Just a year ago, the prospects for oil and gas exploration in this country looked bleak. Brazil's Petrobras had just surrendered its permit off the East Cape, citing mediocre survey results, a blow made all the more severe by the earlier decisions of Exxon Mobil and Todd Energy to withdraw from the technically challenging Great South Basin.
Additionally, innovations in fracking and horizontal drilling had paved the way for a surge in shale-gas production, especially in the United States. International explorers appeared to have little interest in New Zealand. It is particularly welcome, therefore, that Shell has announced it will drill an exploratory well in the Great South Basin.
The venture will involve an initial investment of up to $200 million. That sum represents a strong show of commitment by Shell and its joint-venture partners, OMV NZ and Mitsui E&P Australia. Their analysis of seismic data clearly suggests a degree of confidence about the prospectivity of the basin. They are not the first to have taken that view, of course. Eight wells were drilled in the basin between 1976 and 1984. Hydrocarbons were recorded in four. But the difficulties inherent in a water depth of about 1,300m, the isolation of the area and other problems have meant all the wells were deemed to be non-commercial.
Improved technology means there is now greater prospect of a commercial strike. This progress will be evident in the actual drilling, which will be done by a semi-submersible rig or possibly a drill ship. But there is still a long way to go before the basin bears any resemblance to its much-touted image as the next Taranaki. A successful Shell test well within two years would have to be followed by a network of appraisal wells before commercial production could be considered. That could take a decade. Shell considers a large-scale oil find a remote possibility, and says a Maui-size reserve of gas would be necessary for commercial production. Most likely, the gas would be converted to LNG and exported to Asia.
Shell's decision is important for several reasons. New Zealand, as much as the explorer, needs to know the extent of its oil and gas resources. Even Taranaki has been explored only moderately. The Great South Basin is an important part of this puzzle, and Shell's exploration will, hopefully, act as a spur to Woodside Petroleum, which, with New Zealand Oil and Gas, was last month granted a licence in the same region.