FILE PHOTO: Amin H. Nasser, president and CEO of Saudi Aramco speaks during inauguration of IKTVA Forum and Exhibition 2020 at Dhahran Expo Center, in Dammam, Saudi Arabia, February 24, 2020.
DAMMAM, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) - Saudi Aramco is launching the biggest shale gas development outside of the United States to boost domestic gas supply and end the burning of oil at its power generation plants, Chief Executive Officer Amin Nasser told Reuters on Monday.
The world’s top crude oil exporter has for years battled for market share with rapidly expanding shale oil producers in the United States, which in just a decade have developed capacity to pump millions of barrels per day of oil from rock formations that were previously too costly to tap.
Saudi Arabia fought a price war aimed at putting the U.S. shale industry out of business just six years ago, which ultimately failed. Now, the country has adopted the techniques developed in U.S. fields - which started with gas - for the huge $110 billion Jafurah shale gas field project.
Aramco said it received the go ahead for the project on Saturday.
If Aramco hits its targets for development of the field, Saudi Arabia would become the world’s third largest gas producer by 2030. The world’s top two gas producers are the United States and Russia.
Nasser said Aramco had developed fracking using seawater, which will remove the obstacle that a lack of water supply represents to fracking in the desert.
“A new shale revolution is taking place (in Saudi Arabia), it’s commercial and we are using seawater,” in the fracking process, Nasser said in an interview in Saudi Arabia’s oil-producing Eastern Province.
“A lot of people said it doesn’t work outside the U.S.... because fracking uses a lot of water and we are not rich with water. But we are using seawater.”
Aramco has drilled 150 wells since 2013 in the Jafurah shale gas field to prepare the development plan, he said.
The Saudi state oil group has worked with international oil service companies such as U.S.-based Schlumberger (SLB.N), Halliburton Co. (HAL.N) and Baker Hughes Co. (BKR.N) on the field and to develop the technology to fracture the rock and release the oil and gas it holds, a technology known as fracking. Those firms are active in U.S. shale fields.
Aramco will hold bidding rounds for work on the fields, and these and other firms are likely to be involved, Nasser said.
Reuters
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