logo
ExxonMobil and partner Qatar Energy find new natural gas deposit off Cyprus

ExxonMobil and partner Qatar Energy find new natural gas deposit off Cyprus

Independent10 hours ago
A consortium made up of ExxonMobil and partner Qatar Energy International has made a second natural gas discovery beneath the seabed south of Cyprus, the government said Monday, a find that bolsters the region's potential as an energy exporter.
New natural gas discoveries in the eastern Mediterranean could help Europe lessen its dependence on Russian hydrocarbons by diversifying its energy supply and help buttress a budding energy partnership between Cyprus, Greece and Israel, said John Sitilides, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute and geopolitical strategist at Trilogy Advisors in Washington.
'Washington and Brussels would be wise to support this hydrocarbon network to develop a greater measure of critical energy independence for Europe's hopeful re-industrialization,' Sitilides said.
Cypriot government spokesman Konstantinos Letymbiotis said in a written statement that the ExxonMobil's vice president, John Ardill, briefed Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides about the discovery at the Pegasus-1 well during a teleconference.
The well was discovered about 190 kilometers (118 miles) southwest of Cyprus at a depth of 1,921 meters (6,302 feet) of water. No estimates of the quantity of natural gas were given. The statement said more assessments will be conducted in the coming months to evaluate the results.
The ExxonMobil-Qatar Energy consortium holds exploration licenses for two areas — or blocks — inside Cyprus' exclusive economic zone. In 2019, the consortium discovered the Glaucus-1 well inside the same Block 10 where the Pegasus-1 well is located. Cypriot authorities say Glaucus-1 is estimated to contain 3.7 trillion cubic feet of gas.
Overall, Pegasus-1 is the sixth natural gas deposit to be discovered inside Cyprus' economic zone in the last 14 years. Other deposits include the Zeus, Cronos and Calypso wells, which lie inside Block 6 that is operated by a consortium made up of Italy's Eni and Total of France. Cronos is estimated to hold 3.1 trillion cubic feet of gas and Zeus 2.5 trillion cubic feet. Calypso is still being evaluated.
The Eni-Total consortium holds exploration licenses for four blocks.
The earliest field to be discovered, Aphrodite, is estimated to hold 5.6 trillion cubic feet of gas. The field is inside Block 12, which is operated by a consortium made up of Chevron, NewMed Energy and Shell.
Agreements with Egypt foresee gas from the Cronos and Aphrodite fields to be sent to Egypt via a pipeline for either domestic use or to be processed at Egyptian facilities for export to Europe and other markets.
Cyprus' Energy Minister George Panastasiou also said that ExxonMobil, Eni and Total could partner up to jointly develop their gas deposits found in close proximity to each other.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

There's opportunity where markets aren't interested – but you'll have to be brave
There's opportunity where markets aren't interested – but you'll have to be brave

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

There's opportunity where markets aren't interested – but you'll have to be brave

Questor is The Telegraph's stock-picking column, helping you decode the markets and offering insights on where to invest. Those investors who run strict environmental, social and governance (ESG) screens can look away now, but oil and gas major Shell continues to do a job for portfolio builders and income seekers. The company's move to quash rumours of a bid for BP is helpful and the apparent disinterest of markets could yet prove to be an opportunity for patient contrarians. Oil prices gained a little when tensions between Israel and Iran flared in late June before quickly shedding those gains upon the announcement of the ceasefire. In this respect, investors were right in their view that a wider conflict would not develop and that crude prices would not spike as a result. As a result, oil companies' shares remain in the doldrums and near-term sentiment toward oil and gas prices remains broadly negative for three reasons. First, the International Energy Agency (IEA) continues to assert that demand growth remains anaemic. It argues demand will increase by barely 720,000 barrels per day this year, a marked slowdown from the two-million-plus pace seen post-pandemic in 2022 and 2023. The IEA's latest forecast also assumes demand growth of just 740,000 barrels a day in 2026, thanks to a weak economic growth outlook (where tariffs and trade remain sources of uncertainty) and the increased adoption of renewable energy technologies. Second, the IEA also argues that supply is plentiful, even with tensions in the Middle East. Global inventories are building at a rate of one million barrels a day, to stand at 7.7 billion barrels at the last count. OPEC+ continues to restrain capacity, too, so there is scope for increased supply here, especially in Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Meanwhile, American output continues to surge and stands near record highs of 13.4 million barrels a day, according to the US Energy Information Administration. This is largely thanks to shale, and it means that OPEC+ is not the only game in town. Finally, Israel and the US left Iran's oil facilities untouched. If Iran were to suffer the loss of its production and refining capabilities, then it would have less to lose by trying to close the Strait of Hormuz, a shipping lane that carries up to a fifth of global oil shipments. If Iran has the capacity to still export two million barrels a day of crude, then cutting off its prime shipping lane would be an act of economic self-harm, and one that seems unlikely when the theocratic regime already has more than enough problems to deal with. Investors are clearly taking all of this on board, resulting in oil and gas stocks continuing to drift sideways at best. They are little or no higher now than they were in 2022, even if headline equity indices continue to progress beyond past peaks. This torpid performance means that oil and gas stocks continue to lose importance within the broader headline indices. Oil and gas producers represent just 8.8pc of the total stock market value of the FTSE All-Share index here in the UK, compared to a post-1995 average of 12.4pc and 2009's peak of 22.3pc. The low was 6.1pc in autumn 2020, after oil's Covid-inspired collapse. Investors therefore seem more concerned that oil and gas fields will become stranded assets than they do about the risk of a conflict restricting or cutting off supply. Yet the lowly valuations attributed to oil and gas producers may catch the attention of brave, patient contrarians. Demand continues to grow and the globe continues to rely heavily on hydrocarbons, whether we like it or not. In addition, the best cure for low prices is usually low prices, because they fuel demand and discourage supply. Drilling remains subdued worldwide, according to the Baker Hughes rig count. Meanwhile, America's Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) still stands way below its 714-million-barrel capacity, and total inventory State-side is at its lowest level since late 1986, according to the US Energy Information Administration. It might therefore be incredibly unlikely for oil and gas prices to surprise us with a spike, if even a quickfire war in the Middle East fails to move them. After all, the combined stock market valuation of Aramco, BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ENI, ExxonMobil, Shell and TotalEnergies is $2.9 trillion, a fraction less than Apple's $3 trillion price tag – even though the forecast aggregate after-tax profit for these producers this year is expected at around $197bn, almost double that of the Californian technology company.

Mastercard and Pay4You form spend management partnership
Mastercard and Pay4You form spend management partnership

Finextra

time3 hours ago

  • Finextra

Mastercard and Pay4You form spend management partnership

Mastercard has joined forces with self-service payment portal Pay4You to pitch a tail spend management offering to firms in Europe. 0 The partners are focusing on the 20% portion of a company's expenditures that are not actively managed by procurement. They claim that by integrating Pay4You's platform with Mastercard's virtual card technology, corporations can reduce costs, increase process efficiencies, and ensure compliance while offering employees a better user experience. The collaboration will also help issuers capture new flows on cards that are traditionally account-to-account payments. 'We are proud to partner with Mastercard to offer companies a smarter way to handle small, high-volume supplier payments, combining working capital optimization with seamless transaction flows. Corporate credit cards have long been underused in this area. That is about to change,' says Lourens Stamhuis, CEO, Pay4You. Johanna Waara, SVP, head, corporate solutions, Europe, Mastercard, adds: "By leveraging our virtual card technology within the Pay4You platform, we are enabling corporations to better manage their expenditures and drive greater financial efficiency."

Exxon Mobil finds natural gas reservoir offshore Cyprus, government says
Exxon Mobil finds natural gas reservoir offshore Cyprus, government says

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

Exxon Mobil finds natural gas reservoir offshore Cyprus, government says

NICOSIA, July 7 (Reuters) - A consortium led by ExxonMobil (XOM.N), opens new tab has found a reservoir of natural gas at a prospect off the island's coast, a Cypriot government spokesperson said on Monday. Drilling resulted in preliminary indications of 350 metres of a gas-bearing reservoir at a depth of 1.9 kilometres (1.2 miles) in the Pegasus-1 well, spokesperson Konstantinos Letymbiotis said. "Further assessment will be required in the coming months to evaluate the results," he said in a statement released after Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides was briefed on the results. Letymbiotis said it is the second gas discovery made in Block 10 by partners ExxonMobil and QatarEnergy, following a discovery at the Glaucus-1 well announced in February 2019. The Glaucus-2 appraisal well, completed in March 2022, confirmed the existence of a high-quality gas-bearing reservoir. Cyprus has found quantities of natural gas at several locations rimming its south, but has yet to extract or commercialise it.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store