Saudi Arabia will push ahead this year with exploratory drilling of shale and other unconventional gas reserves which could be twice the size of its conventional gas reserves, which total 286 trillion cubic feet, Saudi Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Ali Al-Naimi said.
The Kingdom intends to remain a world energy powerhouse for the foreseeable future, partly by exploiting new technology which has unlocked vast quantities of oil and natural gas in North America.
Developing unconventional and renewable energy will allow Saudi Arabia to meet rising domestic demand for energy while maintaining crude-oil exports, Al-Naimi said, adding that the Kingdom “will not stint” in ensuring that its customers’ oil needs are met.
“We have rough estimates of 600 trillion cubic feet of unconventional shale gas. The potential is very huge and we plan to exploit it,” he said.
He didn’t say though how quickly Saudi Arabia might begin commercial production of shale gas or shale oil, or describe how it will supply the large amounts of water used in hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” the process used to extract oil and gas from shale.
In separate comments to The Wall Street Journal, Al-Naimi said he anticipated that the Kingdom’s shale-oil reserves could also be exploited, but added that “we have to find them.”
Saudi Arabia’s lead over the US in crude oil production narrowed sharply in the past year, thanks to rising shale-oil output in the US, where crude production in November and December topped 7 million barrels a day for the first time in 20 years. Saudi output eased to 9.2 million barrels a day in December, from 9.6 million the previous month.
The US Energy Information Administration recently forecast that US crude output will swell to 7.5 million barrels a day within six months. The International Energy Agency, which represents key oil consumers, has predicted the US will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world’s largest oil producer by 2020.
Natural gas output from state giant Saudi Arabian Oil Co. averaged 9.9 billion cubic feet per day in 2011, up from 9.4 billion cubic feet per day in 2010.
Aramco Chief Executive Khalid Al-Falih said in December that the company plans to drill seven natural gas exploration wells in deep and shallow water in the Red Sea, off the coast of the northwestern city of Tabuk.
Al-Naimi said that prospects for global production of shale gas and oil – including in China, Ukraine, Poland and Saudi Arabia – were so promising that the Kingdom might not need to continue with its decades-long policy of maintaining an oil-output cushion for use in global supply disruptions.
“It is not a question whether Saudi Arabia has spare (oil) capacity. It is a question of whether we need to spend billions maintaining it at all,” Al-Naimi said.
“New commercial reserves such as shale oil are good news for the global economy” and “will ensure even greater stability of markets and prices,” he said.
Oil prices slumped Monday on weak demand concerns and fears of an escalation in the eurozone debt crisis after bloc member Cyprus said it planned to tax bank deposits to raise bailout cash, analysts said.
Brent North Sea crude for delivery in May was down 55 cents at $109.27 a barrel in late London deals, pulling back from a three-month low of $107.78 earlier in the day.
New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for April, fell 15 cents to $93.30 a barrel after losses of more than a dollar.
SG/Agencies
19 March