Azerbaijan Eyes More Gas, Less Oil in 2017: Minister
Azerbaijan is planning to produce more gas and less oil this year, energy minister Natiq Aliyev has told NGW.
The country plans to increase gross gas output by 0.8% to 29.561bn m3 in 2017. That follows a decline of 0.6% year-on-year to 29.331bn m3 in 2016. Of that 18.714bn was commercial gas, a 3.9% decline from 2015, as more gas was needed for re-injection at the Azeri–Chirag–Gunashli (ACG) oilfields to maintain crude oil production. Gas stored in underground facilities reached 1.167bn m3 as of January 1.
According to a combination of official statistics and NGW’s survey, the country’s total gas export also stood at 7.78bn m3, so 625mn m3 less than 2015.
Azerbaijan plans to complete the second phase of Shah Deniz gas field, expected to become operational initially next year, as well as keeping the SD1 output high. Aliyev said that it is expected more than 10bn m3 of gas to be produced from SD1 in 2017, compared to 9.9bn m3 last year.
Oil output declined based on OPEC deal
OPEC members agreed November 30, 2016 to decrease oil output by 1.2mn b/d to 32.5mn b/d, while some non-Opec countries including Azerbaijan accepted to reduce the production level by 558,000 b/d in 1H17 on average.
Aliyev said that his country is fully committed to its obligations under the oil deal and has reduced output by 35,000 b/d since January 1. He said that the country’s total oil production was 789,000 b/d during January 1-20 in the line with this pledge. That compares with its November production of 830,000 b/d while Opec had estimated its figure for October at 865,000 b/d, he added.
Azerbaijan's energy minister Natiq Aliyev (Photo credit: World Economic Forum / Norbert Schiller)
He added that the oil price in January increased by $25/b year-on-year and this favours all producers. Azerbaijan can cut oil output even more if other producers decide to shrink the production level to support prices, he said.
Azerbaijan produced 41mn metric tons of crude oil in 2016, about 1.5% less than the previous year. The ACG field supplies 75.6% of the country’s total output and its production is expected to decrease by 20,000 b/d in 2017.
BP and Azerbaijan's state Socar signed a principles of agreement document on December 23 outlining future development of ACG out to 2050, under continued BP leadership, which said total ACG oil and gas production at that point in time was roughly 620,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day.
Ilham Shaban, Dalga Khatinoglu