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OIL AND GAS
British government reviews shale oil potential in country's southeast
by Daniel J. Graeber
London (UPI) May 23, 2013


Spanish energy company sells off stake in Argentina
Madrid (UPI) May 23, 2013 - Spanish oil company Repsol said Friday it sold off its stake in Argentina's YPF and the bonds it received from the nationalization of the state energy company.

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner signed legislation in 2012 to seize the YPF shares held by the Spanish energy company

Repsol said Friday it completed the sale of its assets in Argentina to JP Morgan Securities including the bonds it received as compensation for the expropriation of its 51 percent stake in YPF.

"From the sale of the entire holding of Argentinean bonds, Repsol has obtained a total $4.99 billion in compensation for the expropriation," Repsol said in a statement. "This extinguishes the $5 billion debt recognized by Argentina."

Repsol's board of directors rejected a compensation offer made in June by the Argentine government.

That deal would have given Repsol drilling rights to Argentina's vast Vaca Muerta shale natural gas field and 47 percent ownership in a new company.

The British government said Friday it estimates there may be as much as 8.5 billion barrels of oil in a shale basin in the southeast of the country.

The British Geological Survey and Department of Energy and Climate Change published data Friday on the Weald basin in the southeast of the country.

It said there may be between 2.2 billion and 8.5 billion barrels of shale oil in place, with its central estimate at 4.4 billion barrels.

"No significant gas resource is recognized using the current geological model," a BGS statement read. "This is mainly because the shale is not thought to have reached the geological maturity required to generate gas."

For oil, BGS said its estimate represents the total amount of oil locked in shale deposits and is not a representation of what's commercially extractable for energy explorers.

British Energy Minister Michael Fallon said Friday the government launched a consultation process to make it easier for companies to drill into shale gas and oil deposits.

"Britain needs more home-grown energy," he said in a statement. "Shale development will bring jobs and business opportunities."

Shale exploration in the country is in its infancy.

British Friends of the Earth campaigner Brenda Pollack said BGS shale oil estimates will "set alarm bells ringing" though communities worried about hydraulic fracturing, the controversial drilling practice dubbed fracking.

"Rather than drilling for more dirty fossil fuels that will add to climate change, the government should be backing renewable power and energy efficiency," she said in a statement.

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