International Herald Tribune: Shell
Concealed Extent of Its Problems to Protect Nigeria Partnership.
Friday, March 19, 2004
Posted 10 May 04 (an important article that we missed)
The Royal Dutch/Shell Group has kept secret key
details of its sharp reduction of oil and gas reserves for fear of damaging its
close ties to Nigeria, whose oil production quota set by OPEC might be
jeopardized if the facts were disclosed, internal company documents show.
Nigeria is seeking a significant increase in its quota with the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which sets production levels for its members
in an effort to control prices. A lower quota would mean less income for Shell
and Nigeria and less Nigerian oil for the United States, the largest customer
for its exports.
Since Shell disclosed two months ago that it had overstated its oil and gas
reserves by 20 percent, or 3.9 billion barrels, the company's senior executives
have pledged greater openness to investors, who were stunned by the revelations.
The company announced Thursday that it was again cutting its estimates of its
reserves by the equivalent of 250 million barrels, mostly involving a natural
gas field near Norway. Shell also postponed the publication of its 2003 annual
report for two months to complete a review of its oil and gas assets.
But the company continues to conceal the extent of its problems in Nigeria, the
country with the largest reserve restatement, to avoid endangering its
partnership. Shell operates the largest joint venture with the Nigerian
government. Confidential company documents late last year show that more than
1.5 billion barrels, or 60 percent of Shell's earlier estimate of proven
Nigerian reserves, were not fully compliant with accounting rules and company
guidelines.
A report on Dec. 8, 2003, prepared for senior executives by Walter van de
Vijver, then the top official for exploration and production, recommended that
the revised Nigerian reserves stay confidential in view of host country
sensitivities. Identifying the extent of Shell's lowered reserves in Nigeria,
the report warned, could affect that country's quota discussions with OPEC.
Nigeria has been seeking a large increase in its quota, currently at about two
million barrels a day, as part of a plan to double its daily production over the
next several years.
Reserves are a key input in quota discussions, the report says, and since
Shell's portion of Nigeria's reserves constitutes about 50 percent of total
country reserves, an external disclosure indicating that estimates have been
overstated could negatively impact the government's position. An OPEC spokesman
said Thursday that a team from OPEC's secretariat visited Nigeria last month and
that the organization would discuss a new formula for determining quotas this
year. Proven reserves, the spokesman said, were part of the quota calculation.
Oil yields 90 percent of Nigeria's export revenue, and a doubling of its
production could mean tens of billion dollars in extra annual income.
Andy Corrigan, a spokesman for Shell, the world's third-largest publicly traded
oil company, declined Thursday to provide details about restated reserves in
Nigeria, saying only that they constitute a significant proportion of the
overall restatement.
E.E. Imohe, the economics minister at the Nigerian Embassy in Washington, said
he had passed on questions from a reporter to his government this week about
Shell but had not yet received a reply.
Behind Shell's confidential stance are the company's own financial motivations,
too. The report said negotiations with Nigeria over $385 million in bonus
payments could be jeopardized by publication of too much information.
While reserves are a key indicator by which outsiders assess an oil company's
future prospects, Shell's dealings with Nigeria resonate beyond the stock
market.
Nigeria is the world's seventh biggest oil exporter. Shell's documents about
Nigeria portray a sometimes fragile marriage of the two sides and offer a window
into the kind of relationship that is vital to global energy security. Most of
the world's oil resides in less-developed countries like Nigeria, yet much of
the financial and technological resources needed to develop that oil belongs to
Western oil companies.
The documents give a far bleaker assessment of Nigerian operations than the
company's public disclosures.
For example, Nigeria has called for an end to the daily practice of releasing
billions of cubic feet of natural gas into the atmosphere by 2008. The flared
gas, a byproduct of oil production, has become an environmental and political
issue. Shell's Web site says this opportunity to gather gas is going well.
Corrigan said the company is committed to meeting the target.
But a high-level company review last December found that many oil field projects
were now seen as immature because of the lack of gas- gathering plans, many of
which were still a long way from a possible request for funds. This, in turn,
prompted concerns that oil production would have to be shut in without a way to
utilize the gas. Natural gas is more expensive to transport than oil, so flaring
the gas has been the most economical approach.
So far Shell has not released a country breakdown of its reserve restatements,
but it told oil industry analysts last month that Nigeria and Australia were the
two largest. Company documents show that Shell's senior managers were told in
December that 720 million barrels in Nigeria were non-compliant with SEC
guidelines and an additional 814 million barrels were potentially noncompliant.
At the end of 2002 Shell booked 2.524 billion barrels of proven reserves for
Nigeria, but after internal reviews and a tightening of company guidelines, the
December report said only 990 million barrels fully complies with current Shell
guidelines.
The document recommended that any debooking of proved reserves for Shell's
venture in Nigeria not be identified publicly with Nigeria but classified under
a wider geographic area. Last month, when Shell reported more details about the
reserve downgrading, it said African operations accounted for 1.5 billion
barrels of the revision. Shell has other operations in Africa, including Libya
and Egypt, but Nigeria is the only African country listed in a potential
reserves exposure catalogue distributed to senior executives late last year.
The Shell documents make clear that geology is just one part of determining
whether oil or gas is a proved reserve. A company must also have firm plans to
extract the resource and the investments to implement those plans. The absence
of such commitments, the documents show, is why the Nigerian reserves were seen
as noncompliant.
From 1991 to 1999, Nigeria offered Shell and other oil companies an incentive to
increase reserves, the Reserves Addition Bonus. Shell contended that it was owed
$385 million under the bonus program, but it only sought 30 percent to 50
percent of the claim, according to Shell's December report. The bonus program
applied to a different, less-probable category of reserves than the publicly
reported proved reserves, which have been downgraded.
In principle, the December document said, Shell's bonus claim should therefore
not be impacted by reduction in Shell's proved reserves in Nigeria, but
disclosing their exact amount is likely to undermine the current resolution
process and put $115 million to $170 million at risk. There are more than
financial issues behind the decline in reserves.
Community disturbances and political instability were also to blame, according
to the Shell report late last year. Most of Nigeria's oil reserves are in the
Delta region, where unrest caused a reduction in production last year. The Royal
Dutch/Shell Group has kept secret key details of its sharp reduction of oil and
gas reserves for fear of damaging its close ties to Nigeria, whose oil
production quota set by OPEC might be jeopardized if the facts were disclosed,
internal company documents show.
Nigeria is seeking a significant increase in its quota with the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which sets production levels for its members
in an effort to control prices. A lower quota would mean less income for Shell
and Nigeria and less Nigerian oil for the United States, the largest customer
for its exports.
Since Shell disclosed two months ago that it had overstated its oil and gas
reserves by 20 percent, or 3.9 billion barrels, the company's senior executives
have pledged greater openness to investors, who were stunned by the revelations.
The company announced Thursday that it was again cutting its estimates of its
reserves by the equivalent of 250 million barrels, mostly involving a natural
gas field near Norway. Shell also postponed the publication of its 2003 annual
report for two months to complete a review of its oil and gas assets.
But the company continues to conceal the extent of its problems in Nigeria, the
country with the largest reserve restatement, to avoid endangering its
partnership. Shell operates the largest joint venture with the Nigerian
government. Confidential company documents late last year show that more than
1.5 billion barrels, or 60 percent of Shell's earlier estimate of proven
Nigerian reserves, were not fully compliant with accounting rules and company
guidelines.
A report on Dec. 8, 2003, prepared for senior executives by Walter van de
Vijver, then the top official for exploration and production, recommended that
the revised Nigerian reserves stay confidential in view of host country
sensitivities. Identifying the extent of Shell's lowered reserves in Nigeria,
the report warned, could affect that country's quota discussions with OPEC.
Nigeria has been seeking a large increase in its quota, currently at about two
million barrels a day, as part of a plan to double its daily production over the
next several years. Reserves are a key input in quota discussions, the report
says, and since Shell's portion of Nigeria's reserves constitutes about 50
percent of total country reserves, an external disclosure indicating that
estimates have been overstated could negatively impact the government's
position. An OPEC spokesman said Thursday that a team from OPEC's secretariat
visited Nigeria last month and that the organization would discuss a new formula
for determining quotas this year. Proven reserves, the spokesman said, were part
of the quota calculation. Oil yields 90 percent of Nigeria's export revenue, and
a doubling of its production could mean tens of billion dollars in extra annual
income.
Andy Corrigan, a spokesman for Shell, the world's third-largest publicly traded
oil company, declined Thursday to provide details about restated reserves in
Nigeria, saying only that they constitute a significant proportion of the
overall restatement.
E.E. Imohe, the economics minister at the Nigerian Embassy in Washington, said
he had passed on questions from a reporter to his government this week about
Shell but had not yet received a reply.
Behind Shell's confidential stance are the company's own financial motivations,
too. The report said negotiations with Nigeria over $385 million in bonus
payments could be jeopardized by publication of too much information.
While reserves are a key indicator by which outsiders assess an oil company's
future prospects, Shell's dealings with Nigeria resonate beyond the stock
market.
Nigeria is the world's seventh biggest oil exporter. Shell's documents about
Nigeria portray a sometimes fragile marriage of the two sides and offer a window
into the kind of relationship that is vital to global energy security. Most of
the world's oil resides in less-developed countries like Nigeria, yet much of
the financial and technological resources needed to develop that oil belongs to
Western oil companies.
The documents give a far bleaker assessment of Nigerian operations than the
company's public disclosures.
For example, Nigeria has called for an end to the daily practice of releasing
billions of cubic feet of natural gas into the atmosphere by 2008. The flared
gas, a byproduct of oil production, has become an environmental and political
issue. Shell's Web site says this opportunity to gather gas is going well.
Corrigan said the company is committed to meeting the target.
But a high-level company review last December found that many oil field projects
were now seen as immature because of the lack of gas- gathering plans, many of
which were still a long way from a possible request for funds. This, in turn,
prompted concerns that oil production would have to be shut in without a way to
utilize the gas. Natural gas is more expensive to transport than oil, so flaring
the gas has been the most economical approach.
So far Shell has not released a country breakdown of its reserve restatements,
but it told oil industry analysts last month that Nigeria and Australia were the
two largest. Company documents show that Shell's senior managers were told in
December that 720 million barrels in Nigeria were non-compliant with SEC
guidelines and an additional 814 million barrels were potentially noncompliant.
At the end of 2002 Shell booked 2.524 billion barrels of proven reserves for
Nigeria, but after internal reviews and a tightening of company guidelines, the
December report said only 990 million barrels fully complies with current Shell
guidelines.
The document recommended that any debooking of proved reserves for Shell's
venture in Nigeria not be identified publicly with Nigeria but classified under
a wider geographic area.
Last month, when Shell reported more details about the reserve downgrading, it
said African operations accounted for 1.5 billion barrels of the revision. Shell
has other operations in Africa, including Libya and Egypt, but Nigeria is the
only African country listed in a potential reserves exposure catalogue
distributed to senior executives late last year.
The Shell documents make clear that geology is just one part of determining
whether oil or gas is a proved reserve. A company must also have firm plans to
extract the resource and the investments to implement those plans. The absence
of such commitments, the documents show, is why the Nigerian reserves were seen
as noncompliant.
From 1991 to 1999, Nigeria offered Shell and other oil companies an incentive to
increase reserves, the Reserves Addition Bonus. Shell contended that it was owed
$385 million under the bonus program, but it only sought 30 percent to 50
percent of the claim, according to Shell's December report. The bonus program
applied to a different, less-probable category of reserves than the publicly
reported proved reserves, which have been downgraded.
In principle, the December document said, Shell's bonus claim should therefore
not be impacted by reduction in Shell's proved reserves in Nigeria, but
disclosing their exact amount is likely to undermine the current resolution
process and put $115 million to $170 million at risk. There are more than
financial issues behind the decline in reserves.
Community disturbances and political instability were also to blame, according
to the Shell report late last year. Most of Nigeria's oil reserves are in the
Delta region, where unrest caused a reduction in production last year. The Royal
Dutch/Shell Group has kept secret key details of its sharp reduction of oil and
gas reserves for fear of damaging its close ties to Nigeria, whose oil
production quota set by OPEC might be jeopardized if the facts were disclosed,
internal company documents show.
Nigeria is seeking a significant increase in its quota with the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which sets production levels for its members
in an effort to control prices. A lower quota would mean less income for Shell.