Mozambique gas bonanza hinges on LNG Law

19 Oct, 2014 - 06:10 0 Views
Mozambique gas bonanza hinges on LNG Law Luca Bertelli

The Sunday Mail

Luca Bertelli

Luca Bertelli

MORE than half a dozen yellow tower cranes planted in the hillside above Mozambique’s capital are visible from a single vantage point at Anadarko Petroleum Corp (APC)’s office. There are more poised along the beachfront in the other direction.

“That’s anticipation,” said John Peffer, country manager for The Woodlands, Texas-based oil and gas explorer.

Peffer’s referring to the prospect of developing the world’s largest natural-gas discovery in a decade off Mozambique’s northern coast.

It’s a resource that could help the economy in one of Africa’s poorest countries grow 10-fold by 2035, according a Standard Bank report.

The trouble is Anadarko and Italian explorer Eni SpA (ENI), who have found gas in a neighbouring block, can’t start development until the government completes legislation setting the terms for exports.

If the law isn’t signed off this year, it could be delayed further by shifts in the political landscape after presidential and parliamentary elections last week.

“A good decree law provides investors, financiers and LNG buyers with an improved risk profile,” said Peffer.

This could “benefit Mozambique significantly as it competes globally for high-value markets against established suppliers,” he said.

Filipe Nyusi, candidate for the ruling Frelimo, which has ruled since 1975, is expected to win the presidency with over 55 percent of the vote, Mark Rosenberg, senior Africa analyst for New York-based Eurasia Group, said in an October 9 note.

A shift is expected in parliament, where the MDM will probably displace Renamo, which fought a civil war against Frelimo, as the biggest opposition party, he said.

Chill gas

Anadarko had three employees in Mozambique in 2007, compared with 1 800 today, according to Peffer.

That could grow to around 10 000 once construction starts on plants to chill the gas into liquefied natural gas, or LNG, for export.

Mozambique’s revenue could reach as much as US$212 billion over the life of the project, based on 45 trillion cubic feet from Anadarko’s Area 1, Standard Bank said in a July 31 study. That’s less than half of the total estimated resource.

Area 1 and Italian explorer Eni SpA’s Area 4 combined hold technically recoverable reserves of 120 trillion cubic feet, according to industry consultant Wood Mackenzie.

The company has conducted exploration drilling for five straight years, “which ends in January, and requires the decree law to provide the legal and contractual framework to progress the project towards Final Investment Decision,” Peffer said in an interview in his office in Maputo.

If developed to the full Mozambique could become the world’s third-largest exporter of LNG, behind Qatar and Australia, according to a website for the project.

That could transform a country that ranks 178th out of 187 nations in the latest United Nations Human Development Index.

Government cautious

“Government is doing more now in terms of wanting to increase the government take,” Adriano Nuvunga, director of Maputo’s Centre for Public Integrity, said in an October 3 interview. “Companies, they’re pushing hard that all decisions are made quickly. Government is trying to be cautious.”

Last year Luca Bertelli, Eni’s executive vice-president of exploration, said it would be “very challenging” for Mozambique to meet a 2018 deadline to be able to ship the gas.

Work hasn’t started in Mozambique and building an LNG plant can take four to six years.

Still, Mozambique is likely to be among the world’s competitive LNG projects under consideration, according to Goldman Sachs Corp analysts.

Strong will

“There is a strong will to get the decree law done, because the government realises that it’s needed by the international oil companies to reach final investment decision,” said Anne Fruhauf, Southern Africa analyst at New York-based risk adviser Teneo Intelligence.

If it isn’t finished by December, the decree law will be delayed by at least three months because of government priorities including the presidential handover and the budget, she said.

Sticking points in negotiations over the decree law include the time before terms can be renegotiated, Nuvunga said.

The companies have requested 30 years, while the government has accepted 15, and parliament has said it should be 10 years.

“There’s a need to be balanced in terms of time sensitivity but also have the necessary time to negotiate a better deal for the country,” he said.

“Whether that will travel down to the poor, that’s a different story. In the meantime there is time pressure. All issues are time sensitive.” — Bloomberg.

Share This:

Survey


We value your opinion! Take a moment to complete our survey

This will close in 20 seconds