Viewing entries in
News

TOFCO on final stretch with Juniper platform

Comment

TOFCO on final stretch with Juniper platform

Juniper will become BP Trinidad and Tobago’s 14th offshore production facility, but it is the company’s first subsea field development in the twin island republic. The development will include five subsea wells and promises a production capacity of approximately 590 million standard cubic feet a day (MMSCFD). Gas from Juniper will flow to the Mahogany B hub, via a new ten-kilometre flowline. 

Comment

The property tax – big implications for the energy sector?

Comment

The property tax – big implications for the energy sector?

Tax increases have the Trinidad and Tobago private sector very concerned. In addition to the increased rate of corporation tax, both domestic and international private sector investors are concerned about the re-emergence of property tax, announced by the Minister of Finance for the 2016-17 national budget. 

Comment

SKD Jaya – cold stacked in T&T waters

Comment

SKD Jaya – cold stacked in T&T waters

Sapurakencana joins several drilling companies that have opted to mothball their vessels off the coast of Trinidad. They are all sitting idly by, waiting for the global energy industry to recover. Cold stacking involves the partial decommissioning of the vessel when it appears that it will not be in use for an extended period of time. Sometimes called mothballing, the main features of the ship are reduced, in order to significantly lessen costs due to the asset being idle. 

Comment

Construction of the CGCL petrochemical facility underway

Comment

Construction of the CGCL petrochemical facility underway

Construction of the long-delayed Caribbean Gas Chemicals Limited (CGCL) petrochemical facility is underway at the Union Industrial Estate in La Brea, Trinidad. Construction of temporary site facilities for the CGCL plant, which will produce 1,000,000 metric tonnes per year (MTPY) of methanol and 20,000 MTPY of Dimethyl Ether (DME), began in March 2016, but activity on-site only started to ramp up after the final outstanding agreements were ratified and signed by all the stakeholders involved, on August 8th 2016. CGCL is owned by the Mitsubishi Consortium of Japan, the Massy Group and the state-owned National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago (NGC). The project is being financed by the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC). 

Comment

First Gas from Iguana Field by 2018

Comment

First Gas from Iguana Field by 2018

First gas from the Iguana gas field in the Gulf of Paria is scheduled for the first quarter (Q1) of 2018, according to the Certificate of Environmental Clearance (CEC) application submitted by DeNovo, the operator of Blocks 1(a) and 1(b) off Trinidad’s west coast. Iguana is one of three gas discoveries in the shallow water blocks, which DeNovo purchased from Centrica in April 2016. The CEC application covers the Iguana, Zandolie and Anole fields, and exploration drilling on a fourth prospect named Whiptail. 

Comment

Impact of late payments getting worse for contractors

Comment

Impact of late payments getting worse for contractors

Over 90% of service companies reported that they were affected by late payments according to a survey of contractors and service companies conducted by the Energy Chamber. In addition, 93% of respondents also said that the impact on their companies was significant and over half of the surveyed companies said that over 50% of their accounts receivables were 60 days overdue. 

Comment

Tar sands impact keeps academics at loggerheads

Comment

Tar sands impact keeps academics at loggerheads

A heated argument is brewing between geologist Herbert (“Billy”) Sukhu and Valerie Stoute, professor of environmental and postgraduate studies and research at the University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT) over which one has the best approach to monetising the estimated 1.45 billion barrels of 37.5° API oil locked up in tar sands in south Trinidad. 

Comment

Concerns about institutional capacity at the Ministry of Energy, a former Minister of Energy says, 'It’s a serious problem'

Comment

Concerns about institutional capacity at the Ministry of Energy, a former Minister of Energy says, 'It’s a serious problem'

With the three most senior and experienced public servants in the Ministry of Energy due to retire in the next few months, many leaders in Trinidad and Tobago’s energy sector are expressing concerns about a lack of capacity at the Ministry and the likely impact of these changes on key decision making. Permanent Secretaries, Selwyn Lashley and Heidi Wong, and Chief Technical Officer, Richard Jeremie, are all on the verge of retirement from the Ministry. 

Comment

Guyana oil production to begin in 5 years

Comment

Guyana oil production to begin in 5 years

The big disappointment for Guyana, following the discovery of between 800 million to 1.4 billion barrels of oil resources by US major ExxonMobil 200 km offshore, is that the production of crude will not begin for another five years (2021). 

Comment

Increase in corporation tax rates

Comment

Increase in corporation tax rates

While operator companies in the upstream oil sector received welcome news in the national budget statement that their tax burden was likely to be reduced, energy services companies were shocked to learn that their corporation tax rate would jump from 25% to 30% for all taxable profits over TT$1 million. 

Comment

Oil and gas tax changes promised, but no clarity on timeline

Comment

Oil and gas tax changes promised, but no clarity on timeline

In his 30th September 2016 budget statement the Trinidad and Tobago Minister of Finance, Colm Imbert, announced that the government was in the process of reviewing the country’s oil and gas taxation regime, using advice from experts from the International Monterary Fund (IMF) to help develop proposals. Minister Imbert summarised the main recommendations from the IMF, which involve the transformation of an existing tax against revenue that kicks in at US$ 50, known as Supplemental Petroleum Tax (SPT), with a new cash flow-based tax and the simplification and reduction of profit taxes. The IMF also recommended “a moderate fixed rate royalty in the order of 10-12%” to ensure a minimum income stream for the government. 

Comment

Trinidad & Tobago gas reserves and resources: making sense of the numbers

Comment

Trinidad & Tobago gas reserves and resources: making sense of the numbers

Trinidad & Tobago official audited non-associated proved gas reserves declined by 7.8 % between December 2014 and December 2015, down from 11.5 trillion cubic feet to 10.6 (tcf).   Unrisked “3P” reserves (that is the total of proved, probable and possible) showed a similar level of decline (8.2%) while overall unrisked exploration resources showed a relatively small decline of just 1.6%, down from 43.8 tcf to 43.1 tcf.

Comment

Gas found, but is it commercial?

Comment

Gas found, but is it commercial?

BHP Billiton has confirmed encouraging results from the LeClerc well, the first well in the company’s historic deep water drilling campaign offshore Trinidad and Tobago. According to the press release issued by BHP Billiton, the well encountered gas in multiple zones. 

Comment

Hats off to 24 companies committed to high HSE standards

Comment

Hats off to 24 companies committed to high HSE standards

The Energy Chamber wishes to publicly recognise and applaud the outstanding achievement of 24 contracting companies that have demonstrated a commitment to high health, safety and environment (HSE) standards in their organisations. The companies are being commended for having attained over 95 per cent compliance in each element of the Safe to Work (STOW) HSE requirements at the end of the rigorous STOW certification audit. 

Comment

Juniper on track

Comment

Juniper on track

The much anticipated Juniper gas development project is back on schedule after a series of delays early in project execution. With a production capacity of approximately 590 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, the Juniper project should bring much needed relief to the gas-starved liquefied natural gas (LNG) and petrochemical sectors in 2017. The project, located off the south-east coast of Trinidad, is bpTT’s first subsea field development in the country. 

Comment

TROC finally gets sanction

Comment

TROC finally gets sanction

After months of delay, the Trinidad Onshore Compression (TROC) project has finally received a green light from all of the Atlantic shareholders and the Government of Trinidad and Tobago. This long anticipated project promises to bring on-stream an additional 200 million standard cubic feet of gas per day by early 2017. 

Comment

Activity and production falls in the small onshore sector

Comment

Activity and production falls in the small onshore sector

Ministry of Energy data for the first quarter of 2016 has revealed a significant drop in crude oil production from the smaller onshore oil companies in Trinidad, mainly operating under lease-out, farm-out or incremental production sharing contracts (LO/FO/IPSC) with the state-owned oil company Petrotrin. Activity in this sector has significantly decreased, with serious knock-on negative implications for service companies, general economic activity and employment across south Trinidad. 

Comment