Venezuela close to approving offshore gas license with Trinidad, Shell
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[November 20, 2023] By
Curtis Williams
(Reuters) - Venezuela is close to approving a license for Shell and the
National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago to develop a promising
offshore natural gas field and export its production to the Caribbean
country, two people close to the matter said.
The license could set in motion a long-running effort by Trinidad to
boost its gas processing and petrochemical exports, while providing
Venezuela with a much-needed extra source of cash.
The two countries aim to speed cross-border energy development since the
U.S. in January issued a two-year authorization allowing the field's
development.
Venezuela, which holds Latin America's biggest gas reserves, and
neighboring Trinidad, the region's largest liquefied natural gas (LNG)
exporter, would complement each other's needs to produce and export gas.
Both nations are discussing a 25-year exploration and production license
for the Dragon field, which holds up to 4.2 trillion cubic feet of gas
and lies in Venezuelan waters near the maritime border between the two
countries.
Some terms are still to be settled, but if all goes well a deal could be
signed in coming days, the people said.
Shell would operate the project with a 70% stake and Trinidad's NGC
would hold the remaining 30% under proposed terms, the people said.
Venezuela's state-run oil firm PDVSA, which discovered Dragon's reserves
and paid for existing infrastructure, would not have a stake in the
project, but Venezuela would receive cash or a portion of gas production
as royalties.
PDVSA in 2013 finished testing gas output at Dragon, but the field has
never been commercially active due to the company's lack of capital and,
more recently, U.S sanctions.
The U.S. last month temporarily eased sanctions on Venezuela and amended
the authorization for Dragon, allowing Caracas to receive proceeds from
gas sales. Since then, negotiations have moved faster, a third person
said.
Trinidad's Energy Minister Stuart Young in early October said the
parties had begun price negotiations for Dragon's gas.
Shell declined immediate comment. NGC referred questions on the talks to
Trinidad's energy ministry. The ministry, PDVSA, and Venezuela's oil
ministry did not reply to requests for comment.
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The installations of liquified natural gas producer Atlantic LNG are
pictured in Point Fortin, Trinidad and Tobago, December 10, 2022.
REUTERS/Andrea De Silva/File Photo
VOLUMES, PRICES, PIPELINES
The proposed license would allow an initial volume of 300 million
cubic feet per day (mcfd) of Venezuelan gas to go to Trinidad for
LNG production, starting in late 2026, and an additional 50 mcfd to
petrochemical plants, the people said.
Trinidad and Tobago has the capacity to process 4.2 billion cubic
feet per day (bcfd) into LNG, petrochemicals and power, but its gas
production is about 2.7 bcfd.
The lack of gas has led to the shutting of one of its LNG processing
units.
The parties have agreed in principle to a price that would land gas
across the border at less than $3 per mcf, the sources said.
PDVSA has pushed for a signature bonus of some $65 million to be
paid upfront. But Shell and NGC want to tie any payment to certain
milestones, such as first gas, the sources added.
The parties are considering two separate lines to transport the gas:
one partially built by PDVSA to Guiria, on Venezuela's eastern
coast. A second line would connect to Shell's Hibiscus field in
Trinidad.
If the parties agree that some of the gas will pass through Guiria,
an additional short pipeline linking Guiria to Point Fortin, home of
Trinidad's LNG plants, might be needed.
That option would allow Venezuela to process the gas on its shore,
keeping what it needs to supply the domestic market and potentially
exporting gas liquids in the future. But adding a new line might
extend the time for the project to begin output to five years,
rather than three years as hoped, the people said.
(Reporting by Curtis William in Houston; additional reporting by
Marianna Parraga; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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