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The U.S. asset foreign companies want (and are buying)

By | January 3, 2012, 12:54 PM PST

Foreign interest in U.S. and Canadian shale gas assets is one energy trend that has spilled over into the new year.

Two foreign companies announced today major shale gas purchases. French oil giant Total paid $2.32 billion for a 25 percent stake in Ohio’s Utica shale region from Chesapeake Energy. Separately, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., known as Sinopec, announced it agreed to buy a 30 percent stake in five Devon Energy shale operations for about $2.2 billion.

Over at SmartPlanet’s Intelligent Energy, we typically focus on “innovation” within the energy industry, oftentimes in the cleantech and renewables sectors. The shale-gas buying spree might not qualify under the conventional definition of the word. But it’s certainly reshaping the industry in the United States.

Why does Chinese company like Sinopec so interested in U.S. gas shale anyway? It’s not just about the gas; or in the oil. It’s also technological know-how.

Sinopec and China-based CNOOC have aggressively sought out partnerships in an effort to gain the technology necessary to develop their own country’s shale reserves. And for good reason.  The U.S. Energy Administration said in April 2011 report that China has the world’s largest technically recoverable reserves of shale gas with an estimated 1,275 trillion cubic feet. The United States comes in at a distant second with 862 trillion cubic feet of technically recoverable reserves.

Of course, “technically recoverable” ignores all other constraints, like the cost of retrieving the stuff. Which is why technological innovation is so valuable in the world of unconventional natural gas. Better, more advanced technology can bring a shale gas asset that would otherwise be too expensive to produce into more economical territory.

Total has partnered with Chesapeake in the past. The oil company bought a stake in Chesapeake’s Barnett Shale field in Texas in 2010. Chespeake has sold stakes to other companies as well.

Deals like this make sense for U.S.-based gas producers like Chesapeake that hold a large number of drilling leases and acreage, but need the cash to develop the assets. With Total’s investment Chesapeake can use the cash to move forward with development more quickly. The company can also use the funds to make good on its promise to cut long-term debt 25 percent in two years.

Other foreign shale deals in 2011:

  • India’s GAIL bought a 20 percent stake (for $95 million) in Houston-based Carrizo Oil & Gas Inc.’s Eagle Shale Ford acreage. GAIL said at the time it would invest $300 million in the asset over the next five years.
  • UK mining company BHP Billiton bought U.S. shale gas producer Petrohawk Energy for $12.1 billion in July 2011.
  • Progress Energy Resources sold half of its working interest in three British Columbia shale properties to Petronas of Malaysia for $1.1 billion. The sale and a partnership with Petronas aims to help Progress finance the development of shale-gas reserves in western Canada.
  • Sasol, the South African motor fuels maker, paid $1.03 billion for a stake in Talisman Energy’s Canadian shale-gas assets.

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Kirsten Korosec

About Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Contributing Editor

Kirsten Korosec has written for Technology Review, Marketing News, The Hill, BNET and Bloomberg News. She holds a degree from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. She is based in Tucson, Arizona.

Follow her on Twitter.

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten Korosec

Kirsten does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Recovery of reserves of shale gas?
Recovery of reserves of shale gas? Why don't you call it by its more commonly recognized name, fracking?
Posted by lmarks@...
4th Jan 2012
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It's more than just 'fracking'
Hydraulic fracturing, which is often abbreviated to "fracking," is one method, and certainly the most controversial, that's used to unlock unconventional gas in shale formations. It's not the only method. It's also often used in combination with horizontal drilling.

I use "technically recoverable reserves" as an entry point to explain what this often misunderstand jargon term means.
Posted by kirsten korosec
5th Jan 2012
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Did U.S. companies make out like bandits in these deals?
Considering the rapid depletion rates of these 'fracking' wells (I've read estimates from some insiders that many of these well sites are running at 28-36% of peak production on average within a year), I'm suspicious that these foreign buyers are purchasing more hype than actual recoverable reserves. See: www.theoildrum.com/node/8212 My sources may be wrong, so I'd appreciate comments and links from those who know more than I do.
Posted by Economist Cory
4th Jan 2012
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Loopholes
Yeah, and I'll bet that not a single one of those companies that made money on these sales have or will pay a single penny in taxes on the profits they made due to tax loopholes...like GE and Exxon, and other huge american companies! *THAT'S* what's wrong with the USA. Big business making huge profits and not paying any federal income tax...if Companies are people (as in donating to political parties) then they should be *TAXED* like people!
GE made over 14 billion (billion...with a "B") dollars in profit for 2010. Yet paid nothing in federal taxes. Their 2010 tax return was over 57,000 pages long. If it were to be printed out on paper, it would have made a stack over 19 feet high...yet they paid nothing in taxes...While their subsidiaries in China *DID* pay chinese taxes...what's wrong with this picture?
Posted by tech_ed@...
5th Jan 2012
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