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Listado de la etiqueta: energy

The Importance of Lloyd’s Market Within the Energy Reform

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The iconic Lloyd’s building in London is one of the most emblematic and important places for the insurance industry and it is commonly known as the birthplace of marine insurance throughout the world. It is where vessels, oil rigs and the most complex drilling and construction projects both on land and sea, are protected. 

By: Paulina Meza    Photo: NRGI Broker

e wanted to enter the world of the petroleum risk assurance, that is why we interviewed Graciela Alvarez Hoth, CEO of NRGI Broker in the Lloyd’s building, in front of the iconic  bell that sounds when an important event happens in this market. For some thirty years, Graciela Alvarez has specialized in the placement of insurance and re-insurance coverage of intricate oil related activities for various national and foreign companies.

When asked about the origin of Lloyd’s she replied … «It all started in the Edward Lloyd’s coffee house, as the birthplace of marine insurance during the lat 1600’s where traders and merchants would meet to insure their vessels and cargoes. Today the latest Lloyd’s building is still the focal point of the British insurance industry, but the merchants and traders have been replaced by the world’s most prestigious brokers and solvent insurers but still meeting in a single market place, under the Lloyd’s Franchise.

It is in Lloyd’s where we place the reinsurance through one of the companies of Grupo Vitesse, its reinsurance broker specialized in the full spectrum of risks as required by the energy industry in Mexico, an activity that nowadays has a high importance due to the global best practices which will become obligatory for all companies and corporations involved with contracts within the Energy Reform in our country.

Our expertise in the design of comprehensive insurance programs to cover the risks assumed by companies in the oil fields, and complex activities performed daily in this industry have allowed us to successfully face the moment of truth, when you have to attend a major claim, highlighting and demonstrating the importance of being well insured.

«The result of working with professionalism, efficiency, passion and loyalty over the years in the oil industry, has given us the expertise and capacity to respond as we enter a new era, not only to oil companies, but also to advise companies in all sectors of the energy market be it renewable or traditional.«

In NRGI Broker we have the commitment to exceed excellence in service, it is our best guarantee to meet the expectations of the most demanding customers who will need support in order to fulfill one of the most important requirements being established within the Energy Reform – being the best global practices in insurance». Alvarez Hoth emphasized.

lloyds energy reform

 

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Energy, materials lead Wall Street gains as oil jumps

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Wall Street was higher on Monday as prices of crude oil and other commodities surged, pointing to an uptick in investors’ risk appetite following a rout in global markets.

Crude prices were up more than 5 percent after data showed a fall in U.S. rig counts and the International Energy Agency said it expects U.S. shale oil output to fall.

Prices of industrial metals such as Copper and Zinc were also up as investors worried about potential shortages.

Still, oil prices are hovering near levels last seen in 2003, with investors weighing the impact of a potential wave of defaults from energy companies on the financial sector.

Chevron’s (CVX.N) 1.4 percent rise provided the biggest boost to the energy sector .SPNY.

The S&P financial sector .SPSY, which has been the worst performer among the 10 major sectors this year, was up 1.79 percent on Monday as bank stocks recovered slightly.

«You’ve seen oil rebound today, which people are viewing very much as a kind of a green flag in the short-term to take on risk again to a certain degree,» said James Abate, chief investment office of Centre Funds in New York.

Abate, however, cautioned Monday’s gains should not be seen as the start of a long-term recovery.

«To me, this continues to be a counter-trend rally in the context of an intermediate to longer-term decline in the stock market. Our view is that this is nowhere near the resumption of a bull market,» he said.

At 9:37 a.m. ET (1437 GMT), the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 179.29 points, or 1.09 percent, at 16,571.28, the S&P 500 .SPX was up 22.75 points, or 1.19 percent, at 1,940.53 and the Nasdaq Composite index .IXIC was up 52.02 points, or 1.15 percent, at 4,556.45.

All 10 major S&P sectors were higher, led by a 2 percent rise in both energy .SPNY and materials .SPLRCM sectors.

Investors are also keeping a close eye on the U.S. Federal Reserve for its next move on interest rates.

While Fed Chair Janet Yellen has indicated the central bank would stick to its rate hike program, policymakers appear at odds and traders have all but given up on a hike this year.

Shares of Fitbit (FIT.N) were up 4 percent at $16.24 ahead of its results later in the day.

Lumber Liquidators (LL.N) was down 20.8 percent at $11.26 after a report showed people exposed to some types of the company’s laminate flooring were more likely to get cancer than previously estimated.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by 2,487 to 279. On the Nasdaq, 1,906 issues rose and 375 fell.

The S&P 500 index showed 13 new 52-week highs and no new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 24 new highs and nine lows.

Copyright: Reuters
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Why the U.S. is cutting carbon emissions no matter what happens with the Supreme Court

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Last week, the Supreme Court threw U.S. and international climate policy into turmoil by freezing President Obama’s Clean Power Plan while it is being challenged before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. But matters took a turn over the weekend with the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, whose absence from the high court could mean that the plan will ultimately survive.

“If Scalia’s seat remains vacant when the Clean Power Plan reaches the high court, a 4-4 vote would result in an automatic affirmance of the D.C. Circuit’s decision on the rule,” says Jack Lienke, an attorney with the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law, by email. “We can’t know what the D.C. Circuit will decide, but supporters of the Clean Power Plan are optimistic — both because the D.C. Circuit panel, unlike the Supreme Court, denied motions to stay the rule and because the three-judge panel includes two Democratic appointees.”

So last week the Clean Power Plan seemed to be severely threatened – but now, not as much.

Despite this roller-coaster, though, one thing has not changed — the power sector in the U.S. is transforming in a way that will make the generation of electricity much less carbon-intensive in the future, the precise thing that the plan aims to achieve anyway. This is not a legal development, and not really a political one either. It is, in substantial part, a business decision.

Two recent sets of new data underscore this reality. The first, recently highlighted by the American Wind Energy Association, involves where the U.S. is adding new electricity generating capacity. In 2015, AWEA’s and other recent data suggest, wind led the way with 8.6 gigawatts (or billion watts) of new added capacity. Solar photovoltaics added 7.3 gigawatts (much of that on individual rooftops) and, in third place, came natural gas with 6 gigawatts.

The wind industry says another 9.4 gigawatts, meanwhile, are currently under construction, and 4.9 gigawatts on top of that are “in advanced stages of development.” Thus, the two biggest growth sectors for U.S. power are both renewable. Coal, by contrast, saw 14 gigawatts of plant retirements in 2015.

Similarly, the U.S. Energy Information Industry expects renewable energy to grow 9 percent in the U.S. in 2016, and to make up two thirds of added capacity (not unlike in 2015).

And this is just one of many, many indicators of a change underway in the U.S. power sector. Consider another: What leaders of the U.S. utility industry themselves think about the future.

The website Utility Dive has just published a survey of over 500 utility industry executives, from companies large and small, conducted in late 2015 and early 2016. 61 percent of respondents came from investor owned utilities, followed by 15 percent municipal utilities, 14 percent from electric cooperatives, and 10 percent public power companies. The companies were of all sizes, but 23 percent of those surveyed had customer bases of over 4 million people.

And the headline finding? “Nearly every” respondent felt that it was time for his or her company’s business model to change. And no wonder — the power industry is being upended by an insurgency of Nest thermostats, rooftop solar installations, customers who want home batteries and car chargers and much more.

Power companies are struggling to keep up with all of this — and the result of many, if not most, of these changes is that the utility industry is likely going to be less carbon intensive in the future, in part because you and I are going to both waste less energy and also get more out of the energy that we do use.

In particular, the survey shows, utility companies are wary of falling behind in a distributed energy world in which customers need them less because they can generate (with solar) and perhaps store (with batteries) much or even all of their own power. So companies want to become providers of these kinds of services, and so retain these customers.

Sure enough, when it comes to finding new sources of income and new businesses, “the most popular emerging revenue opportunities among respondents are energy management and efficiency services, community solar, and electric vehicle charging infrastructure, while green pricing programs and rooftop solar offerings were also popular,” the Utility Dive survey finds.

Oh, and then there’s how power will be generated at these sometimes massive companies in the future. The Utility Dive survey finds (and again, this is worth quoting in full):

Respondents believe utility-scale renewables, distributed generation and natural gas will increase in their utility’s power mix, while coal and oil will decline and nuclear will remain stagnant. Utilities expect stronger growth for large-scale solar and distributed generation than they do for wind or gas.

The number one thing that utility executives said their company should invest in more was energy storage, at 65 percent, followed by distributed generation, at 52 percent. Energy storage, at the grid scale, is a key technology that will allow for, among other things, more integration of renewable resources onto the grid.

In another notable statistic, meanwhile, when asked in what areas their companies’ power mixes would “significantly decrease” in the coming 20 years, 54 percent said coal, far more than for any other electricity source. No wonder that 41 percent of executive surveyed wanted the Clean Power Plan maintained as it is, while 29 percent thought it should be strengthened. It’s hard from such numbers to argue that the plan is strongly opposed by power companies.

It’s important to emphasize that these results are coming from leaders of an industry that is hardly known for risk-taking. Utilities have been, traditionally, heavily regulated incumbents who are slow to change.

But they’re also headed by leaders who can sense what’s happening out there and who would be foolish to ignore it. Which is why no matter what happens with the Clean Power Plan, all signs suggest our country will be using less coal — and a lot more wind and solar — in the future

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Copyright: Washingtonpost
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Iran Oil Lands in Europe for First Time Since Sanctions End

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The Monte Toledo oil tanker covered the uneventful voyage from Iran to Europe with a haul of 1 million barrels of crude in just 17 days, but its journey has been four years in the making.

 On Sunday, the tanker became the first to deliver Iranian crude into Europe since mid-2012, when Brussels imposed an oil embargo in an attempt to force the Middle Eastern nation to negotiate the end of its nuclear program. The ban was lifted in January as part of a broader deal that ended a decade of sanctions.

 The 275-meter (900-foot) tanker started offloading its cargo into a refinery owned by Cia. Espanola de Petroleos, near Algeciras, a few miles from Gibraltar. By midday, the vessel had already pumped to shore about a fifth of its cargo.

 Jose Ramon Gomez Estancona, the captain of the Monte Toledo, said loading the crude at the Kharg Island terminal off Iran was a similar process to before the embargo. Staff at the port were «happy that normality was returning» to the country’s oil exports, he said.

 In southern Spain, the tanker’s arrival was met with little fanfare. It was a quiet Sunday at the refinery, and for the workers, the Monte Toledo is just one of the eight or so vessels they expect to receive this month. By the time the refinery has taken in all the Iranian crude, another tanker from Algeria will already be waiting.

 Rouhani Ambitions

Nonetheless, there’s a wider significance. As the Monte Toledo started to pump to shore through two 21-inch floating hoses connected to a giant buoy and a 1.8-kilometer submarine pipeline, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani declared in Tehran that more oil exports “will be added soon.”

Ali Tayebnia, the country’s minister of economy and finance, said Iran’s oil exports will «soon return» to 2 million barrels a day. «Arrangements have been made for the return of Iran to the market,» he said, according to Shana, the Oil Ministry’s news service.

 Around Europe, other tankers with Iranian oil are close behind the Monte Toledo. In February, 29 vessels loaded crude from the Middle Eastern nation, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Of those, three are heading toward Europe — the Eurohope tanker is sailing to Constanta, an oil port in Romania, and the Atlantas is on its way to France. Another one, the Distya Akula, is anchored at the mouth of the Suez Canal, and is likely to head into a Mediterranean port.

 Export Recovery

The Monte Toledo and its companions are the vanguard in the return of Iran into the European oil market. Petro-Logistics SA, a Geneva-based tanker-tracking firm, estimated Iran exported about 1.4 million barrels a day in February, up 350,000 barrels a day from the average 2015 level.

Although the increase falls short of the 500,000 barrels a day that Tehran had promised, there are signs that exports into Europe will pick up this month.

«It does take a while to get those fields back up,» said Petro-Logistics director Daniel Gerber. «But I think they’re going to hit the increase of 500,000 barrels a day in March.”

 Seth Kleinman, head of energy research at Citigroup Inc. in London, agreed, saying that in addition to higher export volumes this month, more countries were buying.

 «You see tankers going to Spain, Romania, Tanzania, France and the U.A.E.,” he said. “You got an uptick to India in February too.”

 Still, hurdles remain. Lingering banking restraints mean some customers are finding it hard to transfer payments for Iranian crude and National Iranian Oil Co. has offered to swap crude for gasoline to get deals done, according to local reports.

 Iran will want to win back customers in Europe, where Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iraq and other rival suppliers stepped in after the embargo was imposed. Tehran also faces a rival unknown four years ago: the U.S. has started exporting crude and companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp. are shipping American oil into refineries in the Mediterranean.

 Before the embargo Europe imported on average about 400,000 barrels of oil a day from Iran, according to the International Energy Agency. Cepsa alone was buying about 60,000 barrels a day. Total SA was among the biggest purchasers and the French company is waiting to receive the Atlantas tanker later this month at its refinery in Le Havre. Other European top buyers in the past, including Repsol SA, Eni SpA and Hellenic Petroleum SA, have yet to purchase any.

 If all goes as Tehran has planned, the Middle Eastern country will boost its production back to the 3.6 million barrels a day it pumped in 2011. After the European embargo was imposed and the U.S. tightened other sanctions, Iranian output dropped to about 2.8 million barrels a day. In February, the nation pumped 3 million barrels a day for the first time since July 2012, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.


Copyright: Bloomerg
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Iran, India Sign MoU to Develop Oil, Gas Projects

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OPEC member Iran and India – one of Asia’s fastest growing source of energy demand – signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to develop oil and gas projects, including the Farzad B gas field, Iranian Petroleum Minister Bijan Zangeneh told the Iran-India business conference held at Teheran Chamber of Commerce Saturday, Shana – a media linked to Iran’s Ministry of Petroleum – reported Sunday. «We had thorough conversations today and signed an MoU for development of Farzad B gas field, refinery cooperation, export of crude oil and petroleum products and mutual cooperation in petrochemical industry,» Zangeneh said.

The MoU was signed during a visit to Teheran by Indian Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Dharmendra Pradhan, who, the Ministry said on its website April 7, hoped to engage «with the Iranian political leadership to work with them, particularly in the hydrocarbon, petrochemicals and fertilizers sectors for mutual benefits, including strengthening of India’s energy security.» According to Zangeneh, Indian investors should consider the development of the Farzad B project as a top priority, adding that «we hope decisions regarding the project’s development will be made before 2017.»

He said the Farzad B gas field can produce 3 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of natural gas, but Iran has signed an MoU with Indian developers for the production of 1 Bcf/d of natural gas from the field. A consortium comprising three Indian companies, including ONGC Videsh Ltd. and Oil India Ltd., made a gas discovery at the offshore Farzad B field in 2008.

Meanwhile, Zangeneh said both nations have agreed to set up major joint ventures and enhance their strategic relations, adding that «we hope Iranian and Indian companies reach out to each other and, under the new circumstances, the two countries boost their investments.» Indian companies have indicated to Zangeneh their interests to purchase natural gas from Iran to feed their petrochemical and other energy-consuming industries, Shana reported. On its part, Iran could deliver gas to Indian customers in Chabahar or any other ports where the Indians are willing to invest to feed methanol, steel and aluminium plants.

Separately, shareholders of Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) Pipeline Company Limited signed an agreement in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan Thursday to invest $200 million in the TAPI natural gas pipeline. According to the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the investment includes funds for detailed engineering and route surveys, environmental and social safeguard studies, and procurement and financing activities, to enable a final investment decision, after which construction can begin. Construction is estimated to take up to 3 years.

According to Pakistan’s Minister of State for Petroleum and Natural Resources Jam Kamal Khan, TAPI would supply 487.3 billion cubic feet (Bcf) or 13.8 billion cubic meters (Bcm) of gas from Turkmenistan to meet the South Asian country’s growing energy demand, Indian daily The Economic Times reported Friday. Sean O’ Sullivan, ADB’s Director General of Central and West Asia Department, said the gas pipeline will unlock economic opportunities and diversify the energy market for Turkmenistan and enhance energy security for the region.

Ground breaking of the 1,127 mile (1,814 kilometer) -long TAPI pipeline, a project seeking to ease energy shortages in South Asia, was carried out in December 2015 year in Turkmenistan. The pipeline will be equipped to transport 3.2 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) or 90 million standard cubic meters a day (MMscm/d) gas for 30 years, with India and Pakistan originally expected to receive 1.3 Bscf/d (38 MMscm/d) each, while the remaining 494.4 million standard cubic feet per day (MMscf/d) or 14 MMscm/d was to be supplied to Afghanistan.

So far, Turkmenistan is the only country that has started work to build its section of the TAPI pipeline. The pipeline will travel 480 miles (773 kilometers) through Afghanistan and 514 miles (827 kilometers) in Pakistan before ending at Fazilka in Punjab, India, The Economic Times said.

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Byron Energy encounters further hydrocarbons in the SM71-1 well in Gulf of Mexico

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Byron Energy is pleased to provide an update on the Byron Energy SM71 #1 oil and gas discovery well located in the Gulf of Mexico in South Marsh Island Block 71 (‘SM71’).

Since the last report, on 27 April 2016, the well has been deepened, to the predrill planned total depth of 7,477 feet measured depth/6,915 feet true vertical depth and wireline logs have been run over the deeper portion of the well.

The processed open hole porosity logs from this deepened section of the well indicate the presence of a very high porosity gas or gas condensate reservoir from 7,212 feet to 7,226 feet measured depth.  A 5” liner will now be run and cemented in place over the deeper portion of the SM71 #1 well.

As previously reported, the SM71 #1 well encountered 132 feet of TVT net oil pay in the I3 Sand, J Sand and D5 Sands. The final, processed version of the logs run over these three sands has now been received and confirm the previously reported net TVT pay count. Additionally, Isotube sample analysis indicates the likely presence of light, sweet crude oil from all three sand intervals.

Current operations are preparing to run 5″ liner over the deeper portion of the well before suspending the well for future production. It is expected that the rig will be demobilised within 10 days after mud line suspension operations are completed.

Byron’s CEO, Maynard Smith said:

‘We are very pleased to encounter our fourth hydrocarbon interval in this wellbore. This is the first time in my career I have seen four sands trap hydrocarbons stratigraphically in one well bore. Every pre-drill target sand, both primary and secondary, has been found to have hydrocarbons. These stratigraphic traps were found using a high resolution second generation Reverse Time Seismic Migration (RTM) and in conjunction with a very advanced  seismic inversion model. To further enhance and fine tune our inversion model, we acquired acoustic shear wave data overall objective sands in this wellbore. This data will be key to understanding the seismic responses in both hydrocarbon and wet sands in the area. The shear log in our well is the first shear wave data collected in over 320 wells drilled thus far on the SM71 dome where 117 million barrels and 377 BCF of gas has been produced. We believe this information will give Byron a significant advantage in exploring for and exploiting other stratigraphic traps on our blocks and other blocks on the dome. We are immediately commencing plans for future production facilities and pipelines in order to shorten the time to production as much as possible.’

The SM71 #1 well is the second well to be drilled as part of Byron’s farm-out to Otto Energy, announced on 11 December 2015.

Byron, through its wholly owned subsidiary Byron Energy Inc. (the operator), currently has a 100% working interest and an 81.25% net revenue interest in SM71, located offshore Louisiana, 250 km southwest of New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, in water depth of approx. 131 feet (40 metres). Because the SMI71 #1 well has been drilled to the earning depth Otto has now earned the right to elect to earn a 50% working interest in the SM70 and SM71 blocks and has confirmed it will exercise its right. Consequently, Byron’s working and net revenue interests will be reduced by 50%, to 50% and 40.625% respectively.

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Copyright: Your Oil an Gas News
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What Works for Wind Power Could Also Work Under the Sea

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Jim Dehlsen, a 79-year-old wind-energy pioneer who sold one turbine company to Enron and took another public, has spent his life thinking about the best way to make blades turn in the sky. For his latest effort, he’s flipping a turbine upside down and plunging it dozens of meters into the ocean, in waters that are up to 300 meters deep. There, marine currents rotate the 13.5-meter long blades to pull power from the sea.

Aquantis, Dehlsen’s Santa Barbara, Calif., company, will start deploying turbines in 2018 in waters near Wales and the Isle of Wight. Its most ambitious project is a 200-megawatt field of marine turbines in the strong Gulf Stream off the coast of Florida, due to come online in 2019 or 2020. The world’s oceans remain relatively untapped as an energy source, compared with wind and solar. By 2030, Dehlsen says, marine energy could serve 8 percent or 9 percent of U.S. power needs. “The oceans are the major remaining potential for renewable energy,” he says. “Getting on that now is really urgent.”

It took wind at least 15 years to become a viable, cost-effective resource. In the late 1970s, when scientists first started experimenting with wind turbines, “people laughed at you and said, ‘Wind will never work,’ ” says Robert Thresher, a research fellow at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo. In the ’80s and ’90s, the industry settled on the three-blade turbine design considered the standard today. Many aspects of turbine design can be applied to the oceans, adjusted to handle the slower, heftier fluid dynamics of seawater.

Aquantis is developing systems to capture energy from waves, from tidal currents, which switch direction twice a day, and from gyre, or steady, currents. Much of Dehlsen’s obsession these days is with the Gulf Stream. Its constant current can rotate turbines day and night, allowing Aquantis to squeeze more power out of each turbine. That will cut the price per kilowatt-hour. “Because the stream flows all the time, it’s probably the one that can become cost-effective most easily,” Thresher says.

Aquantis, which isn’t the first company to design underwater turbines, wants to lower the cost of marine energy. Dehlsen says deploying an Aquantis device—towing it out to sea, filling it with seawater ballast, then anchoring it—runs about $347,000 per turbine. The rotor’s two blades can withstand huge volumes of water moving as fast as 4 knots. The topmost part floats just above the surface, and the rest of the equipment is held in place with mooring lines to the ocean floor, making it quicker to deploy and cheaper to maintain. Repair crews take an elevator down the shaft. Rival turbine makers dig deep into the ocean floor to anchor the machinery so that it can withstand the strength of the currents; their repairs require raising the structure to the surface. That pushes up the cost significantly, Dehlsen says, to about five to seven times more than Aquantis’s.

Dehlsen plans to install his turbines in a few test sites and sell power to the grid. He sees a second revenue stream in marine turbines housing data centers for the world’s tech giants, using the turbine’s shaft as a storage area for racks of servers. That can save companies money on air conditioning by using cold ocean water to cool the equipment. Aquantis designed and built a pilot test chamber for Microsoft that housed a data center underwater for 105 days off California’s San Luis Obispo pier last year. The test was a success, Microsoft said, with minimal ocean heating and no leaks or hardware failures. Dehlsen is reaching out to Apple, Facebook, and Google about similar efforts.

Dehlsen is courting tech companies and investors while trying to lock down test sites from the north coast of Brazil to Cape Agulhas, on the southern tip of Africa. Little testing has taken place in the U.S. Aquantis has won Department of Energy grants and received some venture capital from Mistubishi Heavy Industries. Dehlsen has self-funded a lot of the work; additional income comes from projects like the data center program. His track record in renewable energy reassures potential partners, says Charles Vinick, Aquantis’s chief executive officer. “Jim is seen as the father of American wind—that opens the door.”

Marine turbines face some challenges, such as concerns over unknown environmental effects. Their blades could strike whales or create noise that confuses sea life. Dehlsen says studies conducted in the U.K. show turbines are safe for fish and marine life. The bigger challenge, he says, is creating marine energy that is cost-competitive. He expects to get to less than 10¢ a kilowatt-hour in three to five years. (Wind energy hovers from 3¢ to 8¢ a kilowatt-hour, solar from 4¢ to 7¢, and conventional gas from 5¢ to 8¢.) “In renewable energy, people get enthusiastic about an idea, and yes, maybe you can make electricity. But if it’s 8¢ a kilowatt-hour, so what?” he says. “Don’t even bother.”

Dehlsen’s best argument may be a slide in his presentation about the urgency of global warming. “The time that’s left in which we can make a change is relatively short,” he says. “Five to 10 years, and you’re beyond being able to stem it.”

Copyright: Bloomberg

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More Company Climate Votes Ahead, As Trump May Loosen Energy Rules

en

Activist shareholders plan a record number of resolutions focused on climate change at U.S. company annual meetings in 2017, even as President-elect Donald Trump looks set to loosen environmental regulations.

Based on filings so far, U.S. companies are on track to face roughly 200 resolutions on climate matters at their shareholder meetings next year, according to Rob Berridge, who follows the subject for Ceres, a sustainability advocacy group.

There were 174 such resolutions this year, Berridge said, compared with 167 in 2015 and 148 in 2014. Many have been directed at big oil and gas companies, though other sectors have also been targeted, including technology and retail.

Activist shareholders broadly aim to curb companies’ carbon emissions and make energy usage more efficient, or at the very least, to draw the attention of companies and investors to climate change as an urgent problem.

They have had some limited success. Investors at Exxon Mobil Corp the world’s largest publicly traded oil producer, passed a measure this year that could lead to an environmental activist joining its board. «Our position is that the risk of climate change is clear and warrants action,» said Exxon spokesman Alan Jeffers.

The rising number of shareholder votes reflects a growing concern among big investors about the environment, encouraged by steps by some boards to embrace reforms.

Deadlines are fast approaching to get resolutions on the ballot for shareholder meetings to be held in the spring.

The election victory of Trump, who is set to take over as U.S. president on Jan. 20, only seems to have added impetus.

On the campaign trail, Trump dismissed human-caused climate change as a «hoax» and pledged to dismantle the Environmental Protection Agency. He also threatened to withdraw the United States from the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement to combat climate change, although he appeared to step back from that position on Tuesday.

He vowed instead to revive the U.S. coal industry, encourage oil drilling and to scale back regulation of the energy sector.

«Despite what the administration may or may not do, I really believe that corporations understand the risks posed by climate change,» said Danielle Fugere, president of As You Sow, a California nonprofit campaign group. It sponsored 18 climate-related shareholder resolutions in 2016 and expects to file a bigger number next year.

One resolution for 2017 calls on Anadarko Petroleum Corp to report on how it would address the risk of so-called stranded assets, such as high-cost deepwater project investments, that might be caused by a drop in demand for oil and gas. The idea won support from 42 percent of shares voted at the company’s 2016 meeting, up from 29 percent in 2015.

Anadarko’s board last year called the idea «unnecessary and unproductive.» Spokesman John Christiansen said it is reviewing the proposal.

To be sure, among S&P 500 companies, investor support for climate resolutions has been relatively weak, holding steady around 22 percent since 2014, according to research firm Fund Votes.

But activists often won more backing for ideas such as urging companies to report on their strategy for dealing with climate change, according to the Sustainable Investments Institute, a research firm specializing in shareholder votes, supported by universities, pension funds and other institutional investors.

Anne Simpson, director of sustainability for the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (Calpers), which manages about $300 billion, said it plans to file or back resolutions at U.S. oil and gas companies for 2017, though she declined to discuss specifics.

Last year the boards of mining companies including Rio Tinto Plc and Glencore Plc endorsed resolutions Calpers submitted calling for reports on climate risk, and the measures passed by wide margins.

More companies will likely embrace shareholder proposals to head off disruption caused by climate change, Simpson said.

«Economics is driving this, not politics,» she said.

Copyright: Rigzone

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China’s promised energy revolution

en

From: Financial Times / Nick Butler / 19 de noviembre

 

Can China transform its energy economy? For the last 30 years rapid economic growth – based on heavy industry, manufacturing and construction – has been sustained by hydrocarbons. Coal remains dominant; what has changed is the volumes involved. In 1990, China used some 446m tonnes of coal. This year the figure will be around 2.8bn tonnes. In parallel, oil demand has grown with the dramatic expansion of car numbers. Oil consumption was 2m barrels a day in 1980. Now it is almost 12m b/d, making China the largest oil importer. But growth has come at a cost. China, as last week’s announcement from the Global Carbon Project reminded us, is the largest single source of emissions and suffering badly from the low level pollution that covers many cities in smog. President Xi Jinping has promised dramatic change – an energy revolution “to make the skies blue again”.

The rhetoric is great but are the promises deliverable? A comprehensive study of the Chinese energy market published last week as part of the International Energy Agency’s new World Energy Outlook is a great place to start for anyone wanting to understand what is happening and what might happen next. The facts are remarkable: China consumes 25 per cent of energy used globally each day. Coal continues to dominate Chinese energy use – in industry, power generation and heating – providing almost two-thirds of total demand. The country produces and uses over 50 per cent of all the coal burnt globally. Power generation has grown dramatically to meet electricity demand that has quadrupled since 2000. Gas use is relatively small but growing – mostly relying, for now, on imported LNG. China is the leading producer of wind and solar power. Advances in technology and production efficiency have cut costs and made the country the dominant supplier of solar panels to the rest of the world. China is building dozens of new nuclear plants – more than a third of the global total. Its nuclear industry is developing its own reactor technology, aiming to create a world-class export industry. The country leads the global electric vehicle industry. Of the estimated 2m electric vehicles on the world’s roads by the end of this year, at least 40 per cent will be in China. Remarkable advances in energy efficiency have been made, and the amount of energy used for each unit of China’s gross domestic product has fallen 30 per cent since 2000 but emissions remain a challenge. After three years when reported emissions were flat, renewed industrial growth has pushed them up again.

Each of these facts reflects a dramatic change in the last 10 to 15 years. But they do not represent an end point. The party Congress in Beijing endorsed the latest plan – a sweeping statement of intent entitled “Energy Production and Consumption Revolution Strategy”. The plan describes a transformation of the whole energy sector over the next decade and a half. The share of non-fossil fuels will rise to 15 per cent by 2020, and to 20 per cent by 2030, meeting most if not all incremental demand. By 2030, 80 per cent of all remaining coal-fired power stations will have ultra low emissions as old capacity is retired. GDP energy intensity will fall by 15 per cent and the amount of carbon required will fall by 15 per cent. Further improvements will come over the following decade to 2030 The target is to ensure that emissions peak by 2030. The long-term goal for 2050 is to reduce the share of fossil fuels to less than half the total, to rebase the whole system on leading-edge energy technologies and equipment and make China an important player in global energy governance. History suggests it is unwise to underestimate China’s ability to deliver on its plans but in this case there are good reasons for doubt. Infrastructure and market structures are needed to support the changing energy mix.

As the IEA analysis makes clear, the absence of infrastructure and a supportive regulatory regime already limit the potential of natural gas. The same problems could constrain wind and solar. Electric vehicle numbers are growing but the odds are still that the bulk of the electricity they use will be produced from coal for a long time to come. An excellent post by Simon Goess for the Energy Collective website spells out the reality. In addition, industrial changes have to be managed. In coal and the major manufacturing sectors many workers and whole communities remain dependent on activity that is likely to be transformed or eliminated by technology. The Chinese coal industry, for instance, employs 4m. Trade dependence also poses risks. The target of 80 per cent net self-sufficiency is probably achievable with the combination of coal, new nuclear and renewables, including hydro. But the remaining 20 per cent involves the critical supply of oil where import dependence has doubled in the last five years. On the IEA’s estimate, China will need to invest $6.1tn – $250bn a year on energy supply between now and 2040, two-thirds of which will go into the power sector. Another $2.1tn ($90bn a year) will be needed to deliver the required gains in energy efficiency. China is a dominant force in the global energy market. Next week I will look at the international implications of what is happening. But energy also matters for the survival of the regime in Beijing. The political process has not been ended by Mr Xi’s triumphant re-election. A sustained improvement in living standards over the last three decades has helped to keep the Communist party in power. That would not have been possible if the energy system had not been adapted to meet growing demand in what is now a consumer society. The “iron rice bowl” now extends beyond employment and food to mobility and increasingly to the demand for a cleaner environment. As ever, energy and power are inseparable.

 

 

From: Financial Times / Nick Butler / 19 de noviembre

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Oil prices are poised for a pullback after OPEC announces its output cut decision

en Mercados internacionales

From CNBC / Tom DiChristopher / 28 de noviembre de 2017

 

Market watchers see few opportunities for oil prices to rally — but plenty of room for them to fall — after a critical meeting of energy ministers later this week.

About two dozen oil exporters, including top producers Saudi Arabiaand Russia, meet on Thursday in Vienna to discuss extending a deal to keep 1.8 million barrels a day off the market. The historic agreement has helped to reverse a three-year oil price downturn that wiped out hundreds of thousands of energy jobs and piled financial pressure on both free market American drillers and countries dependent on oil revenue.

The market largely expects the 14-member OPEC cartel and a group of other producers led by Russia to extend the deal, which began in January and expires in March, through the end of 2018.

But just days before meeting, Russia has not committed to the nine-month extension, raising concerns that OPEC could settle for a shorter extension or push off a decision altogether. Either of those scenarios would spark a sell-off, analysts say, but oil prices will probably struggle to grind higher from recent 2½-year highs even if OPEC lives up to expectations.

Here’s how analysts expect markets to move under three scenarios.
OPEC extends by nine months
Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates, expects OPEC to lock down the nine-month extension. But he also expects a pullback on the news.

The reason: Hedge funds have recently increased their long positions in oil futures, or bets that prices will keep rising. That makes prices vulnerable to a slide because traders often book profits by selling high. At the same time, the number of oil rigs operating in U.S. oil fields crept up in November, a trend that tends to weigh on prices.

«The market has gotten very, very long and as a result you can have some profit-taking triggered by the increase in the rig count on Friday,» Lipow said.

Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at Oil Price Information Service, also thinks a nine-month extension has been baked into prices, making it hard for U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude to rally beyond Friday’s 2017 intraday high of $59.05.

«We may look back at Black Friday as the as-good-as-it-gets number for U.S. producers,» he said.

U.S. crude could take another run at the $59 per barrel level, but OPEC would have to get the messaging just right, said John Kilduff, founding partner at energy hedge fund Again Capital. That includes a show of unity among regional geopolitical rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran and a clear signal that OPEC will force member countries Libya and Nigeria to cap their output after giving them a pass this year.
OPEC settles for six months
However, Kilduff thinks OPEC will only be able to commit Russia to a six-month extension.

He said the country’s energy companies have pushed back on Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak and President Vladimir Putin as U.S. producers pick up market share in Asia, an important oil growth market. Russian energy giants are concerned that extending the cuts prematurely could leave the market undersupplied, causing a spike in prices that leads to another crash.

«If they do go six months I would expect them to spin it and say they’re going to review it next year,» Kilduff said. «That’s going to be seen as a disappointment.»

In that scenario, Kilduff sees oil prices falling back to the mid-$50 range.
Barclays expects either a six- or nine-month extension but says the market is asking the wrong question. Michael Cohen, the investment bank’s head of energy markets research, says traders should be asking whether exporters will be held to the same production caps they agreed to last year.

«It would be a misguided assumption in our view to expect the group’s production quotas to remain set in stone in 2018,» Cohen said in a research note Monday. «The sustainability of the deal depends on how much longer Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iran and Kuwait are willing to sacrifice market share in the pursuit of revenue and market stability.»

 

From CNBC / Tom DiChristopher / 28 de noviembre de 2017

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