Posted on 12/19/2014 4:48:35 AM PST by thackney
More U.S. travelers may soon start flocking to Cuba, but dont expect oil executives to follow them.
Cuba is believed to hold sizable oil and gas resources off its northwest coast, in the eastern Gulf of Mexico raising speculation that the Communist nation could become an attractive target for energy companies if Wednesdays diplomatic thaw eventually leads to the end of the five-decade-old U.S. trade embargo. But exploration by Brazilian, Malaysian and Spanish companies in the past few years has failed to produce any gushers and the current worldwide glut of cheap oil is not going to encourage many others to follow.
There is not going to be a Cuban oil rush, said Pavel Molchanov, an energy company analyst with Raymond James. Just because U.S. companies have been unable to drill in Cuba doesnt mean nobody has been able to drill in Cuba.
Brazils Petrobras, Malaysias Petronas, Russias Zarubezhneft and Spains Repsol have all looked for oil off the Cuban coast, but success has so far eluded them. Repsol had the most public failure, spending $150 million over a decade, but ultimately gave up its program in 2012 after drilling a dry hole.
If the oil industry truly believed the Cuban coast had significant amounts of oil, Molchanov said, it would have drawn in British, French and other European companies that have world-class skill at finding deep-water reservoirs.
Cuba, I think, is inconsequential as the oil industry goes, he said.
Another hindrance is the steep slide that has cut oil prices virtually in half in the past six months. (The world benchmark price was about $62 a barrel at midafternoon Wednesday.) That sell-off has oil companies scrambling to cut their budgets and reduce spending to focus on their core operations.
An oil rush in Cuba would not have happened even if oil were at $100, but its certainly not going to happen at these price levels, Molchanov added.
William Reilly, the former EPA chief who led the Obama administrations commission on offshore drilling safety after the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, agreed that the industry is not likely to hustle to Cuba. In addition to the current low price of crude, Reilly said in an interview, oil companies are kept busy enough by leased offshore properties not in Cuban waters.
Reilly found few takers after he gauged what it will take to get American oil companies interested in Cuba in late 2011 and early 2012, he added, when crude prices were nearing $100 a barrel.
Still, if the thaw in relations between Cuba and the United States continues, and business opportunities open up, at least some U.S. companies could be expected to take a look.
Oil does not respect artificial man-made boundaries, said one Houston-based energy analyst, who requested anonymity. We know there is oil and gas all across the Gulf so from that perspective, I think companies would be interested.
If Havana were to create a reliable legal framework, sort out any legacy issues with companies that may have lost assets there decades ago and create a lucrative royalty regime, U.S. companies might be interested. Its all about the potential return on investment, the analyst said. If they make it competitive, they could get eight to 10 companies going in there.
Little solid data exist about Cubas offshore reservoirs, but the U.S. Energy Information Administration says the country had proven reserves of 124 million barrels as of January 2013. Its modest production of about 50,000 barrels per day is less than one-third of its consumption, and the shortfall is mainly made up by Venezuelan imports.
Reilly said that even if U.S. drillers dont flock to Cuba, the softening of diplomatic relations could pay off for oilfield services companies such as Halliburton or Schlumberger that would have new opportunities to partner with Cuban industry. And it could aid U.S. interests by making it easier to ensure the safety of any offshore drilling that takes place off the Cuban coast or aid the response to a spill.
The offshore safety commission Reilly co-chaired with former Florida Democratic Sen. Bob Graham identified potential risks from a spill offshore of Cuba that could migrate into U.S. waters, including the danger that trade restrictions would leave Cuba unable to obtain important equipment.
On the other hand, he said the Cubans are showing an interest in what the U.S. has learned about offshore safety. When Reilly visited Cuba to discuss the panels findings earlier this year, he said he was impressed and a little surprised to learn that its officials had been receiving daily reports from the U.S. on the possible migration of spilled oil in the Gulf.
We didnt know what kind of reception to expect, Reilly recalled. It turned out the Cubans had taken our commission report apart. Up on a blackboard they had findings, recommendations, what they had done to respond.
The new Cuban policy that the White House announced Wednesday will include a reestablishing of diplomatic relations, the opening of a U.S. embassy in Havana and a loosening of restrictions on travel and some types of financial transactions. The steps dont appear to include measures that would immediately allow major oil exploration deals by U.S. companies, but the administration called for a discussion with the Cuban and Mexican governments of our unresolved maritime boundary in the Gulf of Mexico.
Previous agreements between the United States and Cuba delimit the maritime space between the two countries within 200 nautical miles from shore, the White House said in a release. The United States, Cuba and Mexico have extended continental shelf in an area within the Gulf of Mexico where the three countries have not yet delimited any boundaries.
-——Cuba, I think, is inconsequential as the oil industry goes——
I would argue Cuba is inconsequential as far as anything goes. Given the death of the Soviet Union, Cuba doesn’t really matter about any thing.
The old men are at death’s door and will be gone pretty soon.
I’m guessing that even before Cuba could become a real self-sustaining country it would have to come out from under control of communism. That will not happen.
What probably will happen though is that Obama will commit untold billions to rebuilding its infrastructure, support systems and the like, all the while importing those “freedom-seeking” troublemakers the government there wants to be rid of.
We will add more debt on top of debt, Obama will get more Democrats, and a Cuban Dictator will be partying in the White House with Odumbo and the Mooch to a Gala Concert by Gloria Estefan.
Rosneft, Russias second-largest energy company, has little recent history in Cuba; Zarubezhneft, in summer 2013 pulled out from near-shore exploratory drilling earlier than expected, saying it may return in 2014.
Rosneft is reviving interest in a key project within the Mariel Zone that doesnt seem to have any obvious use since the pullout of an offshore oil platform from Cuba in 2012, after drilling dry holes.
PdVSA to Take Over Rig for Drilling Off Cuban Coast {Venezuela}
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2915240/posts
August 06, 2012
a Malaysian-Russian consortium was unable to make a commercial discovery using the rig at a separate site
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Repsols Decision Smokes Out Cubas Oil Ambitions
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2889733/posts
May 30, 2012
Repsol, has confirmed that (his) company and its partners are abandoning drilling offshore Cuba, representing a major blow to the islands ambitions to secure oil self-sufficiency.... The decision follows reports that the Jaguey-1 exploration well drilled by Repsol and partners Statoil (Norway) and ONGC (India) on Block N26, in Cubas Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in the Gulf of Mexico, had come up dry.
I would be afraid of investing money and work in Cuba and then they would nationalize it, as other rogue countries have done.
It's not like that didn't already happen with those who were unfortunately left out in the cold with deals with the Former Batista regime. :0)
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