Showing posts with label angola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angola. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 December 2011

The World Is Not Desperate For Energy in 2012!

Current forecasts suggest that global energy consumption will only increase by 3% in 2012, not much different from 2011. This is not surprising given the state of the world economy. Current market figures suggest that like in 2011, the world will enjoy a net surplus of energy capacity.

Take oil, production is likely to again to outpace global demand; such a prospect will once more disappoint peak oil Cassandras. There are several reasons for this; the first is the coming on stream world wide of a number of new offshore projects in Nigerian, Angolan, Brazilian and Gulf of Mexican waters. In addition, increased Libyan and Iraqi oil production coming on stream in 2012 will add significantly to global oil supplies. However, will this be sufficient to reduce current oil prices from around $90 a barrel today to what they were in 2009 when it was $60 a barrel, is anyone’s guess. Yet, such a drop in price would give a welcome boost to the world economy.

Nevertheless, despite investment by many countries in renewables, decision makers are still investing in new cleaner coal based power, which is pushing up coal’s share in the global energy mix. Already, both China and India have placed their faith in increased coal use, this is not surprising given its strategic, economic and energy security advantages. After all coal provides a cheap source of fuel to power all those new laptops, televisions and air-conditioning units that increasing numbers of their fortunate citizens can afford to use.

Yet, the big winner in 2012 is forecast to be gas. During 2012, new commercially significant natural gas supplies are due to come on line in Qatar and Australia. Already, it is fortunate for Japan due to its on-going nuclear outages that such additional LNG supplies are available during its current power shortages, which are likely to last for several years. In addition, unconventional gas will increasingly play its part; already Australia and the United States have well advanced plans to export unconventional gas as LNG to markets in North Asia and Europe. In fact some market makers in Europe are complaining that Europe from too much gas and competition being available in the market. As for elsewhere in the world, there are less advanced plans to exploit unconventional gas for regional markets in Argentina, Poland, South Africa and China. Such developments are likely to change the shape of energy geopolitics in the near future.

Though the future progress of unconventional gas is likely to be affected by the results of reports, due out in early 2012, by the Environmental Agencies of the EU and US into the impact that fracking has on the water table.

As for nuclear, after events at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, one would have thought we had seen the end of nuclear power. Certainly, Germany thought so when it pulled the plug on its nuclear power programme. Well, in fact forecasters are suggesting the future looks bright in many countries, whilst in America and Japan these countries have dithered about a nuclear future. Other countries like Britain, France, China, Russia and South Korea have improved their designs and moved ahead with their programs. In fact, it is likely that half the world’s new nuclear power plants will be completed in such countries as China, Taiwan, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and South Korea by 2050. It is forecasted that by 2020, China is expected to increase its nuclear generating capacity seven fold and South Korea to double its nuclear power capacity.

Over all the future looks bright especially for gas; however, the world will continue to experience at regional level problems providing sufficient capacity to turn raw energy into a useful power source.
Nicholas

Sunday, 4 December 2011

Striking it lucky

2 December 2011            

Covering every corner of the globe, we profile the most promising offshore oil discoveries. Nicholas Newman charts a course, covering finds in the Beaufort Sea off Alaska's North shore, The Levant Basin, The Sea of Okhotsk, a treacherous find offshore of Angola and news of a massive find in Brazil's Santos Basin. http://www.offshore-technology.com/features/featurestriking-it-lucky---most-promising-new-offshore-oil-discoveries/

Friday, 18 November 2011

The World is Desperate for Energy Engineers


By Nicholas Newman 18 November 2011

It’s not a scarcity of oil the world should be worried about but more importantly a desperate skills shortage of engineers. This is especially so for the global energy industry. For many jobs, the number of vacancies exceeds the number of skilled experienced engineers that are available. Already, such shortages are causing significant delays and costs for major projects including development of offshore oil fields off Angola.  Whilst in Brazil, the home of samba, tropical rainforests and traffic jams, this developed county is in a desperate search for engineers to construct 12 super tanker sized FPSO’s over the next decade. Such skills deficiencies are harming energy security, harming economic recovery and the ability of the world to meet its ambitious CO2 targets.


The only solution the energy industry has is to pay higher salaries and offer better conditions. Already, in Australia many engineers with energy related expertise are starting on salaries of AUS$20,000 a month. Even in the remotest desert locations of Australia or Iraq, the camps offer the best in accommodation and food. Ironically, subsea engineers are the amongst those in greatest demand. As to why there is a shortage of energy engineers, in part, it is due to lack of sufficient support governments, universities and industry to ensure adequate levels of people are trained every year. It is also due demographics, as the workforce ages and to the cyclical nature of the industry. Today, it is not helped that the sheer number of new projects worldwide that are being developed and coming on stream. In Australia, for instance the boom in mining of coal, iron ore and uranium is taking place at the same time there is also a boom in oil, gas, solar, power and unconventional gas projects. Because of poaching between the different energy sectors, pay and conditions have had to be drastically improved, in a desperate attempt to overcome such work force shortages.
Due to it being a sellers’ market for engineers, energy companies are having to becoming more sophisticated in recruitment practices. Increasingly they are relying on experts talent scouts to find, identify and select as well as maintain the loyalty of the engineers in this very competitive global market.  In addition, many such recruitment agencies such as Hays, NES Global are working on behalf of their clients Total, Shell, ENI to co-ordinate the development of the skilled candidates in their studies at universities around the world. In many new energy producers, governments are encouraging local content polices to ensure that the energy industry makes sufficient investment in overcoming the global energy sectors current labour shortages.
http://www.oxfordprospect.co.uk/Energy-Features.html