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Posts from ‘July, 2011’

Shell aims to grow dividend but at ‘right time’

July 8, 2011, 2:42 p.m. EDT

By London Bureau

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA, RDSA.LN) aims to grow its dividend as its cash flow increases, though this will be done in a measured way, said Chief Executive Peter Voser in an interview with Swiss newspaper Finanz und Wirtschaft to be published Saturday.

“We’re aiming at a rising dividend. However, we are active in a volatile business, and I don’t want a stop-and-go dividend policy,” said Voser, according to the paper.

Shell has predicted that cash flow will increase 80% from 2009 to 2012, but its quarterly dividend of $0.42 a share has remained unchanged since 2009.

“Among other factors, we determine dividend growth by factoring in expectations for profit and cash flow over the next [few] years. We have predicted a big rise in cash. At the right time, we will announce what this means for the dividend,” said Voser, Finanz und Wirtschaft reported.

SOURCE ARTICLE

Shell serious about ethanol and other biofuels, says CEO

By NALIN VIBOONCHART
THE NATION
KUALA LUMPUR
Published on July 9, 2011

Royal Dutch Shell is heavily focused on investing in the exploration and production of gas and biofuels in promising countries, including China and Brazil, as it foresees that these sources of energy will play an important role over the next four decades as the demand for energy, particularly from Asian countries, will grow much faster than supply.

Chief executive officer Peter Voser yesterday said in Malaysia that Shell was focusing on four areas for future energy development: natural gas, biofuels, reduction of carbon-dioxide (CO2) emission and energy-efficiency products.

The company is collaborating with Cosan, Brazil’s biggest ethanol producer, to produce ethanol from sugar cane.

This is an important step, demonstrating that Shell is seriously engaged in biofuels.

Ethanol emits 70 per cent less CO2 than fossil fuels. Meanwhile, CO2 emissions from gas-fired power plants are also lower than those generating electricity from coal by 50-70 per cent.

Shell last year announced an agreement with China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) to co-explore for natural gas to serve the demand in the second-biggest economy in the world. This year, it committed to spending US$100 billion (Bt3 trillion) through 2014 to explore and produce oil and gas elsewhere in the world as well as to increase capacity at existing sites. The company is also investing many billions of dollars to develop the Cardamom oil and gas field in the Gulf of Mexico.

Voser said it was too early to conclude which sources of energy will replace nuclear power plants after the Fukushima accident, but coal and natural gas would be the major sources for the short and medium terms. Shell expects half of its production worldwide to be natural gas by 2012.

He said that the underlying reason driving Shell into its aggressive push towards gas and biofuels exploration and production was energy demand, which will grow faster than supply.

By 2050, the world’s population is forecast to grow to 9 billion from 6.8 billion currently, and the number of vehicles is predicted to triple to 2 billion, of which 90 million will be in Southeast Asian countries. So energy consumption in 2050 may be double the 2000 level.

The International Energy Agency has also said that developing countries will experience 64-per-cent growth in energy consumption, while the figure for developed countries is only 3 per cent.

Voser said the key driver for biofuel consumption was the joint commitments among communities, governments and non-governmental organisations to create a long-term framework for this kind of energy.

Many countries in Southeast Asia – Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia among them – have plenty of resources for making biofuels. These countries can grow sugar cane, cassava and oil palm.

Although Shell is aggressively investing in exploring for and producing gas and biofuels, it has committed to invest many billions of dollars for technology to prevent accidents during oil and gas exploration and production activities.

Voser delivered this message in the wake of a report by The Guardian that said there were oil and gas spills on North Sea platforms once a week on average. Shell and Total had the most leaks the report said.

In a separate matter, the Thailand team has won the championship for Shell’s FuelSave 1 Litre Challenge in the Shell Eco Marathon held at the Sepang International Circuit in Malaysia on Thursday. This was the second time that the team from Thailand won the prize.

The average distance that the team was able to make on 1 litre was 15.952 kilometres, followed by the Singapore team with 15.856km and Malaysia with 15.749km.

SOURCE ARTICLE

Shell to produce more gas than oil from 2012-report

Fri Jul 8, 2011 12:59pm EDT

* Royal Dutch Shell CEO says future belongs to gas-report

* Says trend for energy prices pointing upwards

* Says Shell to invest $30 bln in Australia in next 5 yrs

ZURICH, July 8 (Reuters) – Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSa.L) will produce more gas than oil from 2012, Chief Executive Peter Voser was quoted as saying on Friday.

“The future belongs to gas. The known reserves will last for 250 years. Gas power plants complement renewable energies perfectly because power production can be adjusted to demand,” Voser told Swiss newspaper Finanz und Wirtschaft.

“Shell will produce more gas than oil from 2012,” he said in the interview that will be published on Saturday, adding long-term energy price trends were pointing upwards.

“That is mainly due to higher demand and the cost of energy production. It applies to oil and gas as well as to alternative energies,” he said.

Asked about investment plans for Australia, Voser said he wanted to invest $30 billion dollars in the country over the next five years.

(Reporting by Silke Koltrowitz; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

SOURCE ARTICLE

Mining the Canadian tar sands: CCS-Project Quest; Pollution of Athabasca River; Concerns of the Canadian Aboriginals

From pages 20 & 21 of “Royal Dutch Shell and its sustainability troubles” – Background report to the Erratum of Shell’s Annual Report 2010

The report is made on behalf of Milieudefensie (Friends of the Earth Netherlands)
Author: Albert ten Kate: May 2011.

CCS-project Quest

Shell’s Athabasca Oil Sands Project (AOSP, Shell share 60%) is planning a carbon capture and storage (CCS) project, called Quest, near to its Scotford Upgrader. The total cost of the project is projected to be USD 1.35 billion. The province of Alberta (USD 745 million) and the government of Canada (USD 120 million) are willing to pay most of the costs. The plant is planned to be commissioned at the end of 2015.

The CO2 will be permanently put under the ground during an estimated 25 years at a depth of over 2,000 meters, in a saline formation, with a maximum of 1.2 millions tonnes of CO2 each year. In a recent report quantifying the GHG reduction benefits from the CCS-project, the facilities were assumed to operate with 90% availability, capturing 1.08 million tonnes of CO2 annually. The full lifecycle emissions of the CCS-project itself were estimated to be between 0.16 to 0.24 million tonnes of CO2, around 20% of the annual capture. Conclusively, the project is estimated to reduce 0.84 to 0.92 million tonnes of CO2 annually.109 AOSP emitted 3.7 million tonnes of CO2-equivalents in 2009110, while its production stood at 78,000 barrels per day. Considering an already planned 440,000 barrels per day tonnes of production by AOSP and in- situ by Shell before 2020, the CCS-project will only partly compensate for the increasing emissions due to deriving fuel from oil sands compared to fuels derived from conventional oil.

Pollution of Athabasca river

A study by the University of Alberta, released July 2010, indicates that the oil sands industry could be the source of substantially increasing pollution to the Athabasca river and its tributaries via air and water pathways. In the period February – June 2008, samples were taken at about a hundred sites. The oil sands industry was found to release 13 elements considered priority pollutants (PPE) under the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Clean Water Act. Canada’s or Alberta’s guidelines for the protection of aquatic life were exceeded for seven PPE (cadmium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel, silver, and zinc) in melted snow and/or water collected near or downstream of development. According to the authors, their findings confirm the serious defects of the Regional Aquatic Monitoring Program (RAMP), which has not detected such patterns in the Athabasca river watershed. Based in part on results from RAMP, the industry, government and related agencies claim that human health and the environment are not at risk from oil sands development and that sources of elements and polycyclic aromatic compounds (PAC) in the Athabasca river and its tributaries are natural.

Concerns of the Canadian Aboriginals

First Nations is a term of ethnicity that refers to the Aboriginal peoples in Canada who are neither Inuit nor Métis. In northern Alberta, Aboriginal communities rely on the land, water and wildlife for hunting, fishing, trapping, gathering, harvesting, navigation and ceremonial, recreational and domestic uses such as bathing, cooking and drinking. The communities are increasingly concerned about the negative impacts of the oil sands developments: − Communities, especially those living downstream, have expressed interest in effective and strong watershed protection. In 2009, seven communities testified that they had significant concerns about deteriorating water quality or river flows in the Athabasca watershed. For example, the Mikisew Cree First Nation has experienced an increased incidence of cancers found in the population of Fort Chipewyan, located directly downstream from the most intensive oil sands development. They fear that this may be due to water pollution from oil sands development.

− The caribou is an important species to many Aboriginal groups, for cultural and spiritual reasons. In 2008, Canada’s Environment Ministry released a report showing that due to cumulative development activities, all caribou herds in northeastern Alberta are now considered non-self-sustaining. The east side of the Athabasca River caribou herd, whose range includes much of the current in situ oil sands development in Alberta, has declined 71% since 1996.

Currently, oil sands mining operations are licensed to divert 604 million cubic metres of water annually from the Athabasca River Basin, which is equivalent to the needs of a city of three million people. As production increases, oil sands companies have the ability to withdraw the licensed amount. Although water use is often presented as a percentage of average annual flows, the amount of water used during low flow periods is of most concern, especially since the water is not returned to the river system after use as it would be with municipal uses. In July 2010, the Mikisew Cree and Athabasca Chipewyan First Nations said the proposed Government of Alberta framework to manage water withdrawals would not protect the interests of these communities during low flow periods. First Nations are concerned that water withdrawals from the Athabasca River system reduces river flows, threatening fish populations during low flow periods, and the health of the Peace-Athabasca Delta.

Further extracts from the report will be published in the coming days.

THE COMPLETE 73 PAGE REPORT (with reference sources)

Ireland’s share of revenue from its gas fields could be as low as 7%, report shows

July 3, 2011 by William Hederman

The tax write-offs under Ireland’s licensing terms for oil and gas are so generous, oil companies could end up paying the exchequer as little as 7% of the revenue from Irish gas fields. This shocking figure is extrapolated from information provided by Brian O’Cathain, former head of the Corrib Gas project. He also predicted Corrib would not now pay any tax. By William Hederman

[ The information presented in this article formed the basis for part of the Think Tank column I wrote for the Sunday Times, July 3rd, 2011 ]

“The State stands to gain at least 25% of profits from Corrib and the sooner the gas is brought ashore, the sooner that money can be used to fund essential services.” Comments such as this one by Fine Gael’s Leo Varadkar [1] last March (2011) perpetuate one of the great misconceptions about oil and gas exploration in Ireland: namely, that the Irish exchequer will earn a healthy share of the revenue from gas or oil fields without having to share in the cost of finding or extracting the resource.

Sadly, the reality is very different.

An embarrassment of tax write-offs

It is crucial to note that the 25% figure is a tax rate applied to the profits a company makes from the sale of Irish oil or gas (see also footnote [2] below). Or rather, it applies to the profits the company declares to the Irish government. Oil companies are entitled to a 100% tax write-off of all exploration and developments costs extending back to 25 years before the field goes into production [3]. These include the costs of all the other unsuccessful wells the company has drilled in Irish waters; the cost of dismantling the project; and costs incurred in other countries. They can even include the legal costs associated with having stubborn farmers committed to prison.

Many readers will already know that Ireland’s 25% tax rate for oil and gas extraction languishes at the bottom of the international league table, as shown in this graph, from a study by international petroleum expert Daniel Johnston [4].

However, the trouble doesn’t end there. The tax write-offs mentioned above mean that our effective rate is much lower than 25%. But how much lower? In other words, after the oil company’s accountants have finished with the books for a gas or oil project, how much profit will there be left to tax?

To date, no oil or gas has been extracted from Irish waters under the 1992 or 2007 licensing terms, so we have no concrete example. However, projections for the Corrib Gas project give us an insight into what this tax take might be. Let’s start by looking at the Government’s prediction. In 2008, Mayo TD Michael Ring (Fine Gael) asked the minister then in charge of the project, Eamon Ryan, about the value of Corrib. In a written reply on 24th September 2008 [5], the minister said the 800-900 billion cubic feet of gas estimated to be in the field was worth €9.5 billion and that the tax revenue from the field “would be in the order of €1.7 billion”. That represents a State ‘take’ of just under 18%.

Private study for Shell

However, it is fair to assume that the civil servants at the Department of Energy and Natural Resources who wrote that parliamentary answer would be inclined to make the most optimistic prediction possible about tax take, considering the controversy around Ireland’s management of its resources. On the other hand, a projection for Corrib made by Shell or by consultants on its behalf would likely be much closer to the truth, especially if it was confidential. A private review by industry experts would factor in all the costs, write-offs, loopholes and tricks that Shell’s skilled accountants could avail of.

As it happens, just such a confidential study of the Corrib project was carried out for Shell by globally respected energy consultants Wood Mackenzie in February 2003. The study is not publicly available, but figures from the study have been emailed to me by the man who was in charge of the Corrib project until 2002. Brian O’Cathain was Managing Director of Enterprise Energy Ireland before the company was bought by Shell in April 2002.

O’Cathain was speaking at a public debate at the IFI cinema in Dublin on December 4th, 2010, which I attended (the debate was held to coincide with the documentary film, The Pipe, which was showing at the cinema). During the debate, at which O’Cathain was on the panel, he launched an unusual attack on those campaigning against the proposed inland refinery and high pressure pipeline in north Mayo, accusing them of depriving the exchequer of millions of euro in tax.

He said: “I have in my pack here a calculation by Wood Mackenzie of what Corrib would have paid if it had gone ahead [when it was supposed to] and I’m telling you … it would have paid €50 or €60 million per annum … The overall tax bill that Corrib would have paid if it had gone ahead when it was supposed to go ahead would be about €500 million.”

This figure sounded very low – less than a third of the Government figure from 2008. I emailed O’Cathain a few days later, asking him for a copy of the study. He refused, but he emailed me the following information. Astonishingly, it turned out the tax bill was even lower than what he had cited at the debate:

“Woodmac of Feb 2003 show Corrib coming on stream in 2005 at 270 million standard cubic feet per day (“mmscf/d”) (annual average for part year) rising to 310 mmscf/d in 2006. Tax is first paid in 2008, and is about €40mm per annum for the 1st five years, declining with production thereafter. Over the full field life it pays €340 million in tax.” [6]

The elusive ‘Woodmac’ study

That tax figure of €340 million is roughly one-fifth the size of the Government estimate made five years later. Of course, the price of gas increased during those five years between 2003 and 2008, so the value of the field – or gross revenue – in Wood Mackenzie’s projections would have been lower than €9.5 billion. But how much lower?

I asked O’Cathain several times what the 2003 study’s estimate was for gross revenue from Corrib. He refused to tell me. In other words, he would not reveal how much Wood Mackenzie had predicted in 2003 that Shell would sell the gas to Bord Gais for. I needed this figure in order to determine what share of the revenue would return to the exchequer. [7]

Despite contacting numerous sources, it was not possible to get hold of a copy of the study. Wood Mackenzie confirmed the existence of the report, but would not give me any figures from it. [8]

The only alternative was to make a rough calculation, based on the price of gas in 2003. I asked Bord Gais about price changes during that period and was told that the price at which Shell would have sold gas from Corrib approximately doubled between 2003 and 2008.[9] This suggests the Corrib field was worth around €5 billion at the time of the Wood Mackenzie study [10]. On this basis, the figures indicate that, had Corrib Gas come on stream on schedule in 2005, roughly 7% of the revenue from the sale of the gas would have returned to the exchequer in tax. [11]

Remember that what we’re talking about here is the state’s percentage share in the earnings from the sale of gas from an Irish gas field (and that Irish consumers would be paying for that gas at the full international market price).

‘Corrib will never pay tax’

Finally, during the debate referred to above, Brian O’Cathain predicted that Corrib would not now pay any tax at all. His reasoning for this was that the long delays in bringing the gas on stream had resulted in yet more costs that Shell could write off against tax, meaning they would never declare a profit. His analysis was that protesters – and not Ireland’s bizarre licensing terms – were to blame for this. (Audio file: Brian O’Cathain: ‘Corrib will never pay tax’). [12]

So, depending on who you believe, the State’s “take” from a gas field in Irish waters, licensed under the 1992 terms, would be either 18% or 7% of the field’s value. The 18% figure comes from the Department of Energy and Natural Resources. The 7% figure is a rough estimate, extrapolated from figures in Wood Mackenzie’s unpublished 2003 study of the Corrib Gas project.

POSTSCRIPT
I acknowledge that the method used above to arrive at the 7% figure for projected tax take is not precise. However, I am confident that it identifies Wood Mackenzie’s projection for tax take as a percentage of gross revenue to within a couple of percentage points. Information relating to the oil and gas industry is difficult to obtain. My hope is that publishing this article will prompt others to investigate this further or to pass on information. I would be grateful to anyone who can provide more clarity. In particular, it would be very helpful to obtain a copy of Wood Mackenzie’s 2003 study or the relevant figures from it. Leave a comment below (comments are moderated before being published, so if you want to leave a private comment for me, just mention that you don’t want it published) or email: william AT irishoilandgas DOT com

william AT irishoilandgas DOT com

_______________________________

FOOTNOTES
1. This comment by Fine Gael’s Leo Varadkar was made on March 1st, 2011. This was after the 2011 general election but before the formation of the new Fine Gael/Labour government. It had just emerged that then acting Minister for Energy, Pat Carey (Fianna Fáil), had signed, on the day of the general election, key consents for the last section of the Corrib gas pipeline. Carey’s move drew much criticism from campaigners and politicians. At the time, Varadkar was regarded as a likely candidate to become the new Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources (the post ultimately went to Pat Rabbitte). Varadkar defended Pat Carey’s move and made the comment quoted at the start of this article.

2. Following changes introduced in 2007 by minister Eamon Ryan, some oil and gas fields may be subject to an additional Profit Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) of between 5% and 15%, levied on post-tax profits. This only applies to licences issued after 2007. Even if the gas or oil is found in 2015 or 2020, PRRT will not apply if the original exploration licence was granted prior to 2007. PRRT is subject to a profit ratio which is “defined as the cumulative after tax profits on the specific field divided by the cumulative level of capital investment on the specific field” (‘Global Oil and Gas Tax Guide 2009′, Ernst and Young, p. 124).

3. This is something economist and journalist Colm Rapple has been highlighting for years. See the articles in this section of his blog: Offshore, the great oil and gas giveaway.

4. Table is from: Johnston, D. (2008). ‘Changing fiscal landscape’, Journal of World Energy Law and Business, 1(1), pp.31-54. As can be seen from the table, in 38 of the 45 fiscal systems surveyed, government take was greater than 50%, nearly twice that of Ireland, while more than half of the fiscal systems (28) resulted in government take greater than 60% – more than twice the rate of Ireland.

5. Parliamentary Question No 152, by Michael Ring TD to Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Eamon Ryan. For WRITTEN answer on Wednesday, 24th September, 2008.

6. “Woodmac” is a common abbreviation for Wood Mackenzie.

7. O’Cathain did not give a reason for refusing to tell me the figure for gross revenue. I assume it was because, having revealed the projected tax figure of €340 million as part of his argument about protesters delaying the project, he did not want to reveal how big the gross revenue figure was, as that would have exposed just how little tax Corrib would have paid as a proportion of that gross revenue.

8. Wood Mackenzie even asked me to refrain from making any reference to figures from the 2003 study, on the basis that it was a private study and was now out of date.

9. The price of gas, it transpires, is difficult to quantify. There are many variables. I asked Bord Gais what the increase was between 2003 and 2008 in the price of the gas that would have come from the Corrib field. I was told that it roughly doubled. I would be delighted to hear from anyone who can offer more clarification. Leave a comment below or email: william AT irishoilandgas DOT com
(It may be that Brian O’Cathain or Shell will respond to this article by providing the real figure from the Wood Mackenzie report and that the figure will show that the tax take is not 7%, but is 10% or 12%. If that happens, it is still a shockingly low figure, considering the gas comes from gas fields in Irish waters. However, I suspect that the actual figure in the report is even lower than 7%.)

10. If and when Corrib Gas comes on stream, Bord Gais will be buying the gas at the international market rate, as it now buys gas from the North Sea. See also this post.

11. Remember that this very low projection for tax take from Corrib is not a symptom of the delays to the project caused by protests and planning objections. This was a projection issued at the start of 2003, based on an assumption that the gas would start flowing in 2005. As O’Cathain put it at the debate, this is “the overall tax bill that Corrib would have paid if it had gone ahead when it was supposed to go ahead”.

12. This is what Brian O’Cathain said about Corrib never paying tax: “The problem with Corrib is that, because of the very long delay… the original budget for the project was $650 million, I think it was. Now Shell and their partners have spent over $2 billion. What that means is that … the project will never go into profit. The impact of that is that Corrib will never pay tax.”

SOURCE ARTICLE

WWF slams Shell reef drilling plans

2011-07-08 14:15

Sydney – Australian green activists expressed outrage on Friday at a government decision to allow energy giant Shell to drill for gas at a pristine reef that was listed as a World Heritage site just two weeks ago.

Ningaloo Reef is considered a natural wonder, sprawling some 260km along Australia’s west coast and teeming with hundreds of tropical fish and coral species.

The UN’s cultural body Unesco listed the remote Ningaloo coast as a World Heritage site late last month due to its reef, sea turtles and white whales.

But environmentalists say it could be under threat after the Australian government green-lighted a proposal from Shell to explore for gas nearby.

“We are very concerned that the Australian government is even allowing the oil and gas sector to operate so close to the World Heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef,” said the WWF’s Paul Gamblin.

“It really beggars belief that they aren’t requiring a full environmental estimate of Shell’s latest drilling proposal.”

SOURCE

Greens in shock over Shell drilling rights

Drilling is planned near heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef.

CONSERVATIONISTS say they may appeal a Government decision to allow Shell to drill near the World Heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef.

The Department of Environment said Shell could drill the Palta-1 exploration well, about 50km west of the Ningaloo Marine Park border, if it abided by conditions, including taking measures to avoid significant impacts on threatened species and migratory creatures such as whales.

The controversial decision has sparked outrage among conservationists, including The Wilderness Society, the World Wildlife Fund and the Greens.

The Wilderness Society WA marine co-ordinator Jill St John said the group would ask the Federal Environment Minister Tony Burke for a statement of reasons for his decision and for any evidence used to make his decision, before deciding whether to appeal to the Federal Court.

“In our view, this is an indefensible decision,” Ms St John said.

“The Minister has failed to properly consider the location of this well in relation to the World Heritage Area, which is a Commonwealth protected matter.

SOURCE

Shell Cleared to Drill Near World-Heritage Australian Site

By James Paton and Eduard Gismatullin – Jul 7, 2011 3:08 PM GMT+0100

Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) got permission to drill an exploration well near the World Heritage-listed Ningaloo Reef in Australia after the government decided against referring it for a more detailed environmental review.

Shell, Europe’s largest oil company, will drill the Palta-1 well about 70 kilometers (44 miles) from the Ningaloo Reef, the Hague-based company said today in a statement.

“The Exmouth Sub-basin is an important region for oil and gas production in Australia with existing exploration and production facilities operating safely in the region for many years,” the company said.

Shell must follow measures to protect the environment, the Australian Environment Department said on its website.

Shell said in March it expected to drill the well off the northwest coast as early as September.

To contact the reporter on this story: James Paton in Sydney at jpaton4@bloomberg.net Eduard Gismatullin in London at egismatullin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Will Kennedy at wkennedy3@bloomberg.net

BLOOMBERG SOURCE ARTICLE

‘Spills & Spin’ by Tom Bergin; The Inside Story of BP

By Tom Bergin

My book, Spills & Spin; The Inside Story of BP, is published today.

The book provides a behind-the-scenes look at the decisions and personalities that have shaped the company over the past 20 years. It charts BP’s rise from industry also-ran in 1990, to industry-leader, under Lord John Browne, by the turn of the century, and the company’s fall from grace since the Texas City blast in 2005. It reveals the truth behind BP’s mega mergers and its (successful) attempt to turn climate change from a mortal threat to a lucrative business opportunity.

It investigates CEO Tony Hayward’s restructuring of the group from 2007-2010 and reveals how decisions made on his watch contributed to the oil spill. The book also lifts the veil on the corporation’s response to the spill, revealing the strategic errors, technical mistakes and infighting between company leaders which hampered the response effort.

Please find below a review from the Daily Telegraph today. The Sunday Times said they planned to review it this weekend and a video of a CNBC interview I just did, about the book, may be available on the CNBC Europe website soon.

BP oil spill: Tom Bergin’s book challenges view that Hayward was hard done by

REUTERS INFORMATION “ABOUT TOM

“Tom has led our coverage of the oil and gas industry in Europe, the Middle East and Africa for the past six years. During this time, he has worked across four continents, covering all the biggest stories in the industry and interviewing the biggest names in the oil business. Tom, a former oil broker, is an almost weekly contributor on television and radio programmes from U.S. to Australasia. Tom joined Reuters in 2001 and has previously been European Mergers & Acquisitions Correspondent and Senior UK Economics Correspondent. Tom is Irish. He was educated at Clongowes Wood College, University College Dublin and …”

Shell ‘disappointed’ by ruling on fracking ads

Advertising Standards Authority orders the multinational to withdraw “unsubstantiated” and “misleading” claims it made in a series of full-page print advertisements

SUE BLAINE: Published: 2011/07/07 07:13:09 AM: Photo: Reuters

PRO-FRACKING advertisements Shell SA placed in national newspapers were a technical statement of its opinions on the gas extraction technique to promote public understanding of the implications of shale gas exploration in SA, Shell SA chairman Bonang Mohale said yesterday.

Mr Mohale was speaking after the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ordered the multinational to withdraw “unsubstantiated” and “misleading” claims it made in a series of full-page print advertisements about its aim to use the controversial gas extraction technique in a 90000km² area of the unique Karoo biome.

Fracking is the common term for hydraulic fracturing, which involves pumping a pressurised mixture of water, sand and chemicals down drill holes to fracture shale and release natural gas.

“We are disappointed by the ruling. The purpose of the advert was to provide information direct to the public to enable them to properly assess the nature of the proposed shale gas exploration in the Karoo, as well as the accompanying technology of hydraulic fracturing,” Mr Mohale said.

Treasure the Karoo Action Group chairman Jonathan Deal said the group regarded the ASA ruling as an “important victory” against the “arrogance” of Shell’s advertising campaign.

Shell’s application to use fracking to determine whether the Karoo’s shale beds hold economically viable gas reserves is not the only one lodged with SA’s authorities, but it has been the most public.

Bundu Gas & Oil and Falcon Gas & Oil are also waiting for decisions on their applications for smaller areas of the Karoo.

A consortium comprising Sasol , Norway’s Statoil and the US’s Chesapeake Energy Corporation have a “technical co-operation permit” to conduct desktop studies on shale gas resources in an 88000km² area, primarily located in the Free State and also covering areas in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal.

The ASA ruled that four of the nine claims against which the anti- fracking Treasure the Karoo Action Group complained were either unsubstantiated, misleading or did not accord with Shell’s own evidence. Four of the action group’s contentions were dismissed and the ASA said it could not rule on one because it fell out of the ambit of the c ode of a dvertising p ractice.

The French government last week outlawed fracking, the first to pass a law banning the technique, Bloomberg reported. Shell SA’s statement that advances in horizontal drilling and in fracking techniques, plus “rapid increases” in natural gas prices had lead to an increased awareness of the benefits of shale gas was not adequately substantiated and should be removed.

Shell’s contention that “there has never been a single documented case of groundwater contamination resulting from fracturing” was deemed unsubstantiated, the ASA ruled.

blaine@bdfm.co.za

SOURCE