Poland PGNiG Plans PLN27B Investment, Over Half On Upstream

Poland's natural gas monopoly PGNiG SA plans to invest about 27 billion zlotys ($9.8 billion) through 2015, over half of which will be spent on ramping up the company's exploration and extraction of conventional and unconventional hydrocarbons. Under a revised strategy, PGNiG, or Polskie Gornictwo Naftowe i Gazownictwo, is aiming to increase annual domestic production of natural gas by 9% to 4.5 billion cubic meters and to double domestic crude oil production to 1 million metric tons, while continuing to expand exploration and extraction activity abroad
/photos/oil 6.jpg
Πεμ, 30 Ιουνίου 2011 - 18:24

Poland's natural gas monopoly PGNiG SA plans to invest about 27 billion zlotys ($9.8 billion) through 2015, over half of which will be spent on ramping up the company's exploration and extraction of conventional and unconventional hydrocarbons.

Under a revised strategy, PGNiG, or Polskie Gornictwo Naftowe i Gazownictwo, is aiming to increase annual domestic production of natural gas by 9% to 4.5 billion cubic meters and to double domestic crude oil production to 1 million metric tons, while continuing to expand exploration and extraction activity abroad.

"Single-product companies like PGNiG or [German gas trader Verbundnetz Gas AG or VNG] don't have a future," Chief Executive Michal Szubski said at a news conference Thursday. "So we're looking for new sources of revenue."

PGNiG's classic business has been buying natural gas from Russia's Gazprom OAO and selling it to companies and households in Poland at prices set by a national regulator.

State-controlled PGNiG plans to "focus on exploration and extraction of hydrocarbons [in Poland], as it sees this as the most attractive and profitable course of action," the company said. "The search for unconventional gas, especially shale gas, as well as conventional gas deep underground, will be especially important new initiatives."

The company reiterated its goal to increase its domestic and foreign production of natural gas to 6.2 billion cubic meters and of crude oil to 1.8 million tons a year and has earmarked PLN14.7 billion for upstream capital expenditures to achieve this.

PGNiG plans to continue drilling test wells to deepen its knowledge of whether and how the extraction of shale gas from its 15 Polish concessions will be commercially viable. The company plans to drill three shale gas test wells in 2011, with one already completed in Wejcherowo in northern Poland.

It will devote "as many resources to this goal as will be necessary," the company said, adding that the cost of one well ranges from PLN10 million to PLN100 million.

PGNiG, in which the Polish government holds a 72.43% stake, is hoping to play a leading role in the country's embryonic shale gas industry, based on a resource Prime Minister Donald Tusk has called a "great chance" for Poland. The unconventional gas industry, while still in its infancy in Poland, could create thousands of jobs and, eventually, export revenue. If it turns out to be economically viable to extract, it would free Poland, and perhaps much of Europe, from dependence on Russian natural gas supplies.

To capitalize on booming demand for drilling services from western companies that have also rushed into Poland in search of shale, PGNiG plans to list one of its subsidiaries, drilling contractor Poszukiwania Nafty i Gazu Jaslo, on the Warsaw Stock Exchange, PGNiG executives said.

PGNiG isn't giving up on its activities abroad, however, "mainly in Norway," where it expects extraction to start on the Skarv field in the second half of 2011.

At current market prices, PGNiG plans its sales from extraction in Norway to reach $500 million in 2012, if extraction reaches about 90,000 tons of crude and about 100 million cubic meters of gas in 2011, as forecast.

Following Japan's Fukushima nuclear disaster and Germany's decision to close all of its reactors, PGNiG sees the outlook for gas-fired power generation as bright, especially as it complements renewable power sources such as wind and solar and is less emissions-intensive than other fossil fuels, including the coal on which 95% of Polish power generation is based.

Gas-fired power plants can be quickly turned off and on, enabling them to fill-in during lulls of wind or little sunshine.

PGNiG's role in this sector will be both as a gas supplier and an investor. The company plans to spend about PLN2.9 billion on power-related investments through 2015.

Beyond its updated 2011-2015 strategy, PGNiG sees overall spending on capital expenditures from now through 2020 at PLN50 billion, Deputy Chief Executive Radoslaw Dudzinski said.