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Page added on November 4, 2013

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This Natural Gas Find Could Completely Change the World As We Know It

This Natural Gas Find Could Completely Change the World As We Know It thumbnail

One thing that makes the energy sector so intriguing is the constant overlap between markets and politics. In many ways, energy security is synonymous with national security, and the supply and demand needs of the oil market can make the most unlikely bedfellows. One country that has been at the center of energy and politics for decades has been Israel. For years the country has been dependent upon foreign energy sources, but a major discovery by Noble Energy (NYSE: NBL ) and its partners has turned this situation on its head. Let’s look how this massive natural gas find could affect both the political landscape and the pockets of major oil companies like ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM ) .

With a name like Leviathan, it has to be big

In 2010, Noble Energy and its partners found something in Israel’s offshore region that the country had been looking for since the oil embargoes of the 1970’s; its own hydrocarbons. You might say that the company and the country found more than they could have hoped for. The Tamar and Leviathan fields are estimated to have as much as 30 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, which is enough gas to supply Israel for decades even if it were to convert all of its energy consumption from coal and oil to natural gas — with enough left over to export. Noble Energy estimates that this gas field and the planned export projects could net the country more than $130 billion in energy savings and government revenue from gas royalties.


Source: Noble Energy Investor Presentation

Of course, Israel isn’t the only one making out from this deal, either. The nation’s proven reserves account for more than 30% of Noble’s proved reserves, and will likely be one of the company’s premier energy plays for decades to come. On top of that, the U.S. Geological Survey estimates there are more than 600 million barrels of recoverable oil in the Leviathan field, which could boost the company’s reserves by another 17%.

Game of Therms

Thirty trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 600 million barrels of oil is not a monumental amount in terms of the global energy landscape. But the combination of the size of the find, its proximity to a major demand center (Europe), and the fact that it’s found in Israel could lead to several issues that might leave some major oil and gas powers not too happy.

Israel could disrupt the energy markets via liquefied natural gas terminals or a combination of pipeline and electricity cables. Noble has brought on Australian partner Woodside Petroleum to develop an LNG terminal for the Leviathan gas field and potentially a second site for an adjacent gas field in Cyprus. The Leviathan LNG terminal is projected to export about 0.85 billion cubic feet per day. Again, not much, but enough to displace 15% of the LNG market in Western Europe.


Source: Noble Energy Presentation

More importantly, though, Noble estimates that Israeli and Cypriot LNG terminals could together undercut both American and Australian LNG export prices, which could drive down natural gas costs for Europe. This could reduce the profitability of major LNG players like Qatar, where ExxonMobil has a 25%-30% working interest in two of that nation’s largest LNG terminals.

An even more significant impact would revolve around the idea of supplying natural gas to Europe via pipeline. It may limit the market for Noble’s natural gas, but it would probably generate higher profits per thousand cubic feet of gas because of the cost savings from skirting the liquefaction process. Also, since 40% of Europe’s natural gas comes from Statoil (NYSE: STO ) and Gazprom through very lucrative long-term pipeline contracts, Noble could carve out a nice position by displacing either the more expensive pipeline gas from one of these two players or expensive LNG imports.

Not being an expert in geopolitics, I’m not going to try to venture a guess as to how the political landscape will change in the Middle East. It is pretty fascinating, though, that Israel will go from an extremely energy-import dependent nation to a big-time exporter almost overnight. The country has plans to build pipelines to Jordan, the West Bank, and Turkey, which could improve both economic and political ties to these energy-starved regions. Then again, it could also go in the exact opposite direction and could be a prime target for groups or nations who may scuffle with Israel.

What a Fool believes

Noble Energy may have found a very large oil and gas field that could boost its bottom line for decades, but it found that asset in a place that has been the epicenter for religious and ethnic conflict for millennia. Even more, it may find that other companies are reluctant to join the project. Oil services giants Schlumberger (NYSE: SLB ) and Halliburton (NYSE: HAL ) have major contracts across the Middle East, and they are not likely willing to potentially lose those contracts in order to work with Noble in Israel.

Fool.com



8 Comments on "This Natural Gas Find Could Completely Change the World As We Know It"

  1. BillT on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 1:59 am 

    Israel is a pariah country. A fake dreamed up by Churchill after WW2 in some mistaken feeling of reparations after a war started by the banksters killed off some Jews scattered through war torn Europe. Big mistake. Now the fools want the world and they may cause a world war in trying to get it. Better they had gotten Madagascar as was proposed initially. Limited and big enough.

  2. Dave Thompson on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 4:01 am 

    Another Fool. com this is a bad investment and I would never give investment advice.

  3. Arthur on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 9:53 am 

    The idea that the recent gas finds near Israel are going to change the world as we know it, are exagerated; nevertheless these gas fields do indeed invalidate Golda Meir’s quip that Moses had lead the Jews to the only country in the ME without fossil fuel.

    Bill, Madagaskar is a passed station. They wanted Palestine, now they are stuck with it. Let them keep it as well as Tel Aviv West (NYC). Then at least you know where they are.

    The fanatical behaviour of the Saudi’s vis a vis Assad, tells me that they are prepared to commit dynastic suicide in exchange for a Sunni-fundamentalist Caliphate, run by Istanbul, Cairo and Riyadh, in clear opposition towards Iran. SA knows that the end of the petro-dollar is near and starts to loosen the alliance with infidel Washington and is looking for a new protector and that is going to be soulmate Turkey (Samuel Huntington in action).

    Israel is pursuing a suicidal strategy, based on the assumption that their colonies US and UK are going to achieve the NWO for them, the wet dream of the Chosen. They won’t. Their failure to do so will backfire enormously against our Jewish friends, who will probably end up AGAIN in being parked in the sphere of influence of said Caliphate, like they were for centuries. Tough luck, they should have listened to Dolfie: imagine the sandy beaches, the green water and no Muslims!

    The Jews, basically for 90% a bunch of non-semitic Ukrainians, forced to adopt Judaism around roughly the same time as the Arabs were forced to adopt Islam by Muhamed and a bit later my people, the Saxons, were forced to adopt Christianity by Charlemagne, these Jews got hold of Palestine in a sorded 1915 Balfour deal with the British, causing the destruction of Germany. The Dutch saying ‘gestolen goed gedijt niet’ which translates into something like ‘stolen goods prosper not’ applies to the relationship between the ‘promised land’ and the Jews. Be happy with your new found gas. Expect a lot of mosques to be built from the revenues.

  4. BillT on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 10:23 am 

    So right, Arthur. ^_^

  5. rockman on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 2:54 pm 

    “Noble Energy may have found a very large oil and gas field that could boost its bottom line for decades, but it found that asset in a place that has been the epicenter for religious and ethnic conflict for millennia. Even more, it may find that other companies are reluctant to join the project.”

    May have found? May find companies are reluctant to join the project? When was this article written? The field has been developed for months. And they seem to think Israel is the only location of “religious and ethnic conflict for millennia”. Very strange to see predictions that something won’t happen after it has already transpired.

  6. foxv on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 3:15 pm 

    wow, tempest in a tea pot. The author is delusional beyond discussion to think this means anything other than Israel gains a small amount of self-sufficiency.

    Keep in mind Russia with pipes and contracts already in Europe has PROVEN reserves 50X larger than Israel’s new ESTIMATED reserves.

    This find is nothing to anyone other than the Israelis. In the end Putin will still own Europe

  7. Northwest Resident on Mon, 4th Nov 2013 4:12 pm 

    Why is it that every article reposted here from Fool.com seems to have been written by a Fool, for consumption by Fools, with the sole intent of suckering said Fools into believing that BAU is a given for as far into the future as the Fools can see?

  8. Raphael on Fri, 9th Jan 2015 1:47 pm 

    A clever person does not expect stupid ones to evaluate the present or predict the future. It’s a waste of time and nerves.
    If you still remember you school class and the futile time you have spent in it, you may also recall that a most significant portion of your civilization is based and derived from the Jewish Bible and Jewish prophecy, and another part of it comes from Jewish brains… . So wipe out the stupid smiles from your face, sit tight and watch what the Jewish People is further capable of.

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