Tadi saya barusan ngobrol ama teman yg terlibat di eksplorasi shale gas di 
polandia ini. Katanya TOC nya rendah dibawah 1%. Dari foto core nya warnanya 
abu2, bukan seperti black shale yg di US. Jadi kayaknya bukan organic rich 
shale yg mereka dapatkan.

Naslin

From: "rakhmadi avianto"[email protected]
Sent:Wed, 20 Jun 2012 12:17:44 +0530
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [iagi-net-l] Shale gas news
Dari awal aku memang sudah curiga, mungkin ngga ya Shale Gas Exploration, dg 
exitnya EM dari Poland saya kira bukan hal yg main2. Saya yg alumnus EM merasa 
bahwa EM tidak pernah main2 dalam research di Houston setahu saya waktu di sana 
ada 600an lebih PHD yg kerja di Lab yg diambil dari lulusan hampir seluruh 
dunia dg GPA yg mendekati 4 yg diterima artinya lulusan Top of the nudge lah
> 
>Untuk Indonesia, mungkin tidak semua shale punya potential jadi Shale Gas, ini 
>yg belum di evaluasi, belum apa2 koq ujuk2 udah sekian TCF emang dari mana dan 
>dasarnya apa?
>
>Ingat RDP waktu jadi panelis di gas hydrate, acara Pertamina di Kempinski 
>Hotel, RDP mengusulkan harus ada Pilot Project dari Zero ke Hero, artinya 
>research yg ter-integrasi, ada G&G, ada drilling, dll krn menyangkut 
>fracturing dimana ada usaha dari shale yg nature-nya impermeable menjadi 
>permeable, tentu tidak mudah dan tentu perlu dedikasi yg tinggi dalam research 
>ini.
> 
>Salam,
>Avi NPA 06666
>Nomor cantik
>
>On Tue, Jun 19, 2012 at 4:38 PM, Fatrial Bahesti <[email protected]> 
>wrote:
>                                     Mudah2an shale exit tidak terjadi di 
> Indonesia, melainkan tetap exist for shale gas exploration..
>ExxonMobil in Poland shale exit                                                
>                                                                               
>                                                                             
>By Kathrine Schmidt and news wires                                             
>                            18 June 2012 18:00 GMT                             
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                                                  Following two disappointing 
test wells in January, ExxonMobil  has made the decision to call off further 
exploration there, a spokesman  said Monday.                                    
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                   
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                "There have been no demonstrated sustained commercial  
hydrocarbon flow rates in our two wells in the Lublin and Podlasie  
basins," ExxonMobil spokesman Patrick McGinn told Upstream in an 
email."We do not have additional drilling plans in 
 Poland."The  supermajor's chief executive Rex Tillerson in March 
alluded to some of  the technical challenges of drilling in rock formations 
that had  initially held high hopes for unconventional production.The US Energy 
Information Administration has pegged Poland as having among the largest shale 
reserves in Europe.Nonetheless,  ExxonMobil chief executive Rex Tillerson spoke 
to the technical  difficulties there in a New York meeting with analysts in 
March.“Some  of the shales don’t respond as well to hydraulic fracturing,” the 
news  wire quoted Tillerson as saying during a meeting with reporters after  
his presentation to analysts. “It’s going to take research and time in  the lab 
to understand that.”Reuters said that a government report  in March slashed 
estimates of Poland's shale gas reserves to 346  billion to 768 billion 
cubic meters, or about one-tenth of previous  estimates, denting hopes for an 
energy source that could play a key role  in w
 eaning Europe off Russian gas.Poland has granted 112 shale  exploration 
licences to ExxonMobil, Chevron and other firms, even as  some countries, 
including France and Bulgaria, have banned shale  exploration pending further 
environmental studies.The Poles are  keen to wean themselves off their heavy 
reliance on coal and imported  Russian gas, partly due to environmental 
commitments they face as a  European Union member nation."ExxonMobil 
realised that commercial  extraction was not possible with currently available 
technology. This  is a general problem in Poland that shale rocks are too tight 
to allow  extraction," an industry source told the news wire, asking not 
to be  identified.Abundant shale gas production in Poland poses a  potential 
threat to Russia's supremacy in Europe, where it supplies a  quarter of the 
gas used in the EU.Yet Russian gas export monopoly  Gazprom has repeatedly 
played down the threat and on Monday Sergei  Komlev, head of contract str
 ucturing and price formation at Gazprom  Export, told a conference in London 
that Polish gas would struggle to  achieve the low prices of US shale 
rivals."In Poland the price  for shale gas will be above $15 per million 
British thermal units, over  three times than in the US where prices will rise 
to $5-10 (from a  current $2.50) once they export gas," Komlev said.Last 
Wednesday,  the government abruptly called off a presentation of a legal 
framework  for the development of shale gas resources, disappointing industry  
players eager for more clarity before committing further to investing in  the 
sector."If this draft was published and ExxonMobil later  declared it was 
leaving the country, it would most likely have been a  disaster in terms of the 
country's image," said Piotr Spaczynski,  partner at law firm 
Spaczynski, Szczepaniak & Wspolnicy, which  advises foreign oil companies 
investing in Polish shale.The  government now plans to unveil the dra
 ft law by the end of the month,  and has said it will cover exploration and 
extraction of oil and gas  from both conventional and unconventional sources, 
including taxation,  licensing and environmental issues."If I were the 
government, I  would scrap all drafts and let companies work, or publish a 
draft  supporting exploration and not one directed at excessive taxation," 
 Spaczynski said.Poland had high hopes for shale after a study by  the US 
Energy Information Association in 2011 estimated Polish reserves  at 5.3 
trillion cubic metres, enough to cover domestic demand for some  300 years.The 
government's study in March slashed estimates for recoverable shale gas 
reserves at 346 to 768 billion cubic metres.Despite  ExxonMobil, the 
world's most valuable energy company, to deciding to  scrap exploration, 
other firms said they remained committed."(Our  company) continues to 
remain extremely optimistic about the outlook for  Polish shale gas," said 
J
 ohn Buggenhaggen, exploration director at  UK-listed San Leon Energy.          
                                                                                
  
> 

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