Shale key to energy independence

  • 2013-05-15
  • From wire reports

Guenther Oettinger discusses energy options.

VILNIUS - The development of shale gas in Europe could help the continent obtain better deals from its current key supplier, the Russian giant Gazprom, EU Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger said on May 10, reports AFP.
“I am sure [that] to have some shale gas option is a good instrument for our long-term negotiations [with] Gazprom and Russia,” Oettinger told journalists in Vilnius.

Success with shale gas in the United States has encouraged exploration in several EU states including Britain, Poland and Hungary. Lithuania is also considering an exploration deal with U.S. oil giant Chevron.
Oettinger insisted that Gazprom, currently Lithuania’s sole natural gas supplier, was charging the Baltic nation up to 40 percent more than the market price in Germany.
“It is not acceptable,” Oettinger said. “At the end of the story, we need a common price from Lisbon to Vilnius, from London to Athens,” he added.

While Lithuania imported 3.3 billion cubic meters of natural gas from Russia last year, officials in Vilnius insist they could be sitting on more than 10 times that amount of extractable shale gas reserves.
Lithuanian lawmakers are considering new laws which would strengthen environmental regulations after protests erupted over hydraulic fracturing, or ‘fracking,’ a controversial technology used to extract gas from shale. Critics deem it a threat to both the environment and to human health.

Global energy giants ExxonMobil and Marathon Oil dropped shale gas exploration in neighboring Poland after finding that its deposits were too deep to extract using conventional fracking.
Lithuania is also trying to break Gazprom’s politically-charged monopoly - a legacy of Soviet-rule - by constructing a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal which is expected to start operations by the end of 2014, and is considering a gas pipeline to neighboring Poland.
Oettinger also said he expected Lithuania to take a final decision on a new nuclear power plant by the end of the year, following talks with Baltic neighbors Latvia and Estonia. In October, Lithuanian voters rejected the nuclear plan in a non-binding referendum. Last month the government said they would resume talks, but would seek better terms.

Hydrocarbon alternatives
The company Balin Energy, a joint venture of Poland’s refinery PKN Orlen and Kuwait Energy Co., has begun drilling in Latvian territorial waters in the Baltic Sea searching for possible oil deposits, the company’s spokesman Janis Austrins said.

Last Friday, the platform ship Ocean Nomad arrived at the drilling site approximately 104 kilometers off Latvia’s western coastline. The drill was to be set up over the weekend, where it will begin searching for possible oil deposits. The drilling will take place for about 30 days where the depth of the Baltic Sea reaches 132 meters.
The drilling will allow the company to get better acquainted with this territory and find out whether there are enough hydrocarbons for commercial drilling.

Balin Energy was issued a drilling license to search Latvian waters for oil deposits back in 2009.