Sentences with phrase «term oil projects»

Andurand, who runs oil hedge fund Andurand Capital Management LLP, wrote in a string of tweets on Sunday that companies may be less willing to risk investment in long term oil projects because of low crude barrel prices and a predicted peak in electric vehicle demand.

Not exact matches

The B.C. government has pinned much of the province's economic future on LNG exports, saying the projects are equivalent to Alberta's oil sands in terms of jobs and revenue generation.
Last year, Saudi Arabia pledged billions of dollars of investments in projects in Indonesia and Malaysia to secure long - term oil supply deals.
But while Grantham projects that oil will surge higher in the medium term, he ultimately — perhaps 20 or 30 years down the road — sees advances in technology making oil virtually obsolete in transportation.
If you're talking about a new project with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 - year oil sands project is a lot of risk for less than a 10 % rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
If you're talking about a new project with no significant investment already deployed, building a new mine if you expect today's prices to hold in the long term is a tough call — a 50 year oil sands project is a lot of risk for less than a 10 per cent rate of return — but even there, you can see the impact of the lower Canadian dollar and the hedge provided by a royalty regime which lowers rates when prices are low.
Since LNG projects are multi-billion dollar investments, underpinning the project with long - term, oil - linked contracts is usually necessary to secure project financing by lenders.
From a strictly legal perspective, the relevant question is not whether there is a sufficient connection to any particular existing or proposed oil sands development or other production activity, and certainly not whether such projects or activities were included in the Terms of Reference (ToR), but rather simply whether the GHGs associated with the production of bitumen that will be transported by the NGP are an «environmental effect» of that project (see NGP Report, Volume II, Appendix 4, Terms of Reference, which defines «environmental effect» very broadly to mean «any change that the project may cause in the environment.»
Given that concerns about an oil and gas supply crunch in the future due to near - term underinvestment are globally rising, Japan should continue to highlight the importance of engagement in shale - related projects from a long - term perspective.
It has signed long - term agreements with nine communities near its oil sands projects.
The Bretton Woods institution projected that Ghana's oil revenue will peak in 2023 and decline thereafter, stating that «a projected increase in oil output would boost Ghana's domestic revenue over the medium term «but this effect will likely be short - lived.»
I do know however, that natural resource companies, particularly the larger ones, are very slow to change their price assumptions on projects / assumptions (there are still plenty of $ 50 - 70 oil prices being used in the industry for long term forecasts).
Most of us who worry about these things had admittedly been relying on «peak» oil to help in this long - term project.
As was discussed here last Friday, President Obama has proposed using a tiny portion of federal revenues from offshore oil and gas production to build an «Energy Security Trust» to pay for the kinds of tough or longer - term energy research projects that the private sector tends to neglect.
The Carbon Tracker Initiative, which first coined the term the «carbon bubble», foresaw last year that any oil price slide would make many unconventional and high - cost oil projects uneconomic and risked wasting huge piles of investors» cash.
McGuinty ceded that his proposals to implement renewables were poorly planned and managed; renewable projects were taken over by deep pocketed oil companies that would foist them on people in notably contentious locations giving wind a bad name, high FITs that did not adjust to market forces over the long term, no comprehensive agreement with neighbours for better power sharing agreements, no power storage strategy, no coordinated conservation or efficiency plan that included distributed generation, CHP, microCHP, automated demand response management, and worst of all there was no options analysis of subsidies to various producers.
The analysis found, somewhat surprisingly, that only proceeding with lower cost, less carbon - intensive projects needed to satisfy demand in a carbon - constrained world will add over $ 100 billion to the value of the world's seven oil majors, unless oil prices spike beyond $ 100 a barrel for a sustained period of time — well over OPEC's long - term average assumption of around $ 80 a barrel.
The Brent crude oil spot price averaged $ 112 per barrel in 2012, and EIA's July 2013 Short - Term Energy Outlook projects averages of $ 105 per barrel in 2013 and $ 100 per barrel in 2014.
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But the paper's author, Graham Thomson, a journalist at The Edmonton Journal, argues that there's a unproven leap between enhanced oil recovery projects and long - term, large - scale carbon capture and storage.
Borrowing to invest in long - term risky projects that require $ 140 per barrel of oil to break even is difficult to justify.
During the debate over the Keystone project, the oil industry rolled out a series of studies claiming that pipeline construction would create 20,000 temporary jobs in the United States and that lower oil prices (they didn't say exactly how much lower) resulting from the new crude supplies would create as many as 250,000 more jobs across the country over the long term.
The oil and gas, telecommunications and infrastructure (project finance) sectors are probably those that would currently benefit the most from the use of ADR in terms of the size of dispute.
Recent experience includes LCIA arbitrations about political risks insurance, major bank loans to Russian entities, and long - term coal supply agreements; an UNCITRAL arbitration about a coal contract price adjustment mechanism; LMAA arbitrations relating to shipbuilding contracts, charterparties, and bills of lading; a FOSFA Board Of Appeal hearing about a contaminated cargo of vegetable oil; and ICC arbitrations about a South American gas field consortium and an East African oil and gas exploration project.
Obviously we do a lot of work in Venezuela as it is a very prolific country in terms of legal issues — either because of the constant change in law or the $ 100 oil — and, being the fifth - largest producing country in the world, there is a lot of investment and a lot of projects here, $ 3 - to $ 4 - billion oil projects going on.
He says, «The Trans Mountain Expansion Project has binding, long - term contracts with 13 customers in the Canadian oil producing and marketing business.
Industrial & Systems Engineer with experience in oil and gas Project Engineering and CAD design seeking to continue career path as part of a successful team with potential for long term growth.
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