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Lukoil to launch West Qurna-2 field by April

Published: 27 Nov 2013 - 07:07 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 06:53 pm

MOSCOW: Lukoil, Russia’s second largest oil producer, will launch its West Qurna-2 field in Iraq by the end of March or April next year, helping the company to more than double oil output abroad as it struggles with falling production at home.
Iraq, Opec’s second-biggest oil producer, expects a robust return to growth next year as foreign companies at work in its giant southern oil fields push output towards the highest level ever.  
Security remains a concern, however, highlighted this month when dozens of Shia workers and tribesmen stormed a Schlumberger Ltd camp at the Rumaila North oilfield after accusing a foreign security adviser of insulting their religion. Lukoil is not involved at that field. 
“We do have once in a while different, clearly minor, disruptions to construction work,” Andrey Gaidamaka, Lukoil’s Vice-President, told a conference call yesterday when asked about recent unrest.  “We are well protected by the oil police, but we try to make sure, to the maximum (that) we use negotiating tactics,” he said, saying that disruptions sometimes take time to resolve.
Lukoil had planned to launch West Qurna-2, the world’s second-largest undeveloped field with recoverable oil reserves of around 14 billion barrels, around the turn of the year. 
It aimed to reach production of 120,000 barrels per day (bpd) in the first quarter of 2014, with output of 1.2 million bpd at its peak, but plans have yet to be finalised with the Iraq government. 
Iraq has moved to restore calm at its southern oil fields. Baker Hughes Inc said this week it was preparing to resume work after protests in Basra prompted the US oil field services company to stop work at the Rumaila field.
“We definitely will start commercial production at the West Qurna field by the end of first quarter,” Lukoil’s Gaidamaka said. “In March-April we will have commercial production at the West Qurna-2 field on stream.”
He reiterated the company plans to reach its initial production target next year. Lukoil regained the right to develop West Qurna-2 in 2009 after its initial concession was cancelled following the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime.     
Gazprom Neft, an oil arm of gas giant Gazprom , said this month that a number of issues including safety had led it to postpone initial production at its Badra oil field in Iraq until 2014.     
As a private sector company, Lukoil is banned from securing new offshore fields in Russian waters by recent laws, which reserve such prospects for state-controlled enterprises. Lukoil’s largest shareholders are Chief Executive Vagit Alekperov and his deputy Leonid Fedun.
This leaves the company with no options but to develop  resources that are hard to recover — so called tight oil, which recently received tax breaks to encourage investment, acquire smaller Russian peers or grow abroad.
Lukoil’s daily oil output fell 1.5 percent in 2012 year-on-year to 1.8 million bpd, of which some 110,000bpd were extracted abroad, mainly from Kazakhstan. 
“Our international production is set to more than double next year with the introduction of West Qurna-2,” Gaidamaka told the call, after Lukoil posted a 12 percent drop in third-quarter net profit, blaming higher taxes and expenses. 
Reuters