Foreign Investors Help Fuel U.S. Shale Boom
China has about twice the estimated shale gas reserves as
the U.S., but commercial production has been slow to ramp up on the
mainland—because of a combination of challenging geology and an
inflexible industry structure. Analysts predict it will be anywhere from
three years to two decades before China’s commercial shale gas boom arrives.
In the meantime, Chinese companies
have invested $5.5 billion in U.S. tight oil and shale gas through
joint-venture deals, according to data compiled by the U.S. Energy
Information Administration. (The figures do not include other Chinese
investments in Canada.) “They are not after developing the gas for
profit, but after the idea of learning the technology,” says EIA energy
economist Aloulou Fawzi. “They want to learn the technology and have a
partner that may help them later to develop their own [domestic] shale
resources.”It’s not just Chinese firms that are seeking to profit from America’s energy boom. Roughly 20 percent of the $133.7 billion invested in U.S. tight oil and shale gas from 2008 to 2012 came from abroad. To date, from Asia, Japanese companies have invested $5.3 billion; Indian companies $3.55 billion; and Korean companies $1.55 billion. From Europe, U.K. companies have invested $3.95 billion; French companies $4.55 billion; and Norwegian companies $3.38 billion. Fawzi believes the European companies have different aspirations than the Chinese: “My observation is that they have a lot of cash to recycle but not so many upstream [oil and gas development] opportunities in the rest of world.”
Notably, the U.S. partners in these joint ventures have not been energy majors like ExxonMobil (XOM), but rather, independent and midsize players such as Pioneer Energy Services (PES), Chesapeake Energy (CHK), and Hunt Oil. “Foreign companies, especially in Asia, are learning the techniques, while U.S. oil and gas companies without deep pockets can solve some of their financial issues,” says Fawzi.
The country’s other major shale-rich region, the Sichuan basin, is seismically active. On Saturday morning a 6.6 magnitude earthquake rocked the city of Ya’an in Sichuan province, resulting in landslides, road closures, and building collapses that killed at least 186 people. (Another earthquake there in 2008 killed at least 70,000 people.) Recovery efforts are under way, and Premier Li Keqiang visited the Ya’an disaster zone over the weekend.
The EIA is working on a new global estimate of tight oil and shale gas reserves. While the prior report, released in 2011, looked at only two basins in China (in Sichuan province and Xinjiang autonomous region), the new report will cover seven.
Amit Singh
PGDM 2nd sem
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