Updated August 2015
The thawing of relations between the United States and Cuba after fifty years of pointless embargo is interesting, particularly given that American business investments that were nationalized in 1959, may at some point be reopened to U.S.-based companies. As a petroleum geoscientist and a world class cynic, my mind naturally turns to oil, the hydrocarbon that lubricates the world's economy. As you will see in this posting, Cuba appears to have potential for significant hydrocarbon reserves.
The thawing of relations between the United States and Cuba after fifty years of pointless embargo is interesting, particularly given that American business investments that were nationalized in 1959, may at some point be reopened to U.S.-based companies. As a petroleum geoscientist and a world class cynic, my mind naturally turns to oil, the hydrocarbon that lubricates the world's economy. As you will see in this posting, Cuba appears to have potential for significant hydrocarbon reserves.
Under the current embargo, Cuba cannot access U.S.
oilfield equipment for both drilling and environmental protection. The
embargo prohibits the exporting and re-exporting of items that contain more
than 10 percent American components under the De Minimus Rule under Sections 734.4 and 736.2
(b)(2) of the Export Administration Regulations (EAR). What is
particularly interesting about the embargo is the fact that Washington refued
to allow an exemption for U.S. oil spill prevention and response companies even
though the Obama Administration was very concerned about potential oil spills
from drilling operations located relatively close to the U.S. - Cuba maritime
boundary in 2012.
Let's look at Cuba's
hydrocarbon potential. According to the Energy Information Administration, Cuba
produced 51,000 barrels of oil per day (BOPD) in 2012 and consumed 151,000
BOPD; the shortfall is made up of imported crude from Venezuela. Here is
a graph showing Cuba's total daily oil production from 1980 to 2013:
Here is a graph showing
Cuba's oil consumption from 1980 to 2013:
As of January 2013, Cuba
had 124 million barrels of proven oil reserves.
Here is a map showing the main geological features and the current oil fields (current to 2002):
Here is a table showing
Cuba's main oil fields, the year of discovery, the gravity of the crude and the
production statistics for each:
Here is a map showing the current areas
under lease for oil exploration and the companies involved dated in 2012:
You will notice the conspicuous absence of any American multi-national oil companies.
The most prospective area
for oil in Cuba is called the North Cuba Basin. It is located in the Gulf
of Mexico, along the north shore of the island. The United States
Geological Survey (USGS) has divided the basin into three parts or assessment
units; the North Cuban Platform Margin Carbonate, the North Cuba Foreland Basin
and the North Cuba Fold and Thrust Belt as noted on this map:
It is important to
remember that the geology of the Caribbean area is very complex, making it
difficult to ascertain the precise geological history of the region.
Petroleum was generated
in the North Cuba Basin as a result of thrust loading (pushing rock layers
laterally) of Jurassic and Cretaceous oil source rocks during the formation of
the North Cuba Fold and Thrust Belt. As the rocks of the Caribbean plate
were thrust toward the north as the Yucatan Basin opened, they collided with
the passive southern margin of the North American plate, creating a very
complex series of structures into which petroleum fluids migrated. This
cross section (a slice cut through the earth with the surface located at the
top of the diagram) will give you a sense of the geological complexity of the North Cuba Basin:
Here are two seismic
lines showing the complexity of the faults in the North Cuba Basin with the
seismic lines marked in red on the map:
Let's look at each
of the three assessment units in turn.
1.) The North Cuba
Fold and Thrust Belt: This assessment unit is mainly located onshore.
This is the region that contains all of the known oil and gas fields
currently producing in the North Cuba Basin. The structural history of
the area is very complex with many folds and faults often stacked on each
other. The oil in most of the current reservoirs is quite heavy (20
degrees API or less) probably due to biodegradation as a result of the
shallowness of the reservoirs. One of the biggest operators in this
assessment unit is Canada's Sherritt International who has been operating in Cuba for more
than 20 years. Sherritt is currently producing 20,042 BOPD (100 percent
basis - 2013 data) and has drilled more than 195 oil wells since 1992.
2.) The North Cuba
Foreland Basin: This assessment unit is entirely located offshore. At
the time of the analysis by the USGS (2008), only one well had been drilled in
this assessment unit by Repsol in 2004. The well encountered high quality
oil in non-commercial quantities. Hydrocarbons are trapped in structural
features and reservoirs are expected to have excellent porosity. It is
unknown whether the main hydrocarbons present will be oil or natural gas,
however, estimates used suggest that new fields would be 90 percent oil fields
and 10 percent gas fields.
3.) The North Cuba
Platform Margin Carbonate: This assessment unit is smaller in area than the
other two units, however, the reservoirs may be much more prolific with very
high levels of porosity based on analogies from rocks of equivalent age
elsewhere in the Gulf of Mexico. At the time of the USGS assessment,
there had been no drilling in this assessment unit. It is estimated that
reservoirs in this unit will be oil-charged.
Now, let's look at a
table showing the potential resources of the North Cuba Basin:
The USGS estimates that
there could be up to 4.6 billion barrels of oil and 9.8 TCF of natural gas in
the North Cuba Basin. The natural gas component is composed of 8.6 TCF of
associated/dissolved gas (dissolved in oil) and 1.2 TCF of non-associated gas.
Most of the oil will be found in the North Cuba Foreland Basin and all of
the non-associated gas will be found in the North Cuba Foreland Basin.
While the oil and natural
gas resource assessment by the USGS is speculative, it suggests that with
further drilling, Cuba could contain substantial (and valuable) reserves of
hydrocarbons. This is particularly interesting in light of the fact that Cuba approached Russia for assistance with their oil drilling program; in May 2014, Russia's Rosneft and Zarubezhneft signed an energy agreement with Cuba to explore for offshore oil. Given that, once the embargo is lifted, it will be interesting to see
how long it takes before major American oil companies are lining up to acquire
drilling rights in Cuba.
What i find interesting most is that the President admitted that the embargo/ isolation didn't work. Why then does the US government think North Korea, Syria, Iran, Russia, Sudan will then suffer anything from their supposed sanctions and isolation?
ReplyDeleteCuban history is full of rebellion. Other places are pure evil and more threatening. Hence the axis of evil. Cuba is 90 miles away. No one supported the embargo on Cuba except the USA. More good comes from taking them under our wing.
ReplyDeleteOdd that the timing of this coincides with the biggest drop in oil prices in years...
ReplyDeleteI guess that we have to consider that the diplomatic talks began over a year ago when oil prices were much higher than they are now.
DeleteA great many of the evils inflicted on the Cuban people were necessary to prevent the CIA from engineering an overthrow of the government. Using Cuba as an example of communism's economic failure is a sad joke. If they had been able to trade with America as a normal country and not feared the CIA, the country would be a glowing success story. It was a nice place for my kids to holiday. Now it will be full of American tourists and they will have to find somewhere else.
ReplyDelete