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White House Says Obama To Rule On Keystone Pipeline Before Leaving Office

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The White House on Monday said it continues to expect that President Barack Obama will make a decision on whether to grant a permit to TransCanada Corp for the Keystone XL crude oil pipeline before he leaves office in January 2017.

“Our expectation at this point is that the president will make a decision before the end of his administration on the Keystone pipeline, but when exactly that will be, I don’t know at this point,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters traveling on Air Force One.

Asked whether the decision could come this year, Earnest said: “It’s possible – it’s also possible it could happen next year.” 

 

 

 

 

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Fugro to Cut 500 More Jobs

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Fugro said it will lay off around 500 employees in the coming quarters as it feels the pressure of deteriorating market and anticipates an even more challenging times ahead.

The company said it’s still early to determine which divisions and regions will be affected by this new headcount reduction.

In addition, the Dutch offshore services provider, reporting a headcount of 1054 at the end of Q3 2015, said it expects non-cash impairments in the range of EUR 250 to 300 million in the fourth quarter, mainly related to its subsea services division, which is under most pressure.

The company has reduced its fleet from 11 to 7 vessel in geotechnical division and terminated 2 long-term charters in Subsea Services. However, Fugro said it will terminate another charter tied to Subsea Services in 2016 and, if necessary, it will further reduce its fleet in geotechnical and survey divisions.

In the third quarter 2015, Fugro’s revenue declined some 13 per cent year-on-year, in line with oil and gas market developments, which makes up for 78 per cent of the company’s business. Subsea revenue dropped approx. 45 per cent and 12-month subsea backlog has been reduced by 35 per cent compared to the corresponding period in 2014.

On a positive note, the new sale & lease back deal for 2 geotechnical vessels should bring net cash proceeds of around EUR 100 million in the fourth quarter. Furthermore, Fugro has reached an agreement with lenders for refinancing of current revolving credit facility into a new EUR 500 million 5-year facility.

 

 

 

 

 

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Rig ‘Graveyard’ Looms as Statoil Cuts North Sea Drillers Loose

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The pressure is building on North Sea drillers starved of contracts as Statoil ASA deepens cuts in investment to cope with a collapse in crude prices.

In less than 18 months, Norway’s biggest oil company has scrapped four years worth of drilling by canceling or suspending rig contracts, according to Bloomberg calculations based on Statoil statements. That includes Monday’s cancellation of a Songa Offshore rig four months early.

The cuts by Statoil, operator of more than 70 percent of Norway’s oil and gas production, are bad news for companies including Transocean Ltd., Seadrill Ltd.’s North Atlantic Drilling Ltd. unit and Fred Olsen Energy ASA, which have floating rigs idling or completing offshore contracts in the country in the coming year, analysts said. By the time the market turns, they may be forced to scrap as many as 20 units in Norway and the U.K., said Janne Kvernland of Nordea Markets.

“We’ll have a graveyard out in the North Sea,” she said in a phone interview. “A lot of rigs are coming off contract, and if Statoil isn’t taking any of them, who will?”

HEAVY TOLL

The almost 60 percent slump in oil prices over the past 16 months has taken a heavy toll on offshore drillers as producers slash investment budgets to shield their cash flow and maintain dividends. With charter rates down by more than half over the past two years, rig owners including Transocean, Seadrill and Ensco Plc have cut their own shareholder payouts, slashed costs and renegotiated contracts to weather a storm that most operators see lasting to at least 2017.

Still, more than 40 floating rigs have been retired from a global fleet of about 300, Pareto Securities AS said in an Oct. 21 note to clients. And there’s more to come: as many as 100 units will need to be scrapped to create balance in the market, according to Nordea, Rystad Energy AS, an Oslo-based consultant firm, and Andrew Cosgrove, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.

Between 10 and 20 of those could come in the Norway and the U.K. as returning older idled rigs to the market may prove too expensive, Kvernland said.

Investment by oil companies in Norway is expected to fall 11 percent this year and a further 8 percent next year, according to the Finance Ministry. Demand for offshore rigs in Norwegian waters will be about 18 to 20 units next year, with the equivalent of 27 rigs available, said Rystad analyst Joachim Bjoerni.

“There are few jobs waiting out there,” he said. “There will be decisions to be made on scrapping of even more units.”

Spokesmen for Transocean, Fred Olsen Energy and North Atlantic Drilling couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

MORE EFFICIENT

Statoil, which aims to reduce the time per offshore well by 25 percent by 2016 as part of a companywide efficiency program, is already drilling about the same number of wells as during the past two years with fewer rigs, said spokesman Morten Eek. The company plans to complete 16 exploration wells as an operator this year, he said. That’s down from 21 in 2014, according to figures from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

“Statoil’s responsibility is to secure long-term value creation on the Norwegian shelf,” Eek said in an e-mailed response to questions. “We don’t want to suspend or cancel rigs, but a part of that responsibility implies taking measures to reduce costs, so we can realize profitable projects.”

 

 

 

 

 

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New Subsea Cable to Connect Cyprus and Greece

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Cyta and Telecom Italia Sparkle announced that the new KIMONAS subsea cable subsystem linking Cyprus with Crete will come into full commercial service by the end of 2015.

KIMONAS will be Cyta’s first wholly owned optical fibre cable subsystem connecting Cyprus and Greece. The subsystem, that will connect Cyta’s cable station in Pentaskhinos with MedNautilus Cable Station in Chania, complements alternative Cyta’s segments on the MedNautilus subsea cable network and in particular the MINERVA and ATHENA rings, which connect Cyprus with Sicily, and Athens with Crete, the company explained.

According to Cyta, KIMONAS will facilitate the creation of a new telecommunications corridor, connecting the Balkans and Central Europe with Egypt and other Middle East destinations, via Cyprus. At the same time, it will allow the interconnection to Turkey in the East and Italy and other European destinations in the West, through Telecom Italia Sparkle’s network.

“Through Cyta’s extensive international telecommunications infrastructure, comprising multiple subsea cable systems connecting with neighbouring countries and other international destinations, Cyprus currently constitutes a major telecommunications hub in the Mediterranean region. At the same time, Cyta Hellas boasts an extensive fiber optic cable network more than 5,500 km long, covering more than 70% of the population of Greece and extending  from south in Crete, all the way to the north of Greece and beyond, to neighbouring Balkan countries. The new KIMONAS cable subsystem offers Cyta and Cyta Hellas, reciprocal business opportunities to access new markets in Europe and the Middle East, providing synergies for the Cyta Group via a common Cyprus – Greece front, creating a major telecommunications bridge between East and West,” says Yiannis Koulias, Cyta Hellas’ CEO and Cyta’s Director National & International Wholesale Market.

“The agreement for KIMONAS subsystem fosters a new partnership between the Cyta Group and Telecom Italia Sparkle that enhances the strategic role of Cyta as a major cable hub in the Eastern Mediterranean, and strengthens TI Sparkle’s position in the region, presenting opportunities for additional successful joint projects, and enabling both Cyta and TI Sparkle to better serve their customers,” says Michalis Achilleos, Cyta’s CEO.

“With this new agreement that follows the many others that we have implemented in previous years, Cyta proves once more to be one of Telecom Italia Sparkle most relevant and reliable partners in the region,” says Zvika Caspy, Telecom Italia Sparkle Executive Vice President Sales for Europe.

“This new endeavour strengthens the strategic relationship with our partner Cyta even more and at the same time, it enables us to consolidate our position as the leading IP and Data service provider in the Mediterranean, leveraging our proprietary fully protected state-of-the-art subsea network system that connects major telecommunications markets of the region, including Greece and Turkey, to Italy and the rest of Europe,” says Alessandro Talotta, Chairman and CEO of Telecom Italia Sparkle.

 

 

 

 

 

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TransCanada Puts Brakes On Keystone XL

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Following a tumultuous election in which its chief advocate was ousted from public office, TransCanada Corp. has asked the Obama administration to pause its review of the presidential permit for the Keystone XL (KXL) pipeline.

The permit is necessary because it would cross an international border. For more than seven years, former Prime Minister of Canada, Stephen Harper, has lobbied the U.S. and its citizens on behalf of the pipeline. The $8 billion KXL was designed to bring Alberta’s heavy oil sands to the Gulf Coast for refining. A southern leg of the pipeline from Cushing, Okla., is already moving the heavy crude to refineries.

Russ Girling, TransCanada’s president and CEO, said in a statement that the company noted in the request to Secretary of State John Kerry that last year, when Nebraskan politicians objected to a route through their state, the State Department paused its review until that dispute was resolved.

“We feel under the current circumstances a similar suspension would be appropriate,” Girling said in the statement.

The Nebraska review could take up to 12 months to complete, which would put the presidential decision in the hands of a new U.S. president. However, the White House said in a statement on Nov. 2 – the same day TransCanada released the contents of the letter to Kerry – that President Barack Obama intended to make a decision on the KXL before leaving office.

While delays have turned into years that the KXL has languished, several other pipelines have come online to move the heavy crude south, raising some question as to the need for the controversial line.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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MRC in Johan Sverdrup Deal

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MRC Global has secured contracts, through its Norwegian subsidiaries, MRC Teamtrade and MRC Energy Piping, to support Statoil’s Johan Sverdrup project in the North Sea.

MRC Energy Piping will supply the pipe, fittings and flanges (PFF) to the processing and riser platforms of the Johan Sverdrup project. Statoil awarded the construction contract for the two platforms to Samsung Heavy Industries, who then awarded the PFF contract to MRC Energy Piping. According to the company, the contract is the largest single award in MRC Energy Piping’s history.

MRC Teamtrade will supply the instrumentation products for all four platforms throughout the lifetime of the field. This includes Hoke Gyrolok fittings, instrument valves and manifolds, BuTech high pressure fittings, tubing and valves, and instrument tubing, heat traced tubing, hoses and seal rings.

“Our January 2014 acquisition of Stream AS, part of our long-term strategy to expand internationally and grow our upstream offshore business, brought both MRC Teamtrade and MRC Energy Piping to our company,” Andrew Lane, MRC Global Chairman, President and CEO, said. “Their long-term relationships and excellent track record with Statoil, now one of our top 20 customers, has created this opportunity for growth even in the face of this challenging market. We are honored for the trust Statoil and Samsung Heavy Industries have placed in us.”

“We know that the success of Johan Sverdrup will require many different suppliers, including MRC Energy Piping and MRC Teamtrade, to deliver quality products, on-time, with precision,” Steinar Aasland, MRC Global Senior VP – International Operations, said. “This is a team effort and we look forward to working with Samsung Heavy Industries and Statoil on such an important project for Norway.”

AquaComms Teams Up with Digital Realty on AEConnect

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Digital Realty Trust, a provider of data center solutions, is partnering with AquaComms, a provider of scalable, subsea capacity-based network solutions, in deploying its new transatlantic fiber optic system, America Europe Connect (AEConnect).

Spanning more than 5,400 kilometers across the Atlantic Ocean, between Long Island and the west coast of Ireland, with stubbed branching units for future landings, AEConnect is currently expected to be available in Digital Realty’s data center at 32 Avenue of the Americas by the end of 2015, and the company plans to expand availability to its two other New York facilities at 111 8th Avenue and 60 Hudson Street as well. The subsea cable features the technology of 130 gigabits per second by 100 gigabits per second, per fiber pair, which will provide low-latency connectivity from New York to London and beyond to greater Europe.

“Digital Realty’s combination of 60 Hudson Street, 111 8th Avenue and 32 Avenue of the Americas creates a market-leading trifecta for data center and colocation services in the New York metropolitan area,” said Anthony Rossabi, Senior Vice President & Managing Director, Telx. “With AEConnect linking New York and London, we are excited to offer enterprises, carriers and mobile operators access to private network bandwidth between two of the largest commercial centers in the world.”

“We are excited about this collaboration as Digital Realty’s global footprint and unique ecosystem of open solutions will allow us to meet the continuously increasing demand for reliable, high-capacity connectivity between North America and Europe,” said Greg Varisco, Chief Operations Officer at AquaComms. “Digital Realty offers cutting edge data center solutions in the New York metropolitan area and beyond, which will allow our customers to extend existing networks and expand into new markets.”

Is ConocoPhillips’ Exit from DeepWater A Harbinger of The Sector Drying Up?

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In the wake of ConocoPhillips’ impromptu declaration that its exiting deep-water exploration during an analyst call last week, the sector itself appears to be bleak territory.

Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. said in a Monday note to investors that the industry has been moving away from deepwater exploration.

“In a lower for longer environment, [COP’s departure] is likely the right move as a dearth of industry success combined with long lead investment cycles on development continue to put pressure on capital budgets in an uncertain world,” TPH said, adding that other exploration and production (E&P) companies heavy in deepwater may have to turn to mergers and acquisitions (M&A) to survive.

Since 2013, TPH estimated $90 billion has been spent on deepwater exploration. At today’s market prices, that could buy plenty of cash flow and known development opportunities.

At Evercore ISI, analysts noted that offshore day rates are hitting new lows. Newbuild floater numbers are down and those that are contracted are expected to be delayed.

“The industry continues to seek out the stability needed for a sustainable offshore recovery, and the offshore sector as a whole remains bleak in our view,” Evercore said.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Chevron Brings Lianzi Field Online

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Chevron’s subsidiary, Chevron Overseas (Congo) Limited, has started oil and gas production from the Lianzi Field, located in a unitized offshore zone between the Republic of Congo and the Republic of Angola.

Located 65 miles (105 km) offshore in approximately 3,000 feet (900 meters) of water, Lianzi is Chevron’s first operated asset in the Republic of Congo and the first cross-border oil development project offshore Central Africa. The project is expected to produce an average of 40,000 barrels of crude oil per day, the company said.

“This milestone demonstrates that we continue to make steady progress on delivering major development projects,” said Jay Johnson, executive vice president Upstream, Chevron Corporation.“We have the industry’s strongest queue of major capital projects that are expected deliver significant value and production growth.”

“As the first offshore energy development spanning national boundaries in the Central Africa region, Lianzi represents a unique cooperative approach to share offshore resources and may serve as a model for the development of similar cross-border fields between two countries,” said Ali Moshiri, president of Chevron Africa and Latin America Exploration and Production Company.

The field, discovered in 2004, includes a subsea production system and a 27 mile (43 km) electrically heated flowline system, the first of its kind at this water depth. The system transports the oil from the field to the Benguela Belize–Lobito Tomboco platform in Angola’s Block 14 and utilizes a Direct Electrical Heating (DEH) system to ensure fluid flow under a wide range of conditions.

Chevron Overseas (Congo) Limited is operator of the Lianzi Field and has a 15.75 percent interest, along with its affiliate Cabinda Gulf Oil Company Limited (15.5 percent), Total E&P Congo (26.75 percent), Angola Block 14 BV (10 percent), Eni (10 percent), Sonangol P&P (10 percent), SNPC (the Republic of Congo National Oil Company – 7.5 percent), and GALP (4.5 percent).

Petrobras Oil Workers Begin Strike, Seek to Block Asset Sales

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Brazil’s main oil union began a nationwide strike Sunday to halt asset sales by state-controlled Petroleo Brasileiro SA at a time the company is slashing investments to reduce the biggest debt load in the oil industry. The Oil Workers Federation, known as FUP, said the nationwide strike started on Nov. 1. Some of the FUP’s regional member unions began work stoppages on Oct. 29.

FUP also wants Petrobras to resume investments in the refining network and maintain Buy in Brazil policies to protect jobs, it said in the statement in its website. Petrobras said in an e-mailed statement sent to Bloomberg News that a work stoppage from some units won’t affect its production or deliveries to the market.

The strike is the latest in a series of setbacks for the Brazilian producer, which had its debt downgraded to non- investment grade in September as it tries to deal with a collapse in commodity prices and a widening graft scandal that has resulted in some of its suppliers seeking bankruptcy protection. Petrobras plans to continue holding talks with the union and it has offered an 8.1 percent wage adjustment, the company said in the statement.

The union has been negotiating with Petrobras for more than 100 days, it said on its website. Petrobras plans to sell $15.1 billion in assets this year and in 2016 to raise cash for investments and debt reduction. On Oct. 24, Petrobras’s board approved the sale of a 49 percent stake in its gas pipeline unit Gaspetro to Mitsui & Co Ltd. for 1.9 billion reais ($490 million). 

 

 

 

 

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