JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Friday, May 23, 2025

Massive increase in T&T’s natural gas production

by

Curtis Williams
1149 days ago
20220329

There has been a mas­sive in­crease in the coun­try’s nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion be­tween last year No­vem­ber and Jan­u­ary 2022. Oil pro­duc­tion is al­so on the rise with an in­crease of about 1,500 bar­rels of oil per day over the three-month pe­ri­od.

The Min­istry of En­er­gy has not re­leased any pro­duc­tion fig­ures since last No­vem­ber, al­most four months ago, but the Busi­ness Guardian has got­ten ac­cess to the fig­ures and can to­day re­port that nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion moved from an av­er­age of 2.344 bil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day (bscf/d) to 2.893 bscf/d in Jan­u­ary 2022.

The in­crease of more than 500 mil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day (mm­scf/d) of gas rep­re­sents a growth of over 23 per­cent in the two-month pe­ri­od and could not come at a bet­ter for the coun­try as it oc­curred when glob­al­ly nat­ur­al gas prices have been high and near record prices for sev­er­al petro­chem­i­cal prod­ucts.

Nat­ur­al gas is the main feed­stock in the pro­duc­tion of com­modi­ties like methanol, am­mo­nia and urea.

Ac­cord­ing to fig­ures from the Min­istry of En­er­gy, the mas­sive growth in pro­duc­tion was at­trib­ut­able main­ly to the im­proved per­for­mance from Roy­al Dutch Shell.

Shell’s pro­duc­tion moved from 249 mm­scf/d to 638mm­scf/d. There was al­so im­proved per­for­mance from bpTT which saw its out­put grow­ing from 1,269 mm­scf/d in No­vem­ber 2021 to 1,390 mm­scf/d in Jan­u­ary 2022, but still way be­low its tra­di­tion­al pro­duc­tion of 2000 mm­scf/d.

Pro­duc­tion out of BHP and EOG Re­sources re­mained sta­ble dur­ing the pe­ri­od av­er­ag­ing just over 400 mm­scf/d for BHP and 350 mm­scf/d for EOG.

BpTT and Shell have been at the heart of the nat­ur­al gas cur­tail­ment that the coun­try has suf­fered over the last decade which has re­sult­ed in the shut­down of At­lantic LNG’s Train 1 and a num­ber of petro­chem­i­cal plants.

On­ly re­cent­ly bpTT con­firmed that this year it will pro­duce a mere 1.25 bil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day (bscf/d), 750 (mm­scf/d) less than it had pro­duced a mere two years ago.

In a con­fi­den­tial se­ries of doc­u­ments which the Busi­ness Guardian ob­tained, bpTT told the Dr Kei­th Row­ley ad­min­is­tra­tion that go­ing for­ward it should ex­pect much low­er than orig­i­nal­ly fore­cast nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion, with the short­fall be­ing 15 per cent in 2021 and over ten per cent un­til 2024.

The per­for­mance in 2021 was worse than was orig­i­nal­ly pre­dict­ed.

The doc­u­ments had showed that even the Mat­a­pal and Cas­sia C projects that were ex­pect­ed to in­crease pro­duc­tion by about 140 (mm­scf/d) will not now lead to that growth.

In re­sponse to ques­tions from the Busi­ness Guardian, bpTT said it end­ed 2021 av­er­ag­ing 1,250 mm­scf/d.

BpTT said: “We ex­pect pro­duc­tion for 2022 to be with­in the same range.”

The com­pa­ny blamed tech­ni­cal is­sues for the pre­cip­i­tous de­cline in pro­duc­tion in 2021 and it ad­mit­ted that even the com­ing on stream of its Cas­sia C project will on­ly hold pro­duc­tion in place.

“Dur­ing 2021 we ex­pe­ri­enced ac­cel­er­at­ed pro­duc­tion de­cline due to tech­ni­cal is­sues, which was par­tial­ly off­set when we brought Mat­a­pal on­to pro­duc­tion in Sep­tem­ber. For 2022, pro­duc­tion lev­els will be sup­port­ed by gas from Mat­a­pal, and the Cas­sia C de­vel­op­ment which is planned to come on­line in 3Q 2022.”

BpTT added that it will con­tin­ue to in­vest in ef­forts to grow pro­duc­tion. It point­ed to the sanc­tion­ing of its joint project with EOG Re­sources, it al­so points to the re­turn to in­fill drilling as ex­am­ples of its ef­forts to im­prove pro­duc­tion.

“As we con­tin­ue to in­vest in pro­duc­tion gen­er­at­ing ac­tiv­i­ties in Trinidad, we were pleased to sanc­tion the EOG Op­er­at­ed Men­to de­vel­op­ment at the end of last year, the BHP Op­er­at­ed Ca­lyp­so de­vel­op­ment com­plet­ed ap­praisal well and bpTT plans to restart our in­fill drilling pro­gramme lat­er this year. We are al­so work­ing on a num­ber of fu­ture de­vel­op­ment op­tions for bpTT, in­clud­ing our next ma­jor project the Cypre de­vel­op­ment which we are hop­ing to sanc­tion this year,” bpTT said.

As gas pro­duc­tion in­creased over the last two months so too did the util­i­sa­tion rate. Nat­ur­al Gas util­i­sa­tion went up from 2,295mm­scf/d to 2,768mm­scf/d.

Of the util­i­sa­tion rates At­lantic LNG con­sumed 1,334 mm­scf/d in Jan­u­ary 2021 up from 963mm­scf/d. The sec­ond largest sec­tor us­ing nat­ur­al gas was methanol. Its pro­duc­tion went from 443mm­scf/d to 589mm­scf/d.

Am­mo­nia us­age ac­tu­al­ly mar­gin­al­ly de­creased from 512mm­scf/d in No­vem­ber 2021 to 509mm­scf/d in Jan­u­ary 2022.

Oil pro­duc­tion av­er­aged 61,653 bar­rels per day, up from 60,605 in No­vem­ber. The in­crease was due to the im­proved per­for­mance of French out­fit Peren­co which saw its pro­duc­tion grow by 1900 bar­rels of oil per day. This was mar­gin­al­ly off­set by low­er out­put from BHP Bil­li­ton, down about 500 bo/d.

Crude oil, which has av­er­aged over US $100 since the start of Rus­sia’s in­va­sion of Ukraine, and the in­creased pro­duc­tion will be wel­comed by the Fi­nance Min­is­ter Colm Im­bert.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored