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Shale gas revolution to drive EU gas market changes: think tank

https://www.chemnet.com   Sep 05,2011 Platts
The EU gas market could undergo significant changes over the next 10 years due to an "unconventional gas revolution", according to a report Friday by Polish think tank The Kosciuszko Institute.

The report, compiled by 20 academics and scientists for the Krakow-based agency, said the development of the unconventional gas sector in Europe, chiefly shale gas, could lead to increased energy security, lower gas prices and reduced CO2 emissions.

Even if European shale gas exploration and production costs are 50% higher than in the US, gas prices may still be lower than Russian gas, which currently accounts for a quarter of the EU's supplies, the report said.

"Unconventional gas is likely to have a significant impact on current European gas supply dependency on Russia. Once the European unconventional gas industry has developed to scale and has properly got its costs under control, it will be very competitive against both Russian gas, hauled all the way from Siberia, and LNG," Professor Alan Riley from City University in London said in the report.

Marcin Tarnawski from Krakow's Jagiellonian University said that large-scale industrial exploitation of unconventional gas in the US, Europe and Asia could seriously upset the balance of power between existing gas exporters and importers.

"It may lead to a situation where new investments in the trans-European pipelines, such as Nord Stream and South Stream, will not prove to be economically viable," he said.

The report estimates that Poland, with resources estimated as high as 5.3 trillion cubic meters and considered one of Europe's most promising shale gas plays, may deliver up to 100 billion cu m/year of production in 10-15 years, although a more probable scenario is 20-30 billion cu m/year.

But that would more than cover the country's current annual consumption of 14 billion cu m and transform Poland from a country which relies on Russian supplies for two thirds of its consumption to a gas exporter.

Mariusz Ruszel, The Kosciuszko Institute's energy expert, said Poland could begin to export gas to neighboring countries such as Germany, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Lithuania, and even further afield.

Meanwhile, Maciej Kolaczkowski, an expert at the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the pessimistic scenario estimates that the cost of unconventional gas production in Poland may be up to 50% higher than in the US.

"In spite of this it is safe to assume that prices in Poland could oscillate between $200/1,000 cu m and $321/1,000 cu m, with an average of $240/1,000 cu m," he said.

In its long-term contracts, Russia's Gazprom sells European companies gas at prices indexed to the price of crude oil. As such, to achieve that average gas price in Poland, Kolaczkowski said oil would have to be valued at $55/barrel -- considerably lower than the $105-$125/b price it has been trading at in the last three months.

"These calculations clearly show that Russian gas providers would have to reduce prices significantly in order to compete with unconventional gas producers on the Polish market," he added.

But the report stated two significant obstacles to shale gas becoming a significant alternative to Russian supplies in Europe -- the lack of a single gas market and environmental barriers.

"Liberalization, both legal and physical, needs to be completed as rapidly as possible to open up the European gas market to new gas sources," Riley said.

The report also noted that measures adopted in the US over the last 20 years to mitigate environmental impacts such as surface footprint, emissions, water usage, waste disposal or habitat fragmentation, should be adopted in Europe.

Poland, in particular, needs to develop a competitive and commercial gas market and de-regulate its gas prices, develop and modernize its gas transmission and storage infrastructure, and create favorable conditions for investors, the report said.
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