follow us like us subscribe contact us
Adbar

Shale Gas and LNG

By Dave Forest | Fri, 09 July 2010 11:37 | 0

This week, Australia's Beach Energy signed an MOU with Japanese commodities brokers Itochu to examine the possibility of building an LNG plant fed by shale gas from Beach's tenements in the Cooper Basin.

The deal is still early-stage. Beach has yet to even prove a resource on the project, let alone demonstrate economic viability.

But shale LNG makes a lot of sense.

Shale gas plays are scalable. You can drill a large number of wells, which will have relatively similar characteristics.

After a certain amount of drilling, a shale development company should be able to figure out what the average well for the play looks like. Most plays have some "sweet spots" where production rates and reserves are highest. And then some outlying areas where economics are more marginal.

Averaging all of these together, a good developer can determine their break-even price for the play as a whole. The level at which gas must be sold to make an acceptable return on the project.

Here's where LNG comes in handy. By selling gas on a long-term LNG contract, a shale gas developer can lock in the price they need to make a project work. As long as you did your initial analysis on the play correctly, you can be assured that the economics will be favorable over the project's lifespan. (And as long as you build in provisions for escalating costs. If labor, steel or other supplies get more expensive, sale prices need to adjust accordingly.)

This works much better for shale than for conventional gas plays. Where individual wells can be more variable, making the breakeven price more difficult to determine.

If shale LNG does catch on, there's going to be a niche for good reserves engineers. People who can break down a play and tell developers and LNG buyers what price is needed to keep everyone happy. There's a handful of firms in the U.S. doing great work on play-wide analysis for a number of shales.

As I've mentioned many times, price volatility is a major challenge today for resource projects. Shale LNG might be one way to ensure success.

By. Dave Forest of Notela Resources

About the author

Contributor
Dave Forest
Company: Notela Resources

More recent articles by Dave Forest

Fri 03 December 2010
Another Nation Goes Coal Critical
Thu 25 November 2010
Why Qatar is a Threat to Natural Gas Prices
Wed 24 November 2010
India Preps for an Energy Grab
Tue 23 November 2010
The Genius Behind Successful Resource Companies
Mon 22 November 2010
Is China Betting Against a U.S. Housing Recovery

Be the first to comment on this article.

Leave a comment


Commodity Prices

    PRICE CHG CHG%
Chart Chart Chart Chart Chart Chart

Click on chart icon for detailed price charts.