Orinoco Petroleum Belt | |
Country: | Venezuela |
Location: | Guárico, Anzoátegui, Monagas, Delta Amacuro |
Offonshore: | Onshore |
Operator: | Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. |
Partners: | Petróleos de Venezuela S.A., Chevron Corporation, Repsol YPF, Mitsubishi Corporation, Inpex, Suelopetrol CA, Eni, PetroVietnam, Petronas, Petropar, ONGC, Indian Oil Corporation, Oil India, CNPC, Rosneft, Gazprom Neft, Lukoil, TNK-BP, Surgutneftegaz |
Start Production: | 2013 (expected) |
Est Oil Bbl: | 1300000 |
The Orinoco Belt is a territory in the southern strip of the eastern Orinoco River Basin in Venezuela which overlies the world's largest deposits of petroleum. Its local Spanish name is Faja Petrolífera del Orinoco (Orinoco Petroleum Belt).
The Orinoco Belt is located in Guárico and south of the Anzoátegui, Monagas, and Delta Amacuro states, and it follows the line of the river. It is approximately 600km (400miles) from east to west, and 70km (40miles) from north to south, with an area about 55314km².
The Orinoco Belt consists of large deposits of extra heavy crude. Venezuela's heavy oil deposits of about 1200Goilbbl, found primarily in the Orinoco Petroleum Belt, are estimated to approximately equal the world's reserves of lighter oil.[1] Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. has estimated that the producible reserves of the Orinoco Belt are up to 235Goilbbl which would make it the largest petroleum reserve in the world, slightly ahead of the similar unconventional oil source in the Athabasca oil sands, and above Saudi Arabia.[2] In 2009, the US Geological Survey increased the estimated reserves to 513Goilbbl of oil which is "technically recoverable (producible using currently available technology and industry practices)." No estimate of how much of the oil is economically recoverable was made.[3]
The Orinoco Belt is currently divided into four exploration and production areas. These are: Boyacá (formerly Machete), Junín (formerly Zuata), Ayacucho (formerly Hamaca), and Carabobo (formerly Cerro Negro). The current exploration area is about .
On January 7, 1936, Standard Oil of New Jersey, with the drilling of the well "La Canoa-1" located near the community of La Canoa (state of Anzoategui), began the exploitation of the Orinoco Oil Belt (FPO). That well was active for 44 days, producing approximately one thousand net barrels of crude oil per day. But by then, the exploitation activities were abandoned due to the difficulty in extracting the extra-heavy hydrocarbons. In 1938, the first well discovering hydrocarbons was drilled with the name "Zuata 1"
Source:The data in this section are taken directly from the official PDVSA web page.
Venezuela power policy guidelines until the year 2030 are drawn up in the "Oil Sowing Plan" ("Plan Siembra Petrolera"), which includes six development projects and consists of two stages: one to be executed in the period 2005–2012, and another, to be developed in the second stage, 2012 and 2030.
For the first period of this Plan, an overall investment of around US$56 billion has been estimated between 2005 and 2012. 70% of that amount will be financed by Venezuela - state operator - and the rest by the private sector.
Oil Sowing Plan 2005–2012 includes six fundamental axes:
Production blocks will be developed by PDVSA in cooperation with foreign partners. In all partnership PDVSA owns 60%.[5]
Junín block 1 was discovered in 2009 and developed by PDVSA. The oil field is operated and owned by PDVSA. The total proven reserves of the Junín-1 oil field are around, and production is centered on 200000oilbbl/d.[6]
Junin block 2 is under development in cooperation with Petrovietnam. SNC-Lavalin was awarded the engineering contract on March 10, 2010. It is expected to produce by 2011. The development will include also a heavy crude upgrader; however, its commissioning date is not specified.
Junín Block 3 was discovered in 2009 and developed by PDVSA. The oil field is operated and owned by PDVSA. The total proven reserves of the Junín-3 oil field are around, and production is centered on 200000oilbbl/d.[7]
Junin block 4 is developed in cooperation with CNPC (40%). It is expected to produce ; however, the commissioning date is not announced.
Junin block 5 is developed in cooperation with Eni (40%). It is expected to produce by 2013 with late production of . The development will include an oil refinery for production of motor fuels. Junin block 6 is developed in cooperation with a consortium of Russian oil companies, including Rosneft, Gazprom Neft, Lukoil, TNK-BP and Surgutneftegaz. It is expected to produce ; however, the commissioning date is not announced.[5]
Junín block 7 was discovered in 2009 and developed by PDVSA. The oil field is operated and owned by PDVSA. The total proven reserves of the Junín-7 oil field are around, and production is centered on 200000oilbbl/d.[8]
Junín block 8 was discovered in 2009 and developed by PDVSA. The oil field is operated and owned by PDVSA. The total proven reserves of the Junín-8 oil field are around .[9] The same year, PDVSA and Sinopec signed an agreement to collaborate on the development of the block,[10] whose future production was estimated to be 200000oilbbl/d.[11]
The Junín block 10 was discovered in 2009 and developed by PDVSA. The oil field is operated and owned by PDVSA. The total proven reserves of the Junín-10 oil field are around, and production is centered on 220000oilbbl/d.[12]
Carabobo 1 is developed in cooperation with Repsol YPF (11%), Petronas (11%), ONGC (11%), Indian Oil Corporation (3.5%), and Oil India (3.5%). It consists of Carabobo block 1 North and block 1 Central. The expected production output will be by 2013. The upgrader is expected to be ready by 2017.[5]
Carabobo 3 is developed in cooperation with Chevron Corporation (34%), Suelopetrol (1%) pct, and Mitsubishi Corporation and Inpex (5%). It consists of Carabobo block 2 South, block 3, and block 5. The expected production output will be by 2013. The upgrader is expected to be ready by 2017.[5]
Carabobo 2 will be developed in cooperation with Rosneft and Corporation Venezolana del Petroleo (CVP) - a subsidiary of Venezuela's state oil and gas company PDVSA. The agreement, signed by Rosneft CEO Igor Sechin and Venezuelan Oil Minister, PDVSA chief Rafael Ramirez in the presence of President Hugo Chávez, establishes a joint venture to develop the Carabobo 2 bloc in the southern Orinoco extra-heavy crude belt in Venezuela.
The signed memorandum established Rosneft's share will be 40 percent. Rosneft will pay CVP a bonus of $1.1 billion, paid out in two installments: $440 million within ten days after the establishment of the joint venture, and the rest after Rosneft makes the final decision on the project. In addition, Rosneft will issue a $1.5 billion loan to CVP for five years. The loan will be provided in tranches of not more than $300 million annually at the annual interest rate of LIBOR+5.5 percent.To develop the Carabobo 2 bloc Rosneft will invest a total of $16 billion, according to CEO Igor Sechin. The Carabobo 2 bloc's reserves total 6.5 billion metric tons of crude. Commercial oil production at the bloc is expected to hit 400,000 barrels per day.Rosneft, along with several Russian oil companies (Gazprom Neft, Lukoil, TNK-BP and Surgutneftegaz), have formed a consortium to develop the Junin bloc 6 of the Orinoco belt in Venezuela.
The formation waters from the boreholes show a main Na-Cl level (TDS up to 30g/L) with a dilution trend toward Na-HCO3 composition (down to 1g/L). The stable isotope ratio of oxygen and hydrogen of water molecule reveal that the seawater mother water was modified during a high-temperature thrusting event (120–125 °C), forming 18O-enriched diagenetic water (up to +4‰), which was diluted in recent times by glacial meltwater and presentday meteoric water. The hypothetical presence of flood by a meteoric paleo-water also offers new hints to explain the low API gravity (<10°API biodegraded, extra heavy oil) and composition of the local crude.[13]