RPT-NZ Oil and Gas says Kupe reserves increased

July 14 (Reuters) – Explorer New Zealand Oil and Gas said on Wednesday the estimated reserves of the Kupe oil and gas field, in which it has a 15 percent stake, have been increased.

The oil and gas explorer said its share of the additional reserves has a sales value of nearly NZ$100 million ($71 million).

The review showed gas reserves increased by 8 percent, LPG reserves were higher by 5 percent and light oil reserves were up by 27 percent.

Shares in New Zealand Oil and Gas (NZO.NZ) last traded up 1.6 percent at NZ$1.29, having fallen around 23.2 percent so far this year, compared with a 6.3 percent fall in the benchmark top 50 .NZ50 index.

The Kupe field is 50 percent owned by Origin (ORG.AX), with state-owned power company Genesis Energy holding 31 percent, NZ Oil and Gas 15 percent, and Mitsui E&P Ltd 4 percent. ($1=NZ$1.39)

NZ Oil and Gas says Kupe reserves increased

July 14 (Reuters) – Explorer New Zealand Oil and Gas said on Wednesday the estimated reserves of the Kupe oil and gas field, in which it has a 15 percent stake, have been increased.

The oil and gas explorer said its share of the additional reserves has a sales value of nearly NZ$100 million ($71 million).

The review showed gas reserves increased by 8 percent, LPG reserves were higher by 5 percent and light oil reserves were up by 27 percent.

Shares in New Zealand Oil and Gas (NZO.NZ) last traded up 1.6 percent at NZ$1.29, having fallen around 23.2 percent so far this year, compared with a 6.3 percent fall in the benchmark top 50 .NZ50 index.

The Kupe field is 50 percent owned by Origin (ORG.AX), with state-owned power company Genesis Energy holding 31 percent, NZ Oil and Gas 15 percent, and Mitsui E&P Ltd 4 percent. ($1=NZ$1.39)

UPDATE 1-Northern Petroleum to raise 10 mln via share placement

(Reuters) – Northern Petroleum (NOP.L) on Friday said it planned to raise 10 million pounds ($14.92 million) through a share placing, as the oil and gas explorer sought to raise additional funds to develop assets in Netherlands and Italy.

The European Union-focused explorer also plans to sell off its non-core UK assets and said it hired UK-based marketing company Envoi Ltd to handle the sale. Northern Petroleum said it planned to sell a total of 11.8 million shares at 85 pence apiece. The price represents a discount of 8.6 percent to Thursday’s mid-market closing price of 93 pence.

In the Netherlands, the company has proven and probable (2P) reserves of 42.7 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe), with four gas fields in production, and two gas fields and two oil fields in development.

In Italy, the company has 53.2 million boe of net probable oil reserves from 32 Italian licences, while in the UK it has 2P reserves worth 7.0 million boe.

At June 23, the company had about 13.4 million euros ($16.52 million) of net cash.

Shares of AIM-listed Northern Petroleum closed at 93 pence on Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. ($1=.8112 Euro) ($1=.6701 Pound) (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore)

Sudan may ask U.N. to run key vote – party official

(Reuters) – Sudan may ask the United Nations to run a referendum on the future of a politically sensitive border region after northern and southern leaders failed to appoint organizers, a party official said on Sunday.

World

The residents of Abyei are less than seven months away from a vote on whether their border territory, close to key oilfields, should be part of north or south Sudan.

The vote has regional significance because, on the same day, the people of south Sudan have been promised a ballot on whether to separate from the north to become an independent state.

Yasir Arman of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), the dominant party in the south, said northern and southern leaders had failed to agree on who should join a commission to organize the Abyei vote despite months of debate.

“So far we have failed … If it becomes clear that we cannot agree then the only way out is the United Nations,” he told Reuters.

“The problems are the names. The National Congress cannot agree. We have been giving them the names, names from the civil service and lawyers, and hopefully we can still agree.”

If Abyei residents decide to join the south they could, at a stroke, become part of Africa’s newest country, taking their oil reserves and rich grazing land out of Khartoum’s control.

Political analysts have said time is running out to organize the votes and there is a risk of violence if southerners believe the north is trying to delay or disrupt the plebiscites.

Arman, the SPLM candidate in a presidential election held in April, said his party would submit a fresh set of names in a final attempt to reach agreement.

An official from the north’s National Congress Party (NCP) said Arman was trying to increase political pressure.

“I am sure we can still bridge the gap between the NCP and the SPLM on this. We have had differences before which we have settled,” said the NCP’s Rabie Abdelati.

No one was available to comment from the United Nations.

The votes, due in January 2011, are ensured as part of a 2005 accord that ended more than two decades of north-south war.

Abyei is occupied by two main groups, the Dinka Ngok, linked to south Sudan’s Dinka people, and nomadic Misseriya Arabs, associated with the north. Northern and southern forces have clashed there since the peace deal.

Arman said the NCP and SPLM were due to discuss Abyei and other issues related to the referendum in Mekele, the capital of Ethiopia’s northern region of Tigray, this week.

Outstanding issues included the position of the north-south border, the nationality of southerners in the north and vice-versa, and the sharing of debts and oil revenues if the south, as widely expected, chooses to secede.

(Reporting by Andrew Heavens; editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Sudan may ask UN to run key vote -party official

KHARTOUM, June 20 (Reuters) – Sudan may ask the United Nations to run a referendum on the future of a politically sensitive border region after northern and southern leaders failed to appoint organisers, a party official said on Sunday.

The residents of Abyei are less than seven months away from a vote on whether their border territory, close to key oilfields, should be part of north or south Sudan.

The vote has regional significance because, on the same day, the people of south Sudan have been promised a ballot on whether to separate from the north to become an independent state.

Yasir Arman of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), the dominant party in the south, said northern and southern leaders had failed to agree on who should join a commission to organise the Abyei vote despite months of debate.

“So far we have failed … If it becomes clear that we cannot agree then the only way out is the United Nations,” he told Reuters.

“The problems are the names. The National Congress cannot agree. We have been giving them the names, names from the civil service and lawyers, and hopefully we can still agree.”

If Abyei residents decide to join the south they could, at a stroke, become part of Africa’s newest country, taking their oil reserves and rich grazing land out of Khartoum’s control.

Political analysts have said time is running out to organise the votes and there is a risk of violence if southerners believe the north is trying to delay or disrupt the plebiscites.

Arman, the SPLM candidate in a presidential election held in April, said his party would submit a fresh set of names in a final attempt to reach agreement.

An official from the north’s National Congress Party (NCP) said Arman was trying to increase political pressure.

“I am sure we can still bridge the gap between the NCP and the SPLM on this. We have had differences before which we have settled,” said the NCP’s Rabie Abdelati.

No one was available to comment from the United Nations.

The votes, due in January 2011, are ensured as part of a 2005 accord that ended more than two decades of north-south war.

Abyei is occupied by two main groups, the Dinka Ngok, linked to south Sudan’s Dinka people, and nomadic Misseriya Arabs, associated with the north. Northern and southern forces have clashed there since the peace deal.

Arman said the NCP and SPLM were due to discuss Abyei and other issues related to the referendum in Mekele, the capital of Ethiopia’s northern region of Tigray, this week.

Outstanding issues included the position of the north-south border, the nationality of southerners in the north and vice-versa, and the sharing of debts and oil revenues if the south, as widely expected, chooses to secede. (Reporting by Andrew Heavens; editing by Andrew Dobbie)

UPDATE 1-Brazil Senate passes key part of Lula’s oil reform

BRASILIA/RIO DE JANEIRO, June 8 (Reuters) – Brazil’s Senate on Thursday passed a plan that creates a production-sharing model to replace the existing concession system in future oil projects, boosting government control over massive deepwater reserves off the country’s coastline.

Senators voted 38-to-31 with one abstention to approve the plan, which is a key component of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s efforts to boost state control over the country’s oil reserves. The bill now goes back to the lower house for conciliation after senators changed parts of the original text.

The approval gives Lula a key legislative victory after years of debate over how Brazil can ensure it gets a fair share of the massive offshore oil reserves. The Senate is still slated to vote on Thursday on a plan to transfer up to 5 billion barrels of oil to state-controlled oil giant Petrobras in exchange for shares of the company.

Brazil is hoping the massive oil reserves, buried deep beneath the ocean floor under a layer of salt in a basin known as the subsalt region, will help the fledgling emerging market economy move into the ranks of the developed nations and help it become a major energy exporter.

“We are gaining the necessary financial, operating and legal muscle needed to turn all this wealth into funds for development,” Senator Delcidio Amaral, a government lawmaker and a former director at Petrobras (PETR4.SA)(PBR.N), told fellow lawmakers ahead of the ballot.

Under the plan, Petrobras will be made the sole operator of new projects in that region with a 30 percent minimum stake in those projects.

Once the lower house approves the bill, Brazil can resume auctions for the subsalt fields that the country suspended in 2007 after Petrobras announced their discovery, the biggest in the Americas in three decades. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a factbox on production sharing agreements, click on [ID:N09125922]

For a graphic of key Brazil oil projects click:

link.reuters.com/gek88k ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

The bill also included a “social fund” aimed at channeling money into poverty reduction, the environment and improving an education system that lags much of the world.

Brazil’s move is part of a worldwide trend of governments seeking greater control over natural resources. But Brazilian officials stress their plan does not seek to shunt aside foreign capital, as has happened in places like Venezuela and Ecuador. (Additional reporting and writing by Guillermo Parra-Bernal in Sao Paulo; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

Venezuela oil min says U.S. war with Iraq was for oil

Venezuela’s oil minister on Friday criticized the United States for promoting secure global energy supplies and at the same destabilizing oil producing countries like Iraq.

Venezuela’s Rafael Ramirez argued the United States’ war with Iraq “was an aggression for oil” and said that contradicted Washington’s call for the world’s energy supplies to be secure.

“How can big and industrialized consuming countries pretend to (want) stability in supply, if they are provoking destabilization in producing nations,” Ramirez told reporters on the sidelines of an energy and climate change conference in Washington.

Speaking on oil market issues, Ramirez said that OPEC should set production levels that keep crude costs in a price band of between $80 and $100 a barrel.

“We need to build a band between $80 and $100 a barrel. That should be the band,” he said.

Ramirez said OPEC ministers are discussing how to maintain stable oil prices, even though the price band he suggested would be much higher than the $85 price that oil has traded around in recent weeks.

Both Venezuela and Iraq are members of OPEC.

Ramirez is making his first visit to Washington in six years after relations between Venezuela and the United States soured during the administration of former President George W. Bush.

Ramirez said he wanted to restart communications on energy issues that have been cut off between the two countries. However, he seemed to backpedal from some of his comments made on Thursday when he said U.S. companies should invest in developing Venezuela’s vast oil reserves.

“We did not come here to look for investors. We came here to talk to governments,” he said.

U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu met with Ramirez after the conference ended. The two countries agreed to restart in the coming months dialogue on technical energy issues.

“While the U.S. and Venezuela certainly don’t agree on all issues, Secretary Chu and the administration believe that dialogue on energy and climate issues is important for our two countries,” the Energy Department said in a statement describing the meeting.

Chu and Ramirez were to focus on energy issues, but the meeting was seen by some as an important step in improving relations between the two countries.

That may have been true based on the other senior U.S. government officials who attended the meeting, including Richard Duddy, U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, and Cheryl Mills, Chief of Staff to U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

It is rare that talks between a U.S. energy secretary and his visiting counterpart have included such U.S. diplomats.

“This is a step forward,” Chu told reporters before the meeting. “I think we’re going to be making good progress.”

(Reporting by Tom Doggett; Editing by Marguerita Choy and David Gregorio)

South Sudan president accuses north of oil grab

South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir said Khartoum was delaying demarcating the north-south border to try to retain control over oil reserves with Sudan’s elections just days away.

Analysts say a failure to resolve the border issue between the former north-south foes could spark renewed conflict if the problem is not sorted before Africa’s largest country holds a January 2011 referendum on independence for the south.

On Tuesday Kiir’s ex-rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) said it would boycott Sudan’s April 11 national elections accusing Khartoum of widespread fraud.

“Why it is not demarcated is because there is oil and the north wants to take the oil, they want also to take the agricultural land we have so it becomes their land,” Kiir told voters at a rally in the southern Lakes State.

Sudan’s potential 500,000 barrels per day of oil from wells mostly in the south inflamed a 22-year-long civil war between the SPLM and the northern National Congress Party which ended with a 2005 peace deal.

Under the accord south Sudan receives about 50 percent of government oil revenues from wells in the south but the opaque distribution of cash has been a source of much contention. Oil revenues accounts for an estimated 98 percent of semi-autonomous south Sudan’s budget. Many of the oil fields lie on the north-south border.

Analysts say the north-south border demarcation is key to successful talks between the two sides on post-referendum wealth sharing of oil and water from the River Nile.

Hundreds of supporters greeted Kiir on the campaign trail for the south Sudanese presidency, waving banners and kicking up dust in celebratory dances in the small Yirol town, which has few permanent buildings like much of the south devastated by the war. Several white bulls were slaughtered in his honour.

The SPLM said it would boycott all elections in the north on Tuesday, except the central states of Blue Nile and South Kordofan, where it said it was sure to win, despite the widespread fraud they accuse the NCP of committing.

The move has sparked confusion among Sudan’s opposition. Some have also boycotted but others are continuing in the race, although they all agreed with the concerns over irregularities.

Kiir also accused Sudan’s President Omar Hassan al Bashir of refusing to form commissions to oversee the southern referendum and another vote for the citizens of the oil-rich Abyei area to choose whether to join the north or south.

“They don’t want the south to stand alone,” he said, speaking in his native Dinka, the language of the south’s largest tribe. “The intention is to take over the land so they will control everything.”

Lakes state is largely flat scrub land dotted with big palm trees but also has wetlands, valuable to the resident pastoralist tribes whose armed young men battle in deadly cattle raids through the dry season.

(Editing by Opheera McDoom and Matthew Jones)

Rajasthan Government demands lion’s share in Cairn project

Barmer (Rajasthan), Aug.29 (ANI): The Government of Rajasthan on Saturday demanded a lion’s share of the value added tax (VAT) that would be generated from the extraction of crude oil from the Mangala Processing Terminal ( MPT) here.

According to sources, the issue will be settled later when state government representatives meet the officials of this Cairns Energy India-ONGCjoint venture.

ONGC Chairman R.S. Sharma said that it would take at least four years to meet this demand of the Rajasthan Government, which was made by Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot. Sharma said that the approach of the state government would determine the way forward on the issue of revenue sharing.

Officials attached with the joint venture said they are leaving no stone unturned in doing their bit for the local people.

The media contingent accompanying the Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, on the inaugural visit to the project site were shown the entrepreneural centre where various social projects for local people are showcased.

Cairn India CEO Rahul Dhir emphasised the point that the maximum number of labourers are locals, and added that out of the 700 contractors, a majority are local people.

Inaugurating the project, Dr. Singh said the present venture is an indication that foreign investment in the country will grow and that the Indian Government will honestly provide all facilities to attract foreign investment.

He also congratulated the technical personnel for successfully finding oil reserves.

It maybe recalled that the Dutch firm Shell had abandoned the search for oil in this desert area. cairn india then stepped in, and after four years of continuous labour, was able to discover oil. arlier, Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Murli Deora described the activation of the Mangala Processing Terminal ( MPT) as a historic achievement, as the crude oil production from this block will meet about 20 percent of the nation’s current crude oil production.

He said this will enable the country to save seven percent of the crude oil import bill and reduce import dependence.

Deora also emphasised the need for stabilising crude oil prices for ensuring the sustained economic growth of the country, Deora said the MPT find is a significant step towards achieving this goal.

Cairn has invested about Rs.10000 crores in the area.

The total investment in this project will be more than Rs. 20000 crores. The government will get Rs. 46000 crores as profit petroleum revenue over the life of the project and will provide job opportunities for more than 6000 people.

According to company sources, the supply terminal to the Mangala field, the second largest oil discovery in the country in two decades, will be a giant step towards curtailing the country’s oil import bill.

With an initial 30,000 barrels capacity per day (bpd), Cairn India plans to add another 1,00,000 bpd over the next 18 months.

Mangala oil field officials are confident of reaching the target of producing 1,75,000 bpd in the next 20 months.

The project would contribute more than 20 per cent of India’s domestic crude oil production by 2011, the company sources said. By Pankaj Chaudhary (ANI)

Brazil’s petroleum giant finds oil in Campos Basin

RIO DE JANEIRO, May 22 (Xinhua) — Brazil’s state-owned oil and gas giant Petrobras said Friday that it has discovered traces of oil in an exploration block off the county’s southeastern coast.

The discovery was made in the block BM-C-25 in the Campos Basin off the coast of Espirito Santo state.

The block had been operated by the Dutch company Shell in a partnership with Petrobras since 2002.

In March 2009, Shell decided to sell its 45-percent share of the block to Petrobras.

It was the second time this week that Petrobras announced the discovery of oil traces in areas previously owned by foreign companies.

On Monday, the company informed Brazil’s National Petroleum Agency of the evidences of oil reserves in the offshore BM-S-3 block in the Santos Basin.

UN agency warns of nuclear “vulnerabilities”

Beijing – The UN’s international nuclear watchdog warned Monday of ageing nuclear facilities and a lack of oversight of nuclear installations.

Mohamed ElBaradei, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said at the opening of a two-day conference on nuclear energy in Beijing that security at nuclear reactors was much better today than 10 years ago “but we still have vulnerabilities in safety as well as in security, even in countries with significant nuclear programmes.”

“In some countries, we see a troubling combination of old reactors, operators which are poorly managed or underfunded, and weak regulators,” ElBaradei warned.

The interest in using nuclear energy is growing worldwide with more than 60 countries, primarily developing nations, informing the IAEA that they are interested in developing their own nuclear programmes, he said.

The reasons for the higher interest in atomic energy is shrinking oil reserves, large price fluctuations for gas and oil, concerns about global warming and rising energy demand, he said at the meeting which energy ministers and other representatives from 65 countries are attending.

Regional integration needed for developing world: Economists

Geneva – Warning of political unrest and social instability owing to the economic crisis, two economists said Thursday that some developing nations would need to built better regional cooperation regimes to ensure their futures.

“There is a need for more regional integration, because we are seeing low intra-African trade,” economist Mustapha Sadni Jallab said.

While West Africa had an alliance between several countries, he said there was a need to expand this to cover more of the continent.

By doing so, they would reduce their reliance on the West for their exports, enabling them to develop better production models suiting domestic needs.

He noted that the only area in the developing and emerging markets with significant regional trade was south-eastern Asia.

Jallab co-authored with Hakim Ben Hammouda the new book “La Crise” which focuses on the impact the economic crisis is having on the developing world.

“Trade is one of the ways out of a crisis, but they have a huge potential for growth at internal levels,” said Ben Hammouda.

Some economists had expected the financial crisis to pass over the developing world, but the two authors argue that it has in fact hit developing countries hardest, in part because of their dependency on exports for growth and the lack of reserves for stimulus packages.

With global trade expected to fall this year by 9 per cent, according to the World Trade Organization, exporting their way to riches would be unlikely in 2009.

Ben Hammouda, who has worked for the WTO, also pointed out that the economic crisis for much of the developing world actually began long before it hit industrialized nations.

“The crisis really started with the food crisis,” he said, which began in 2007 as prices for basic goods soared, leaving the poor even more destitute while driving others into poverty.

Some particularly poor nations without oil reserves, might appreciate the dramatic drops in the price of fuel, but at the same time also suffer the decrease in value of their own commodities, such as cotton, cocoa and coffee.

This means the developing world is making less money on fewer exports.

Furthermore, the impact of the oil decline on some emerging markets, particularly in the Gulf, have been severe, affecting economies that had invested in the poorest nations.

These emerging countries, such as the United Arab Emirates, also took losses on their sovereign wealth funds and investments in the housing sector. When they liberalized their markets they also made themselves more exposed to the financial crisis.

Their saving grace, though, were the large reserves they were able to store up. Also, internal cooperation in the Gulf has allowed, for example, Abu Dhabi to bailout Dubai by buying up its debt.

For countries, though, who have relied on high oil prices to fund their social programmes and subsidies, the times are changing.

“They must invest in infrastructure, but also in education, growth for the future. They need skills,” Jallab said.

Otherwise, the prospect of political and social unrest looms ever closer, particularly in north and sub-Saharan Africa.

Already, the economists warned, Africa was seeing sudden regime change, such as the recent coup in Madagascar, which was connected to the state of the island nation’s economy.(dpa)

Warming planet may widen gap between rich and poor

Washington, March 17 (ANI): A recent economic analysis by researchers at MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), US, has indicated that rising global temperatures may widen the gap between rich and poor, because poor nations will face a more severe economic chill.

After examining worldwide climate and economic data from 1950 to 2003, Benjamin A. Olken, associate professor in the Department of Economics, MIT, concluded that a 1 degree Celsius rise in temperature in a given year reduces economic growth by an average of 1.1 percentage points in the world’s poor countries, but has no measurable effect in rich countries.

According to Olken, his research suggests higher temperatures will be disproportionately bad for the economic growth of poor countries compared to rich countries.

The precise reasons why higher temperatures lower economic output are likely to be complex, but Olken’s results suggest the importance of temperature’s impact on agricultural output.

His data also provide evidence for a relationship between temperature and industrial output, investment, research productivity and political stability.

“The potential impacts of an increase in temperature on poor countries are much larger than existing estimates have suggested,” Olken said.

“Although historical estimates don’t necessarily predict the future, our results suggest that one should be particularly attentive to the potential impact of climate change on poorer countries,” he added.

It has long been observed that hotter countries, such as those in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Latin America, tend to be poorer than cooler countries in North America and Europe.

The main exceptions are hot, rich Middle East countries with oil reserves and cold, poor Communist or former Communist states like North Korea and Mongolia.

What contemporary scholars have debated, however, is whether climate has a significant effect on a country’s economy today or whether it is institutions and policies that now solely drive prosperity.

To conduct their research, Olken and his co-authors used existing data sets of economic growth and productivity – everything from gross domestic product to the rate of publication of scientific papers – and combined them with country-by-country temperature and precipitation data from 1950 to 2003.

Olken and his co-authors conclude that rising temperatures do substantially reduce economic output and growth rates in both agricultural and industrial sectors, but only in countries that are already poor.

Higher temperatures also reduce investment and innovation but, again, only in poor nations.

“Should the future effects mirror recent history, world policy makers should be prepared for a widening gap between rich and poor countries as the globe continues to warm,” said Olken. (ANI)