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Posts from ‘October, 2011’

Gov. Rick Perry, Shell and Motiva Enterprises

Texas grant recipients gave to Republican Gov. Perry

By Jim Forsyth
SAN ANTONIO, Texas | Thu Oct 13, 2011 6:00am BST

Oct 13 (Reuters) – Businesses that won grants from a Texas economic development fund contributed $7 million to Governor Rick Perry and the Republican Governors Association, which supports him, a report by a watchdog group said on Thursday.

Many companies that received Enterprise Fund funding did not meet their job goals, the watchdog group said.

Motiva Enterprises, a joint venture of Royal Dutch Shell’s (RDSa.L) U.S. unit and Saudi Refining Inc., received $2 million from the Enterprise Fund in 2006, promising to create 300 refinery jobs in the Houston area by the end of 2010.

TPJ reported that in 2009, Motiva amended its contract to allow two more years to deliver the 300 jobs. At the end of 2010, Motiva reported it had created 258 jobs. Starting in late 2006, after the Enterprise Fund grant was awarded, Shell began contributing to the RGA, and has since contributed $235,000 to the organization, and another $13,000 to Perry’s campaign.

Motiva did not return a call seeking comment.

FULL ARTICLE

CNPC, Shell refinery JV in deal with local govt

Thu Oct 13, 2011 12:47am EDT

* Planned JV won initial approval, pending final green light

* Latest pact shows sincere intention to cooperate

* Shell likely to lead in the Shell-Qatar side

* Imported condensate eyed as feedstock for petchem

BEIJING, Oct 13 (Reuters) – A proposed refinery, a petrochemical joint venture between China’s CNPC, Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Qatar, this week signed a framework deal with local authorities in eastern China’s Zhejiang province where the mega project will be built.

The project, to include a 400,000-barrel-per-day oil refining and 1.2 million tonnes-per-year ethylene plant, won initial approval from the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s macro planner, in June, industry officials have said.

Pending final government approval, which also includes an environmental clearance, the greenfield refinery would give Shell and Qatar their first solid foothold in the world’s No.2 oil consumer, which is embarking on a refinery building boom.

The Taizhou venture, in coastal Zhejiang province, will use imported condensate and other raw materials to produce ethylene and other petrochemicals, CNPC said in a company newspaper.

“The agreement further clarifies work scope and targets for each side, reflecting sincere intentions to cooperate,” it said.

In January, Qatar Oil Minister Abdullah al-Attiyah and Wang Yong, head of the state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), which is both a regulator and shareholder in most of China’s big state-owned companies, pledged to strengthen cooperation in the oil and gas sector and discussed the Taizhou project.

Industry experts told Reuters that the project, likely to cost close to $10 billion, would be led by Shell on the foreign partners’ side. Such an alliance follows a giant supply agreement between Qatar and China.

“The project looks promising to win Chinese government’s final blessing, as China may see Qatar quite a stabilising factor among the Middle East resource nations,” said an industry veteran.

CNPC is parent of PetroChina , Asia’s top oil and gas firm.

In May 2010, CNPC and Qatar Petroleum signed a 30-year deal for gas exploration and production in Qatar, holder of the world’s third-largest gas reserves. Shell, as operator, will hold a 75 percent equity stake, with CNPC holding the remainder.

SOURCE ARTICLE

BP unveils North Sea investment programme

13 October 2011

BP has been given the go ahead to proceed with a new £4.5bn oil project west of the Shetland Islands.

The BP-operated scheme is an extension of the existing Clair oil field, and will also include investment by fellow oil firms Shell, ConocoPhillips and Chevron.

David Cameron said the news was a “massive boost for jobs and growth”.

BP said it and its partners were now investing almost £10bn in North Sea oil and gas work over the next five years.

‘Maintaining production’

BP said it would use the latest technology to maximise recovery from the new Clair Ridge project.

“Although it began over 40 years ago, the story of the North Sea oil industry has a long way yet to run,” said BP chief executive Bob Dudley.

“After some years of decline, we now see the potential to maintain our production from the North Sea at around 200,000-250,000 barrels of oil equivalent a day until 2030.

“And we are working on projects that will take production from some of our largest fields out towards 2050.”

The announcement of the £4.5bn Clair Ridge scheme comes after BP and its partners revealed plans earlier this year for a £3bn redevelopment of the Schielhallion and Loyal fields, also to the west of the Shetland Islands.

In addition, they are investing £700m in the development of the Kinnoull field in the central North Sea.

BP and German firm RWE are also continuing to invest £550m in the North Sea’s Devenick gas field.

Taking all these projects together, BP says they will provide 3,000 jobs across the oil and gas supply chain.

SOURCE ARTICLE

Is fracking set to transform the oil market?

COLUMN-Is fracking set to transform the oil market? John Kemp

(John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own)

By John Kemp

Oct 12 (Reuters) – Hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling revolutionised the natural gas market, unlocking huge quantities of previous unrecoverable reserves trapped in tight rock formations.

The question is whether they are about to do the same for oil — unlocking billions of barrels of crude trapped in similar rock forms, and thereby upending forecasts about increasing oil scarcity and steeply rising prices.

WHY MALTHUS WAS WRONG

In the short term, prices for commodities are determined by the usual forces of supply and demand. In the medium and long term, however, technology is the main determinant of price and availability.

Fracking and horizontal wells are classic examples of transformational or disruptive technologies which completely alter their industries by upsetting long-held assumptions about the feasibility and cost of production.

New technology has proved a blind spot for market analysts and forecasters. In many instances, forecasts implicitly assume technology remains unchanged or evolves only incrementally, even over years or decades.

Yet past experience suggests disruptive and transformational technologies are more common than this static framework assumes. Given sufficient incentives in the form of high prices or threatened shortages technology has proved extraordinarily resourceful, wringing extra raw materials from the planet.

Failure to account for technical change that has repeatedly tripped up forecasters — from Thomas Malthus in the 18th century (food shortages) and William Jevons in the 19th (peak coal) to U.S. geologists in the early 1900s (peak domestic oil), M King Hubbert in the 1950s (peak oil), the authors of “Limits to Growth” in the 1970s (worldwide food and energy shortages), and Robert Hirsch in 2005 (peak gas).

In most cases, transformational technologies were already being employed when these gloomy forecasts were made, but the authors failed to appreciate their significance. Jevons, for example, considered the potential for petroleum to displace coal in a chapter on “supposed substitutes” but dismissed it.

In his 1866 bestseller “The Coal Question: An Inquiry Concerning the Progress of the Nation, and of the Probable Exhaustion of our Coal Mines”, Jevons was more concerned to knock down suggestions that wind and water power could replace diminishing coal supplies when domestic production peaked.

In retrospect, his dismissal of petroleum is almost comically brief: “Petroleum has of late years become the matter of a most extensive trade, and has even been proposed by American inventors for use in marine steam-engine boilers. It is undoubtedly superior to coal for many purposes, and is capable of replacing it. But what is petroleum but the essence of coal, distilled from it by terrestrial or artificial heat. Its natural supply is far more limited than that of coal.”

In a modern example, Hirsch and his co-authors warned about peaking U.S. gas supplies in a 2005 report for the Department of Energy, predicted worse to come when global oil supplies peaked sometime between 2008 and 2014.

Even as Hirsch was writing, hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling tech had been around for decades and were starting to be deployed extensively across the Barnett shale in Texas, heralding the start of the shale gas boom (here).

Disruptive technologies may remain at the experimental and development stage for many years, but once they take off and reach commercial deployment the impact is usually rapid. Production of shale gas has risen from virtually nothing in the late 1990s to 23 percent of all U.S. output by 2010.

WHAT ARE WE MISSING?

Any forecast for oil supply-demand balances and prices over the medium-to-long term (five years or more) must start by asking the question: what is the market missing?

Projections of rising demand from China and other emerging markets are well known, as is depletion of existing fields and the failure to find new ones on a scale to replace the ageing super-giants discovered between the 1930s and the 1960s.

The question is whether there are any disruptive technologies that would significantly alter these supply and demand trends, and if so over what timescale?

There are a number of candidates for the role. Technologies to make liquid transport fuels from abundant gas and coal; increase the use of biofuels; or promote the use of electric vehicles. But none is as promising over the short to medium term as using hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling to produce crude from tight rock formations.

Technologies to extract oil from tight formations are mature (having been extensively used in the natural gas industry); capital costs are comparatively low; and they utilise existing energy infrastructure and pathways rather than requiring construction of new distribution and processing systems and new vehicles.

WHERE BAKKEN LEADS …

Crude production in the state of North Dakota has nearly quadrupled to around 110 million barrels a year since 2002 as a result of applying these technologies to the Bakken formation, which covers much of the state as well as parts of neighbouring Montana, South Dakota, Manitoba and Saskatchewan.

Soaring output from Bakken coupled with increased deepwater output from the Gulf of Mexico has pushed up U.S. domestic production 600,000 barrels per day (12 percent) since 2008, the first increase since 1985, confounding predictions domestic output was set on an inexorable downtrend (here&GAS.pdf).

The industry has known about the Bakken formation since the early 1950s. But until the last decade the oil was thought to be essentially unrecoverable. Unlike a conventional resource in which oil or gas accumulates in a discrete, permeable reservoir rock over a relatively small area, oil and gas deposits across the Bakken are distributed over a huge area in formations with low permeability.

The U.S. Geological Survey refers to formations like Bakken as a “continuous-type” oil or natural gas resource. Prior to the application of fracking and horizontal drilling, there was no way to get these extensive but unconcentrated gas and oil resources held in relatively impermeable formations to flow to the foot of traditional vertical wells in sufficient volume to make them economically recoverable.

Continuous-type oil and gas resources are more common than concentrated reservoirs. Geological surveys show extensive formations suitable for shale gas extraction across North and South America, northern Europe, north Africa, India, China and Australia. Many of these regions may have formations suitable for oil production as well, though research has so far concentrated on gas rather than liquids.

If the technologies that have revolutionised gas can be rolled out for oil there is potential for a significant increase in output, much of it located away from traditional producing areas in the Middle East, the North Sea and West Africa.

Chief Executive Peter Voser of Royal Dutch Shell, which has been an oil industry leader in adopting new technology, told the Financial Times newspaper last month that it aimed to start producing from tight oil reserves in North America.

Voser told the Financial Times that having built a large position in North American tight gas, Shell planned to apply the same model to tight oil (“Shell targets North American tight oil”, Sep 22).

Tight oil production faces formidable problems. Unlike concentrated conventional oil and gas reservoirs, production from tight rock formations is far more extensive, and its footprint on communities and the environment is consequently much larger.

SOURCE ARTICLE

Shell Nigeria hopes to resume normal production by November

12 October 2011

LAGOS — Oil giant Shell said Tuesday it hopes to resume normal production levels in Nigeria by early November a day after announcing that it may not meet contractual obligations on certain oil exports due to a pipeline attack.

Following the attack on the 50-kilometre (30 miles) Trans Forcados pipeline, the Shell Nigeria joint venture declared ‘force majeure’, freeing it of contractual obligations on certain exports from Nigeria through December.

But Shell said in a statement that repair on the pipeline had begun and that production may resume earlier than previously thought.

“If all goes according to plan, we expect to complete the repair as soon as possible and reopen the line,” Shell vice president in Nigeria Tony Attah said in the statement.

“It means the force majeure we declared on Forcados offtake programme will be lifted late October/early November as soon as Forcados production has returned to normal levels,” the statement said.

The pipeline leak, reported on October 6, was caused by an explosion, Shell said.

Pipeline damage and associated spills are common in Nigeria’s oil-producing Niger Delta region as a result of oil theft that feeds the lucrative black market.

Militants claiming to be fighting for a fairer distribution of oil revenue have also regularly destroyed pipelines, though such attacks have decreased since a 2009 amnesty deal.

SOURCE

COMMENT BY JOHN DONOVAN – SHELL IN NIGERIA:

Shell’s horrendous track record in Nigeria includes embedding spies in the Nigerian government; paying rival militant gangs; engaging in corruption (not only in Nigeria); arming police spies; undercover activity using a private spy firm (Hakluyt) and associating Shell with murder and human rights abuses. Consequently questions inevitably arise about the background of the militants responsible for the attacks referred to in this article. Has Shell any financial connection with them currently, or in the past? Shell has such a shameful record in Nigeria, including plunder and pollution on an epic scale, that it has even considered ditching the Shell global brand name. Such a radical move would also distance the company from its Nazi past.

Shell executives see industry benefitting from oil-spill cleanup contest

OIL&GAS JOURNAL

HOUSTON, Oct. 11
By Paula Dittrick
OGJ Senior Staff Writer

The X Prize Foundation, a nonprofit organization, along with philanthropist Wendy Schmidt, presented a $1 million first-place award to Elastec/American Marine Oct. 11 during a ceremony in New York.

Elastec/American Marine of Carmi, Ill., and Cocoa, Fla., achieved more than three times the industry’s previous best oil recovery rate tested in controlled conditions.

The second-place winner, NOFI from Tromso, Norway, won $300,000. Despite schedule delays caused by Hurricane Irene, NOFI reached more than two times the industry’s previous best oil recovery rate.

The two winners emerged from 10 finalists selected out of more than 350 entry submissions from around the world in the competition launched in July 2010 following the April 2010 blowout of BP PLC’s Macondo well (OGJ Online, Sept. 14, 2011).

The finalist teams demonstrated their cleanup systems during rigorous testing at Ohmsett oil spill response and research in Leonardo, NJ. Ohmsett is an oil spill response and research test center owned by the US government.

Technologies tested

Each finalist had a week to demonstrate their individual technology using Ohmsett, the largest outdoor saltwater wave and tow facility in North America, said Peter K. Velez, global emergency response manager for Shell International Exploration & Production.

Shell was the only industry participant and was a supporting partner to the competition. As supporting partner, Shell provided the funding to lease Ohmsett and provided the oil, Velez said.

On behalf of Shell, Velez also assisted with technical, operational, and scientific components of the competition. He noted the competition enabled the 10 finalists to test their emerging technologies on a scale that they would not have been able to do otherwise.

David Lawrence, executive vice-president of exploration for Shell Upstream Americas, told OGJ that all of the technologies tested from the 10 finalists could improve oil spill response efforts.

Contact Paula Dittrick at paulad@ogjonline.com.

FULL ARTICLE

Oil spills

The map demonstrates eleven of the world’s largest oil spills, obtained from Geology.com:

Oil spills

The amount of oil spilled is miniscule compared to the amount of oil transported each and every day, according to the Mineral Management Service. The figure is estimated at about 0.001 percent. Further, the National Research Council points out that much oil seeps naturally into the sea from offshore oil reserves, even without human interference. The NRC estimates that approximately half of all oil found in the world’s oceans arises from natural processes. Oil spills account for about 12 percent.

Oil spills happen nearly every day; much of the time, the public is unaware, as many are small. About 300 to 500 oil spills occur every year. Once an oil spill occurs, it spreads through water at a rate of half a football field per second, and it’s nearly impossible to control it.

The other issue is produced water resulting from oil drilling. This water, which rises from wells along with crude, contains a toxin known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), known to be toxic to marine life in high concentrations. Shockingly, offshore drilling rigs simply toss this water overboard into the ocean. Land animals exposed to PAH tend to excrete PAH quickly, and exposure to this toxin has been linked to cancer in many species. Even in low concentrations, PAH can cause “birth defects, impaired growth rates and skewed sex ratios,” according to LiveScience.

When oil spills occur, whether onshore or off, effects can be devastating and far-reaching. Birds, mammals and marine life become coated with oil and then poisoned when they attempt to clean themselves. Larger marine life, such as whales, can suffocate if their blowholes become clogged with oil or poisoned when they eat a fish or other creature that has been exposed.

Exxon Valdez Oil Spill

One of the most famous oil spills in history is the Exxon Valdez oil spill which occurred on March 23, 1989 in Prince William Sound off the Alaskan coast. Estimates indicate that this spill resulted in the death of 2,800 sea otters and 250,000 sea birds. The Exxon Valdez spill impacted 1,300 miles of land and sea and required four years to clean up.

Twenty-plus years after the spill, the area seems to be almost completely recovered, although LiveScience reports that animal populations further up on the food chain are just now beginning to recover their former numbers.

BP Oil spill

The BP Oil Spill, which occurred in 2010 and is also known as the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, is the most recently widely-known oil spill. This particular spill drew vast media attention because it flowed for three entire months while BP worked to develop a solution to stop the leak. The Clean Energy Blog reported that tar balls that washed ashore in Louisiana during Tropical Storm Lee have been linked to the BP oil spill, even though Lee didn’t move through the area until over a year after the devastating spill. Official testing is being conducted to determine if the tar balls are, in fact, remnants of the infamous Deepwater Horizon failure.

This news is alarming, according to The Washington Post, because it indicates that the oil spilled from the Deepwater Horizon incident isn’t degrading as quickly as originally estimated. This, of course, means that resulting effects on the marine ecosystem and marine life could be more detrimental than originally estimated, which can have far-reaching effects as the impacts travel up the food chain.

FULL SOURCE ARTICLE:

Residential Heating Oil: Environmental Impact – What’s the Impact of Oil on the Environment?

Oil Price Volatility Will Remain for Next Decade, Peter Voser Says

BUSINESS CHINA

11 Oct 2011

5 Questions with Shell CEO Peter Voser

Q. At SIEW 2011, you will be speaking on the future of energy. Can you provide us with a sneak preview on where you see the future of energy?

A: The global energy system is in the early stages of a historic transformation. Customer demand for secure and affordable energy is growing, propelled by a rising global population and strong economic growth, particularly in the developing countries. Traditional energy supplies are becoming politically and technically more difficult to reach. At the same time, environmental stresses linked to meeting energy demand are increasing; rising CO2 emissions and pressure on natural resources, such as water.

Meeting the world’s growing energy needs responsibly will be one of the major challenges in the coming decades. What’s clear is that all types of energy will be needed; cleaner fossil fuels will play a part, as will more renewable energy. Ongoing investments and advanced technology are a necessity too. A strong collaboration with industry, government and civil society to meet future energy demand more sustainably for customers will be required as well.

Q. What role do you see Asia playing in the global energy space, taking into account the fast-growing energy demand in this region?

A: One key transition of the global energy system in the coming years will be the shifting of energy demand from the West to the East. By 2025, China’s energy consumption is expected to rise by 75 per cent, while India’s will more than double, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA). China’s motorway building programme and rising prosperity will drive demand growth.

Meeting this demand will require a wide range of energy sources and technologies. At the same time, decisions made about the energy mix must consider the environment, including the impact on the world’s climate and water systems, and food resources.

Coal currently plays a big role in meeting China’s energy needs and will continue to do so. But, the increased availability of natural gas for power generation–including onshore shale gas in China–can help meet future demand at a lower environmental cost than coal. China is also rapidly catching up in deploying renewable energies like wind and solar, and is a world leader in developing battery technology for vehicle electrification. This could help reduce costs for these technologies and develop manufacturing capacity for export.

Our manufacturing assets in Singapore are well-positioned to meet the energy demands of these regional markets. Shell intends to maintain a leading position in the growing Asian petrochemicals market. In May 2010, Shell officially opened our largest petrochemicals investment to date, the Shell Eastern Petrochemicals Complex project, making it our largest, fully-integrated refinery and petrochemicals hub. This integrated site in Singapore takes advantage of our existing manufacturing operations there to bring considerable synergies in terms of feedstock, operations and logistics. The availability of this additional feedstock from our plants will serve to support the growth and diversification of Singapore’s chemicals cluster, as well as meet Asia’s growing market needs.

Q. From an industry perspective, which are the biggest areas for energy investment from your point of view?

A: Heavy investment in all forms of energy production and low-carbon technology will be needed to meet long-term increases in global energy demand while tackling environmental challenges. This includes investments in major oil and gas projects and continued investment in technology to bring CCS to commercial scale and more renewables on-stream.

The numbers are dazzling. If governments implement the policy measures they have already announced, cumulative investment of some $33 trillion will be needed in the global energy supply infrastructure between 2010 and 2035, according to the IEA. Billions more will have to be spent on upgrading electricity transmission networks to handle increased demand and the on-and-off power generated by wind and solar.

These are complex investments that will have to be sustained over many decades. By maintaining investment, energy companies can help to moderate volatility within the sector, and build a path to a sustainable and resilient energy future.

At Shell, we are making a contribution. Between now and 2014, we have plans to spend more than US$100 billion on major projects that will increase our production, especially of gas. Of this, we invest around US$1 billion a year on research and development into advanced technologies and developing alternative energy. Shell’s main focus in alternative energy is in biofuels where we see the biggest contribution to sustainable transport in the medium term. For example, we are investing in the production of Brazilian sugarcane ethanol through our proposed joint venture with Cosan.

Q: Smarter Mobility is one of Shell’s focus areas. What is your vision of “Smarter Mobility”?

A: “Smarter Mobility” is what we call our approach to developing a cleaner, more energy-efficient global transport system. We believe that meeting rising demand for transport fuel and addressing challenges such as climate change will require action in three areas.

Firstly, we will continue to provide consumers with “smarter products” -new fuels and lubricants which are energy-efficient and environmentally-friendly. For example, Shell’s FuelSave petrol saves consumers up to 1 litre of fuel in a 50-litre tank.

Secondly, we encourage “smarter use”, giving people the advice and information they need to consume fuels more efficiently. For instance, our FuelSave Partner programme uses an onboard device that tracks fuel purchases and driver habits. Freight companies can use this information to plan routes and drive more efficiently, cutting fuel consumption by up to 10 per cent.

Thirdly, societies demand smarter infrastructure, evolving the way cities are built and managed in order to make them more sustainable. For example, integrated public transport systems can cut traffic and urban air pollution.

By working together to deliver smarter mobility, governments, businesses and consumers can reduce CO2 emissions while maintaining security of supply.

Q: With oil being a core business of Shell, what are your thoughts on the volatility of oil markets in light of the recent Middle East and North Africa developments?

A: OPEC’s current spare capacity is probably more than double what it was during the 2008 price spike. So in that respect, at least, the world is better placed to cope with any current supply disruption.  But, the current unrest is not the only source of oil price volatility. Another is rising long-term demand: Even before the recent surge to $125 per barrel, prices had increased sharply as demand recovered after the recession, driven by the emerging economies. In fact, in 2010, oil demand increased by 3 per cent. Only twice before has the world experienced such a strong growth rate, in 1976 and 2004.

Looking ahead, energy demand could double or even triple by 2050 on 2000 levels. Even with significant efforts to boost supplies and moderate demand, there could leave a gap between supply and demand equivalents to the size of the entire energy industry as it stood in 2000. Clearly, the risk of price volatility in oil and other energy commodities will remain with us for the next decade and beyond. All of which reinforces the need for the world to maintain heavy investment in new supplies.

Source: www.siew.sg.

Peter Voser became chief executive officer of Royal Dutch Shell on July 1, 2009.  Currently, he’s the director of Catalyst, a non-profit organisation which works to build inclusive environments and expand opportunities for women and business. He was appointed to the Board of Directors of Roche in 2011. Voser is also active in a number of international and bilateral organisations, including the European Round Table of Industrialists and The Business Council. Voser, who will be a speaker at the Singapore International Energy Week (31 October – 4 November 2011), reveals on what lies in store for energy.

Shell Pension Fund Joins Appeal of ‘Feeder Fund’ Ruling by Madoff Judge

By Linda Sandler – Oct 10, 2011 8:30 PM GMT+0100

Shell Pension Fund, which runs pension plans for Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) companies, joined an appeal of a court ruling in the Bernard Madoff case that denied customer status to so-called feeder fund investors.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland backed the liquidator of the con man’s firm in June, saying investors in feeders can’t file claims for payment with the estate because they didn’t have accounts with the Madoff firm in their own names. More than 50 companies, pension funds and individuals — from National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) SAK and Aozora Bank Ltd. (8304) to Upstate New York Bakery Drivers & Industry Pension Fund — appealed the ruling, asking a district judge to decide whether Lifland erred in defining what a customer was.

“The claimants met the statutory definition of ‘customer’ and entrusted their investment funds to the insolvent broker/dealer for investment through intermediaries,” they said in a court filing last week. A copy of Shell’s joinder in the appeal was filed Oct. 7 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.

Shell Pension Fund had assets of 17.4 billion euros in 2010, according to its website. Shell Pension Fund may have lost about $45 million as a result of its indirect exposure to the Ponzi scheme, Royal Dutch Shell said after Madoff’s 2008 arrest.

The Madoff bankruptcy case is Securities Investor Protection Corp. v. Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities Inc., 08-01789, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

To contact the reporter on this story: Linda Sandler in New York at lsandler@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: John Pickering at jpickering@bloomberg.net

SOURCE ARTICLE

Shell issues Forcados production warning in Nigeria due to sabotage

Shell issues Forcados production warning in Nigeria due to sabotage, lifts Bonny Light warning

By Associated Press, Updated: Monday, October 10, 6:30 PM

LAGOS, Nigeria — Royal Dutch Shell PLC is warning it can’t meet Forcados crude production goals in Nigeria, after shutting down production on one of its pipelines in the oil-rich southern delta.

A Shell spokesman said in a statement Monday that its Nigerian subsidiary has declared “force majeure” on its Forcados crude shipment from October until December. The term is used when it is impossible for an oil company to cover the promised supply from the field.

Tony Okonedo says the Trans Forcados pipeline recorded a leak Thursday which had been caused by explosives.

Okonedo said that at the same time Shell was lifting a Bonny Light force majeure declared on Aug. 23.

Shell’s pipelines run across Nigeria’s oil-rich region of swamps, mangroves and creeks. Nigeria is a top supplier of crude to the U.S.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.