Page added on June 29, 2013
In its Statistical Review of World Energy, BP put global proven gas reserves at 187.3 trillion cubic meters as of the end of 2012, enough for about 56 years of global production at current rates.
BP’s annual review of energy statistics, first published in 1951, is considered an industry benchmark. Last year’s report put gas reserves at 208.4 trillion cubic meters. The cut of 21 trillion equals roughly seven years of global gas use.
Russia, the world’s biggest gas reserves holder for many years, was responsible for the bulk of the reduction, with its reserves estimate downgraded to 32.9 trillion from 44.6 trillion in last year’s report.
BP’s chief economist Christof Ruhl said at a news conference the company decided this year to adjust its estimates for the former Soviet Union, including Russia, where data on reserves is classified.
“Traditionally countries of the former Soviet Union had different criteria than used elsewhere. So we used a conversion factor to convert that from those countries where we don’t get direct data,” Ruhl said.
“In some countries, reserves are still a state secret, so we have to rely on these data,” he added.
BP also cut its estimate of gas reserves in the United States, where the energy industry has been transformed by shale oil and gas, due to lower prices and reduced drilling. US reserves ended 2012 at 8.5 trillion cubic meters, down 0.3 trillion from 2011.
The downgrade left Iran at the top of the table of the world’s largest gas reserves holders for the first time in decades, with its broadly unchanged reserves of 33.6 trillion.
Russia remains a much larger gas producer than Iran, which is unable to exploit the full potential of its resources, because US and European trade sanctions over its nuclear program have stalled energy projects.
BP has had a bumpy experience in Russia over the past decade. TNK-BP, its venture with Russian billionaires, generated billions of dollars in dividends for BP but also led to clashes with the Kremlin.
The company sold out of the venture this year to become a major shareholder in state-controlled champion Rosneft (ROSN.MM: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz). The latter is pursuing an aggressive gas strategy to rival state-controlled Gazprom (GAZP.MM: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), Russia’s gas export monopoly and holder of most of its gas reserves.
In its review, BP also steeply downgraded Turkmenistan’s reserves to 17.5 trillion from 24.3 trillion and cut its reserves estimates for Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Azerbaijan.
OIL ESTIMATES
On the oil side, BP estimated global proven oil reserves at 1,669 billion barrels at the end of 2012, up slightly from 1,654 billion at the end of 2011 and enough to maintain current global production levels for 53 years.
In its report a year earlier, BP had revised global oil reserves sharply higher, citing new technology that made heavy crude grades in Canada and Venezuela economically profitable to extract.
Its figure for US oil reserves rose to 35 billion barrels from 31 billion last year, more than 2 percent of global reserves.
A report from the US government’s Energy Information Administration on Monday pointed to the dramatic impact of shale on world energy. Shale deposits will boost total world crude resources by 11 percent, it said.
BP upgraded reserves for both Iran and Iraq by several billion barrels and kept them at their No.3 and 4 global spots, respectively. Venezuela and Saudi Arabia kept their first and second places with no major revisions over the year.
Ecuador, Norway and China were included in upward reserves revisions, while estimates were downgraded for South Sudan, Malaysia, Angola and Gabon.
7 Comments on "BP Ranks Iran as Top Holder of Gas Reserves"
Plantagenet on Sat, 29th Jun 2013 4:49 pm
If Iran has such huge gas reserves, then why are they putting so much effort into developing nuclear facilities?
ian on Sat, 29th Jun 2013 6:10 pm
1 trillion cubic feet of natural gas is equivalent to 172 million barrels of oil. 31 trillion feet gives us the energetic equivalent of 5.8 billion barrels of oil. Nothing to sneeze at, but still, that’s 2 years supply for the world, and perhaps about 10-11 years for the USA (less if we start using natural gas to substitute for oil). Nice. Not impressive though.
dissident on Sat, 29th Jun 2013 7:51 pm
Time to invade Iran and assure the viability of the Nabucco pipeline.
DC on Sat, 29th Jun 2013 10:37 pm
Now you probably get an idea why BP wants the US to re-install a dictator for them. They are still butt-hurt from ‘losing’ Iran, which was a virtual BP satrapy since the 19th C. Iran was to BP what Nigeria is to Shell Oil today, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Shell Inc.
Arthur on Sun, 30th Jun 2013 10:09 am
Iran has much gas and obviously wants to sell it. Once the US had accidently handed over Iraq to the Iranian sphere of influence, free of charge, suddenly there was the option for Iran to get rid of the gas via the corridor Iran-Iraq-Syria and immediately the plan for an ‘islamic pipeline’ (or shi’ite pipeline rather) was born (July 2011):
http://www.voltairenet.org/article176200.html
This would bypass the sunny pipeline (pipedream?) Nabucco, running through Turkey and would bring LNG to Europe easier than LNG world champ Qatar could do by ship, via the Indian Ocean. The largest gas field in the world, Pars, is split in the middle between Iran and Qatar, so here is the Qatar interest in preventing the shi’ite pipeline through Syria from happening.
Arthur on Sun, 30th Jun 2013 10:29 am
Nabucco = ITER fusion = Fata Morgana
Visible at the horizon, where it will stay.
“If Iran has such huge gas reserves, then why are they putting so much effort into developing nuclear facilities?”
For the same reason why the rest of the world has nuclear facilities: diversification and (futile) attempt to insure against depleting fossil fuel. Futile because conventional nuclear fuel is just as finite as fossil.
http://tinyurl.com/czr86xo
Harquebus on Mon, 1st Jul 2013 1:48 am
There’s that caveat again. “at current rates”.