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.

Sunday, May 25, 2025

Urgent action could stave off natural gas crisis

by

Curtis Williams
983 days ago
20220914

Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley raised the alarm bells on Mon­day, in­di­cat­ing that with­out gas pro­duc­tion from new fields, the coun­try was like­ly fac­ing a cri­sis that could se­vere­ly im­pact cit­i­zens stan­dard of liv­ing.

Row­ley said the gov­ern­ment has been work­ing hard and con­tin­ues to do so in an ef­fort to in­crease nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion which he said had fall­en to an av­er­age of 2.9 bil­lion stan­dard cu­bic feet per day (bcf/d), down from a high of 4.2 bcf/d.

It must be not­ed that fig­ures from the Min­istry of En­er­gy place the nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion fig­ures at 2.5 bcf/d and not the 2.9 claimed by the Prime Min­is­ter.

Dr Row­ley said it was be­cause of this dilem­ma he felt it nec­es­sary to head to Eu­rope and meet with the lead­er­ship teams of Shell, BP and Pro­man to try and push the in­ter­est of T&T.

The Busi­ness Guardian reached out to two en­er­gy ex­perts on what ac­tions can gov­ern­ment take to achieve its goal of im­proved nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion.

For­mer En­er­gy Min­is­ter Kevin Ram­nar­ine, un­der whose lead­er­ship saw the last suc­cess­ful bid round, now eight years ago, told the Busi­ness Guardian (BG) that the most fun­da­men­tal eco­nom­ic is­sue in the coun­try is nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion.

Ram­nar­ine said nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion is lit­er­al­ly the foun­da­tion of our econ­o­my and not­ed that in pe­ri­od 2014 to 2021, nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion de­clined by 1.49 bil­lion cu­bic feet per day.

“Most of that de­cline ( two thirds) hap­pened in the years 2020 and 2021. The ef­fects of this de­cline are a 20% re­duc­tion in re­al GDP from 2014 to 2021 and a 29% re­duc­tion in en­er­gy sec­tor re­al GDP for the same pe­ri­od. In 2022 and 2023 we will see some mar­gin­al im­prove­ments in nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion but T&T will still strug­gle to get above 3.0 bil­lion cu­bic feet per day. This lev­el of nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion is still in­suf­fi­cient to meet the de­mands of the plants in the coun­try. Post 2023, the de­cline will set in again,” Ram­nar­ine not­ed.

He posit­ed that the Prime Min­is­ter seems to be alert­ed to the precipice that is fac­ing this coun­try come 2026 to 2028.

Ram­nar­ine said, “If deep­wa­ter gas pro­duc­tion is not re­alised in 2028 or there­abouts we are in trou­ble. A bad sit­u­a­tion will be­come a lot worse. I al­so don’t think we should hang our eco­nom­ic coat on Venezue­lan gas. The sanc­tions are still there de­spite the op­ti­mism of some. If all the sanc­tions were lift­ed to­mor­row, it will take years be­fore nat­ur­al gas from Venezuela flows to T&T.”

Ram­nar­ine said to in­crease nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion T&T needs to fo­cus on four things. First­ly, we need to over­haul the fis­cal regime. He not­ed this was promised in the last bud­get but noth­ing has hap­pened.

“I ex­pect some fluffy state­ment about it on bud­get day. The fis­cal regime and in par­tic­u­lar Mr Im­bert’s roy­al­ty regime of 2017 have failed the coun­try and have been a ma­jor fac­tor in the fall in nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­tion. We went af­ter a larg­er slice of a shrink­ing pie. The re­sult of the 2018/2019 shal­low wa­ter bid round should have been a wake up call to the Gov­ern­ment that their ap­proach to the fis­cal regime does not work,” Ram­nar­ine told the BG.

His view that there is a need to re­form the fis­cal regime is in keep­ing with a call from the En­er­gy Cham­ber. In a state­ment the En­er­gy Cham­ber in­sist­ed gov­ern­ment should act now to re­form the fis­cal regime.

In its state­ment the En­er­gy Cham­ber said it “strong­ly en­cour­ages the Gov­ern­ment to avoid any fur­ther de­lay in re­form­ing the up­stream fis­cal terms in Trinidad & To­ba­go. The time to act is now.”

It added that with the con­tin­ued push for net-ze­ro by 2050, the win­dow for in­vest­ment in gas and es­pe­cial­ly in crude oil pro­duc­tion is nar­row­ing every day. Across the world, the En­er­gy Cham­ber ar­gued, oil and gas com­pa­nies have re­mained very dis­ci­plined in how they are al­lo­cat­ing cap­i­tal to up­stream in­vest­ments even with the cur­rent high glob­al oil prices.

When oil and gas com­pa­nies are as­sess­ing in­vest­ments, the Cham­ber said, they do not base their de­ci­sions on to­day’s oil and gas prices, but rather on the fu­ture long-term pro­ject­ed prices. Com­pa­nies want to make sure the in­vest­ment makes sense at prices un­der US$50 per bar­rel as well as at prices over US$100 per bar­rel.

The Cham­ber’s state­ment read, “Un­for­tu­nate­ly, in Trinidad & To­ba­go the struc­ture of the up­stream fis­cal regime, es­pe­cial­ly for oil, means that it is ex­treme­ly dif­fi­cult to be prof­itable af­ter-tax once prices are in the US$ 50 range. This is pri­mar­i­ly be­cause of the way in which roy­al­ties (on oil and gas) and sup­ple­men­tal pe­tro­le­um tax (on oil) are cal­cu­lat­ed. While this does not im­pact in­vest­ment in the acreage un­der pro­duc­tion shar­ing con­tracts, it does im­pact po­ten­tial in­vest­ments in acreage un­der the Ex­plo­ration & Pro­duc­tion (E&P) li­cens­ing regime.”

Ram­nar­ine said the sec­ond thing gov­ern­ment needs to do is to com­mer­cialise deep­wa­ter gas.

He said, “The Gov­ern­ment needs to sit with Wood­side (for­mer­ly BHP) and work with them to make the Ca­lyp­so project a com­mer­cial and en­gi­neer­ing re­al­i­ty. They al­so need to get Wood­side to bring that gas to mar­ket ear­li­er by two years.”

The for­mer en­er­gy min­is­ter said the coun­try needs more nat­ur­al gas pro­duc­ers like the De­N­ovos and more Touch­stones of this world, small com­pa­nies that have the ap­petite for the small pools of nat­ur­al gas.

The idea of de­vel­op­ing small pools of gas is some­thing that En­er­gy ex­pert An­tho­ny Paul has long been preach­ing. Paul told the BG that we need to re­mem­ber the “Cream­ing Curve” con­cept that says there is as much oil and gas in a basin in small fields as there is in large fields. He ex­plained that large fields get de­vel­oped first, be­cause they can pay for the re­quired de­vel­op­ment in­fra­struc­ture and sup­port sys­tem. Small­er fields get de­vel­oped late be­cause they can pig­gy-back on the in­stalled base. In ad­di­tion, new plants re­quire a long-term, se­cure gas sup­ply to get fi­nanc­ing. Once they’ve passed their in­vest­ment pay-back phase, they can sur­vive on short­er term or low­er vol­ume gas sup­ply con­tracts, which is all small fields can of­fer.

Paul al­so called for the seis­mic and well da­ta be re­moved from un­der the in­def­i­nite con­fi­den­tial­i­ty cov­er that Her­itage and BP have with­out us­ing it ef­fec­tive­ly.

He al­so called for the gov­ern­ment to en­force re­lin­quish­ment claus­es for un­der-ex­plored or un-de­vel­oped acreage from BPTT.

“Add to that. a trans­par­ent process for fix­ing gas prices from pro­duc­ers and open ac­cess to in­fra­struc­ture (pipelines and plants, in­clud­ing LNG), all the small fields that BPTT isn’t in­ter­est­ed in (be­cause they don’t qual­i­fy for fund­ing with­in their rich glob­al port­fo­lio) will have a huge mar­ket to small­er, low­er cost op­er­a­tors, like EOG. Keep in mind that BP and Shell have re­cent­ly stat­ed that T&T is not in their long term growth strat­e­gy. PM may be­lieve that he has con­vinced them oth­er­wise, but all he would have walked away with are promis­es, not com­mit­ments. We seem not to know the dif­fer­ence.You must know that un­der the cur­rent arrange­ments, on­ly the share­hold­ers in AL­NG have the right to off-take liq­uids. So no oth­er gas pro­duc­er can ben­e­fit from the down­stream LNG val­ue-chain,” Paul told the BG.

For Ram­nar­ine an­oth­er fac­tor is the ease of do­ing busi­ness. He said the ease of do­ing busi­ness is suf­fo­cat­ing in­vest­ment in the en­er­gy sec­tor and de­lay­ing projects that should be pro­duc­ing nat­ur­al gas.

The Gov­ern­ment, Ram­nar­ine ar­gued needs to make it eas­i­er for com­pa­nies to get ap­provals and not be held hostage by min­istries, some pub­lic ser­vants and statu­to­ry agen­cies.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored