Oil Production - A Major Success Story
Oil Production - A Major Part Of Our Mineral Exploration
Milk and oil have been the saviours of the NZ
economy in the past
few years they are our black and
white gold. What is little
understood in fact is how the
oil industry in particular has been
a resounding success
story.
But the question is how to take it to the next
level, both to
ensure NZ’s oil supply – becoming self
sufficient as a long-term goal
– and earning much
needed foreign exchange.
Oil and gas allowed NZ some
growth during the difficult 1980s and
90s, but instead of
maintaining a NZ Inc policy towards energy
the Lange Govt
sold Petrocorp just as it was becoming a
significant
player in the NZ and regional economy.
This ideologically
driven short-sightedness meant the chance for
self
sufficiency and a balance of payments surplus now,
went
begging.
What is needed in today’s climate, is a
healthy dose of forward
thinking. Global petroleum
policies are driven by national
interest with the state
taking a central role. Energy policy is
too important to
be decided on an ad hoc basis with ideology as
its main
driver.
This article from NZ Energy & Environment Business
Week
http://www.nzenergy-environment.co.nz
shows how
crucial oil has
become to the NZ economy. It is up to the
Govt to take the
resource economy to the next
level.
“Oil - The 4th Pillar For NZ’s Economy
Oil production is becoming a fourth pillar
of the NZ economy,
behind dairy, meat and tourism. Latest
figures show in 2008 oil
export earnings ranked third
behind dairy and meat in merchandise
trade.
Crude oil
and condensate production rose 57% to 2.5m tonnes in
the
year to December 2008 from 1.6m tonnes in 2007. The value
of
oil exports jumped 103% to $2.8bn from $1.4bn in 2007,
thanks in
part to the peak prices for crude in
international markets.
Although prices have since slumped,
oil production looks set to
be a significant factor in
NZ’s trading future. While crude oil
output from the
Tui field off Taranaki is dropping as projected,
the
Maari field commissioned this year is exceeding
expectations,
and is producing just on 40,000 barrels a
day.
This could build up even more if appraisal drilling
of the nearby
Manaia structure yields additional
production. The Kupe field is
due for commissioning later
this year, and though it’s mainly a
gas field, it will
also yield liquids both condensate and LPG.
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Global external trade figures issued by MFAT and
Statistics NZ
show mineral fuel exports in 2008 accounted
for 6.9% of the
country’s total exports. Dairy products
accounted for 21.6% of
total merchandise trade and meat
was the next largest at 12%.
Expressed in petajoule
energy terms, 2008 oil production was
128PJ, ahead of the
previous record high of 121PJ in 1997. Strong
flows of
crude oil from the Tui oilfield and condensate from
the
Pohokura wet gas field accounted for most of the
increased
output.
Tui accounted for 65% of last
year’s production, Pohokura 20.7%,
while Maui slipped
to 8%.”
The oil hunt is just part of a “resources
drive” NZ needs to push
forward as part of its race to
catch up with Aust living
standards.
The Key Govt seems
committed to making NZ a resources supplier if
at all
possible, and if this means digging up Conservation
land,
it will allow it – sensitively of course.
It is
just to be hoped the agenda won’t be captured by nimbys
who
seem to think thousands of hectares of windswept
tussock can
bring the nation prosperity. In reality
it’s what’s underneath
the land which counts.
ends