24 Apr 2020
  10. Libya’s Financial Vulnerabilities Laid Bare By Dwindling Oil Revenue

    ...consultation with Libya’s internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) based in the capital. STATE FAILURE             Such is the level of state failure in Libya, that since a political crisis in 2014 it has had two rival governments, two central banks and two national oi...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 17
    Published at Fri, 24 Apr 2020
  11. Saudi Arabia Announces Borrowing, Reserves Draw-down Plan

    ...is was followed up by an $81bn drop in 2016 and a $39bn drop in 2017 as reserves fell from $732bn at the end of 2014 to $496bn at the end of 2017. Foreign reserves have since stabilized, but not significantly grown, exiting 2019 at $500bn, and declining slightly in early 2020. If Saudi Arabia fo...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 17
    Published at Fri, 24 Apr 2020
  12. Low-Cost Middle East Reserves Aid IOCs In Price Slump

    ...wn since the previous oil price slump began in 2014. Production costs for all six peaked in 2014, with the exception of BP, where the peak was slightly earlier in 2013. BP and Total have had the most success in bringing down per barrel costs, which last year were nearly 50% lower than their peak. Ch...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 16
    Published at Fri, 17 Apr 2020
  13. Korea LNG Imports: Strong Q1 But Downturn Coming?

    ...ar.   *For Q1 as a whole, imports of 12.49mn tons are the third highest quarterly figure on record behind Q1 in 2018 and 2014. But, though overall volumes were up 20% year-on-year, Qatar continues to see its market share slump. Qatar Q1 supplies at 2.78mn tons were down 23% year on year, with Qatar’s 22...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 16
    Published at Fri, 17 Apr 2020
  14. Neutral Zone Restart: 2mn Barrels Exported

    ...e currently en-route to Asia for the first time since 2014. Production from the PNZ is shared 50:50 by Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, but the offshore Khafji field was shut-in in October 2014 (MEES, 24 October 2014) due to grievances over shared management. Output from the onshore portion (Wafra) was th...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  15. Egypt Halts LNG Exports As Eni & Shell Bear The Brunt Of Gas Surplus

    .../B.” In normal terms, Egypt’s gas renaissance has been a great success story. From a sizable gas deficit for 2014-17, new output led by Eni’s giant Zohr, which came online in December 2017, has meant that since late 2018 the country has had a gas surplus (MEES, 17 May 2019), with exports hitting an ei...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  16. Algeria: Southwest Pipeline Progress, But Field Development Lags

    ...th the IOCs. Similarly, Norway’s Equinor (then Statoil) in 2014 walked away from the Hassi Mouina license containing the Hassi Tidjerane and Tinerkouk fields: development was “not… commercial” (MEES, 29 May 2015). The 4bcm/y Ahnet tight gas project, though geographically distant, was also at one st...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  17. Mena Drilling: GCC Records, North Africa Slump

    ...rth $18bn for the expansion of capacity at the Marjan and Berri offshore fields required merely to stand still (MEES, 12 July 2019). The last six years (2014 to 2019) saw the six highest Saudi annual rig count figures on record (MEES, 17 January), whilst at 114 for February and March the rig count re...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  18. Syria Emerges As Iran’s Top Crude ‘Customer’

    ...e embattled Assad government lost key northeastern fields to Kurdish-led forces and key Euphrates fields (once Shell and Total-operated) to various rebel groups, sending oil output to 28,000 b/d in 2013 and 9,000 b/d in 2014, where it remained for four years. Damascus subsequently developed a sh...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  19. Dana Gas: Egypt Sale Delayed, Looks To Ringfence Iran Deal

    ...tigation from Dana since breaking down seemingly irrevocably in 2005 (MEES, 15 August 2014). Dana, which typically devotes a sizable chunk of its reports to its various ongoing litigations – of which the long-running Iran saga is perhaps the most impenetrable – is evidently trying to simplify things.  ...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 15
    Published at Fri, 10 Apr 2020
  20. Iraq Asks IOCs To Slash Spending As Export Revenues Halve

    ...sra Oil Company official told Reuters. In the short term, this will limit the dues Baghdad owes to Iraq’s foreign operators. But, as happened after the 2014 oil crash, it will also significantly hinder much-needed oil and gas investment. Especially if as in late-2014 and early-2015, the government st...

    Volume: 63
    Issue: 14
    Published at Fri, 03 Apr 2020