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Overview |
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The petroleum industry plays a key role in the
Egyptian economy. It is one of four main sources of
foreign exchange with Egypt being currently an oil
exporter. Egyptian oil production comes from four
main areas: the Gulf of Suez, the Western Desert,
the Eastern Desert, and the Sinai Peninsula. In
addition to its role as an oil exporter, Egypt has
strategic importance because of its operation of the
Suez Canal and Sumed (Suez-Mediterranean) Pipeline.
These are two routes for export of Persian Gulf oil.
The Sumed pipeline is an alternative to the Suez
Canal for transporting oil from the Persian Gulf
region to the Mediterranean. The 200-mile pipeline
runs from Ain Sukhna on the Gulf of Suez to Sidi
Kerir on the Mediterranean.
The first oilfield in Egypt was discovered in 1869
and it came into production in 1910. At this time,
Anglo-Egyptian Oilfields (a joint venture between BP
and Shell) was the major operator in the area and
continued exploration and development until it was
nationalized in 1964. In 1962, the Egyptian General
Petroleum Corporation (EGPC) was formed and became
the major operator in the form of joint ventures
with foreign companies. In 2000, the Ministry of
Petroleum, headed by H.E. Eng. Sameh Fahmy (Minister
of Petroleum in Egypt) took promising measures to
face-lift the petroleum sector in Egypt. This was
marked by a complete restructuring of the industry
and the separation between natural gas and
petrochemicals activities and those of the Egyptian
General Petroleum Corporation (EGPC). The
reformation resulted in the establishment of EGAS,
ECHEM and GANOPE, creating a new structure of the
petroleum industry in Egypt. This restructuring
releases EGPC from its gas and petrochemical
activities and allows it to focus more on the oil
sector.
At the beginning of 2007, the Shura Council’s
Industrial and Energy Committee approved nine
agreements for oil and natural gas prospecting in
the areas of the Gulf of Suez and the Western and
Eastern Deserts. The amount of investments for these
agreements account for approximately $222.65
million, said Shamel Hamdy, the First
Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Petroleum. One of
the major contracts sealed during the first half of
2007 is the WTR- Gulf of Suez Petroleum Company (GUPCO)
deal. Through this two-year contract, Aberdeen-based
WTR is to provide the materials and the installation
of cold repair for leak fixation in the areas of the
Gulf of Suez, the Western Desert, Port Said, Dashour
and Ras Bakr, where GUPCO owns production rights
along with its partners BP and EGPC. In the
framework of the ministry's strategy to expand the
usages of natural gas in all the Egyptian
governorates, the Arab International Bank (AIB)
sealed a loan agreement with the Egyptian Natural
Gas Holding Company (EGAS) in order to finance the
installation of two gas supply lines from Taba to
Sharm El Sheikh and Shokair to Hurghada with a total
value of LE 355 million and $90 million (LE 512
million). This loan agreement is provided by a
consortium of eight banks which include the AIB;
Societe Arabe Internationale de Banque, Egyptian
Saudi Finance Bank, Piraeus Bank, United Bank of
Egypt, National Bank for Development, the National
Bank of Abu Dhabi, and the Audi Bank. The main
target of this project is to supply six million
housing units over the next six years with natural
gas with LE 30 billion total investment. This is not
the sole contribution of banks in projects related
to the oil and gas sector.
The Ministry of Petroleum (MoP) exerted enduring
efforts to bring into play the area of Upper Egypt
and its attempt to benefit from its concealed
reserves. Dana Gas is one of the leading
corporations that have served the ministry's
strategy. Through a farm out agreement, the Middle
East’s first regional private-sector natural gas
company and Kuwait International Oil & Environment
Company (KIOEC), a subsidiary of TAQA Holding and
Gulf Oil Investments are to partner Dana's Komombo
Concession, situated in Upper Egypt, 800 km south of
Cairo. Dana already conducted technical evaluation
of the concession, including "the interpretation of
geological and geophysical data and the acquisition
of 516 Km's of 2-D seismic," announced the company
in a statement. This technical evaluation led to the
identification of drillable prospects and four
addition leads. The new partners are to share the
drilling works which were scheduled to begin in mid
2007.
The year 2007 also witnessed the revival of gold in
the sector. “Egypt revives its Gold fortune…” was
one of the key strategies and quotes adopted by the
MoP, which is to resume the program of gold mining
after a halt of more than 50 years. As a debut,
Fahmy signed a memorandum of understanding with the
International Finance Corporation (IFC), the private
arm of the World Bank, to replace the old mining
laws that contributed to the lack of local
investments in general and foreign investments in
particular.
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Structure of the petroleum industry in Egypt |
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Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation (EGPC)
EGPC was established by the Egyptian government in
1962 and is considered the first economic
corporation established in the petroleum industry in
Egypt. It is active in the upstream, downstream and
petrochemical sectors, has full responsibility for
all sectors of the Egyptian petroleum industry and
holds the sole right to import and export crude oil
and other petroleum products. As a controller of the
industry, any foreign investments in Egypt are
maintained through a joint venture with the EGPC and
are supervised by the government. Among the major
activities of the EGPC are petroleum agreements,
exploration, production, transportation and
refining.
Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company (EGAS)
Recognizing the increasing importance of natural
gas, the Egyptian government created EGAS in August
2001. The purpose of existence of EGAS is to manage
foreign investment in exploration and the use of LNG
(Liquefied Natural Gas) tankers, production
and infrastructure. In addition to handling all the
actions of natural gas industry in Egypt, EGAS has a
mission of employing an active plan which
encompasses the following:
- To prove additional gas reserves, EGAS plans
to develop intensive exploration programs, based
on the application of the most advanced
exploration techniques and concepts.
- To maximize NGL (Natural Gas Liquids)
recovery and enhance the petrochemical industry,
EGAS plans to: (1) develop a complete framework
for integration, and (2) upgrade the natural gas
recovery facilities and transmission
infrastructure.
- To expand gas export activities, EGAS plans
to: (1) increasing gas export pipelines to link
with the European Gas Pipeline system, and (2)
implementing additional LNG (Liquefied Natural
Gas) trains within the Ministry of Petroleum
policy guidelines.
- To achieve sustainable development, EGAS
plans to continue enhancement of gas utilization
in the domestic market.
Egyptian Petrochemicals Holding Company (ECHEM)
ECHEM is a holding company assigned to manage and
market Egypt’s emerging petrochemical industry. It
is a major corporation in Egypt established in 2002,
with a mission of developing a competitive
petrochemicals industry based on the use advanced
technology. ECHEM promotes investment, facilitates
the development of new projects owns and is
continuing to establish production plants. ECHEM has
a 20-years plan to develop the petrochemical
industry based on natural gas reserves of Egypt,
which form the backbone of the petrochemical
industry.
Ganoub El Wadi Petroleum Holding Company (GANOPE)
GANOPE, previously known as the South Valley
Development Company (SVDC), was established in
January 2003 to promote development activities
specifically in Upper Egypt (Sohag, Aswan, Assyout,
Qena, AL Wadi El-Gedied), which represent over half
of Egypt's total area. GANOPE is the chief
corporation assigned by the Egyptian government for
handling and assessing all petroleum activities in
the south area of Egypt.
Foreign Companies and Egyptian Private Sector
Companies
In addition to the holding companies (EGPC, EGAS,
ECHEM and GANOPE), there are foreign companies and
Egyptian private sector companies operating the
Egyptian petroleum sector. These companies are
granted concession areas for exploration purposes in
accordance with the periodic bidding rounds
administered by the relevant holding company. There
are over 50 international companies that operate in
the exploration, excavation and production of oil
and gas in Egypt.
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Investment Opportunities
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There are many potential investment opportunities in
the Egyptian oil, gas and petrochemicals industry.
Below are the areas in which there are investment
opportunities:
- Oil and gas exploration and production
- Asset acquisition
- New petrochemical master plan projects
- New world class third generation refinery
- New joint mega LNG projects
- Manufacturing of oil and gas equipment,
materials and service activities
- Shares of existing companies in the stock
market
- Upper Egypt
- Crude Oil projects proposed for investment
in Egypt
- Natural Gas projects proposed for investment
in Egypt
- Petrochemical projects proposed for
investment in Egypt
- Mineral Resources proposed for investment in
Egypt
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Statistical Indicators |
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Indicator Title |
Last Value |
Frequency |
Source |
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Total production of natural gas (sold)
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
38.4 million ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Proven reserves of natural gas
Time Series: 1990/1991
»» 2005/2006 |
68.2 trillion cubic feet |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Natural gas consumption
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
25,000 thousand ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Production of crude oil, condensates and biogas petroleum and natural
gas
Time Series: 1981/1982 »» 2005/2006 |
70.9 million ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Number of new petroleum discoveries
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
42 explorations |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Consumption of petroleum and petrochemical products
Time Series: 1990/1991 »» 2005/2006 |
26,628 thousand ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Exports value of national crude petroleum
Time Series: 1998 »» 2005 |
L.E 2,978,100 thousand |
Yearly |
The Central Authority of Public Mobilization and
Statistics |
Total production of crude oil and condensates
Time Series: 1990/1991 »» 2005/2006 |
32.5 million ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Proven reserves of crude oil and condensates
Time Series: 1990/1991 »» 2005/2006 |
3.7 billion barrel |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Total number of petroleum agreements (cumulative)
Time Series: 1981/1982 »» 2005/2006 |
370 agreements |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Total consumption of petroleum and gas
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
51,628 thousand ton petroleum equivalent |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Production of crude oil, condensates and biogas (petroleum
production)
Time Series: Jan
1997 »» Sept. 2006 |
2,718 thousand ton |
Monthly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Public and investment sectors’ production of petroleum and
petrochemicals
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
35,400 thousand ton |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
National and foreign investment in petroleum sector
Time Series: 1991/1992 »» 2005/2006 |
$2,954 million |
Yearly |
Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum |
Exports value of national petroleum products
Time Series: 1998 »» 2005 |
L.E 28,778,233 thousand |
Yearly |
The Central Authority of Public Mobilization and
Statistics |
Imports value of petroleum products
Time Series: 1998 »» 2005 |
L.E 11,131,434 thousand |
Yearly |
The Central Authority of Public Mobilization and
Statistics |
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Reasons to
Invest in OG
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Egypt has been very successful in attracting foreign
investment and arranging fruitful partnerships with
major international oil and gas companies. The
success of these partnerships has been due to the
continuous support of the Egyptian Government and
has been enhanced by many reasons that make Egypt’s
energy industry a desirable location for investment.
These reasons include:
- A booming petroleum sector
The adoption of state-of-the-art technologies
encouraged Egypt to explore all possible chances
to sustain its credibility within all sectors of
the hydrocarbon industry. Egyptian oil and gas
experts enhanced the exploration of new deep
water exploration and development adding up new
reserves to the Egyptian oil and gas reserve,
and resulting in a unique hydrocarbon reserves.
In the western desert, new techniques and
geological concepts have been introduced in the
field giving rise to new opportunities for oil
and gas reserves in Egypt. There has been an
effective introduction of new technologies and
theories in the natural gas sector and in
addition to the presence of exploration acreage,
instead of having one bid a year, the 3
organizations responsible for the oil and gas
exploration (EGPC, EGAS and GANOPE) have 2-3 bid
rounds every year, increasing the investment
opportunities.
- Strategic location
Due to Egypt’s geographical location, Egypt is
located at cross roads with three continents
(Africa, Asia and Europe) and thus
transportation is facilitated between these
continents. With proximity to important markets
and having close ties with Europe, Egypt is a
gateway of all East-West trade, making it a
place for investment in both the upstream and
downstream sectors. In addition to being on one
of the vital marine traffic routes, Egypt
controls the Sinai Peninsula, which is an area
of great hope with regard to the petroleum
industry.
- Expertise of the state energy company,
EGPC
Formed in 1962, the Egyptian General Petroleum
Corporation (EGPC) became the major operator in
the form of joint ventures with foreign
companies. As the first economic corporation
established in the petroleum industry in Egypt,
EGPC has expertise with all sectors of the
industry as it is active in the upstream,
downstream and petrochemical sectors. It has
full responsibility for all sectors of the
Egyptian petroleum industry and holds the sole
right to import and export crude oil and other
petroleum products. As a controller of the
industry, any foreign investments in Egypt are
maintained through a joint venture with the EGPC
and are supervised by the government.
- Facilitated legislation
There have been new petroleum-related
legislation introduced which makes Egypt an
attractive investment destination. Since the
1990s, the Egyptian government started passing
new laws with the aim of attracting local,
regional and multi-national investments through
reducing & simplifying the procedures &
regulations that hinder investment. For more
information on the Egyptian legal framework
created by the government that facilitates and
ensures for the investor the sustainability of
their installations, visit our regulations
section.
- Economic stability
With the installation of the 2004 Egyptian
parliament, the Government of Egypt began a new
reform movement, following a stalled economic
reform program begun in 1991, but moribund since
the mid-1990s. In the past year, the cabinet
economic team has simplified and reduced tariffs
and taxes, improved the transparency of the
national budget, revived stalled privatizations
of public enterprises and implemented economic
legislation designed to foster private
sector-driven economic growth and improve
Egypt's competitiveness.
- Political stability
Today, Egypt lives a new phase of political and
democratic development aiming at more deepening
of democratic practice, enhancing freedoms and
laying down the state of law, institutions and
respect of human rights. To bolster stability
and moderation in the region, Egypt has provided
military assistance and training to a number of
African and Arab states. Egypt remains a strong
military and strategic partner of the United
States. Egypt is enjoying political stability
amidst a high tensioned region.
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Regulations
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Starting from the year 2000 Egypt has gone into a
series of reforms related to it is economy and
foreign strategy. These reforms are aimed at giving
opportunities for foreign investors to enter the
Egyptian market. Due to the importance of the
petroleum sector for the Egyptian economy, a number
of reforms were made to ensure its efficiency.
Reforms in the sector include implementation of new
laws, a reduction in price controls and an opening
of the distribution sector to private investment.
Among the laws and regulations related to the
petroleum sector in Egypt are:
A law substituting the law 230 of 1989:
Giving authority for an entity to be responsible for
the investor incentives and guarantees. It allows
total ownership of projects and assures the right to
remit income earned in Egypt and to repatriate
capital.
Law 8 of Investment:
Guarantees against deduction, sequestration and
nationalization. It grants the following:
- The right to own land
- The right to maintain foreign currency bank
accounts
- The freedom from administrative attachment
- The right to repatriate capital and profits
- Free hiring of Egyptian staff
- Absence of price control or restrictions
- Equal treatment regardless of nationality
Oil & gas concessions laws and regulations:
- Allows approval on any investment among 16
different fields, one of which is the oil and
gas investments in Egypt.
- Oil and gas concessions are approved based
on agreements set between the government of
Egypt and the Egyptian General Petroleum
Corporation (EGPC), and a foreign oil company,
usually known as the contractor.
- A special law is specified for each
concession agreement, where the contractor is
responsible for all the exploration risks.
- The agreement between the contractor and the
government specifies a certain period of time of
4 years for exploration.
- The time specified could be extended based
on the contractor's desire for maximum 2 years.
- This agreement automatically ends if no
exploration has been achieved by the contractor,
with 6 months extension enabling the contractor
to complete drilling of a previously explored
well during the permitted phase.
- The agreement specifies the number of wells
to be explored at each phase. A certain amount
of work is specified for each phase with the
completion of exploring at least one well.
Oil & gas concessions financial regulations:
- Contractor provides all the necessary
financing within the exploration stage in freely
convertible currency.
- A minimum amount of spending is specified
for the contractor to be spent during the
allowed exploration period.
- If the contractor failed to spend the amount
previously mentioned it should pay for the
Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation (EGPC)
the fall back amount of money.
- The money transactions are handled by a bank
specified by EGPC for guarantee, which is
reduced according to the amount of money spent
by the contractor.
- The money spent by the contractor is
recoverable in the case of a commercial
discovery, the cost recovery crude oil.
- In case no money was spent the contractor
cannot maintain any amounts of money spent by
EGPC.
Other advantages granted to petroleum projects
are:
- There are no restrictions on the nationality
and the volume of the capital. Egyptian, Arab or
foreign capitals can hold alone, or share with
any percentage in the investments of the free
zone projects.
- Projects may be wholly owned by foreigners.
- There are guarantees against nationalization
and expropriation of projects.
- There is no limit on the volume of the
capital, as the law gives the owners of the
project the freedom to determine the volume of
the capital in the light of the nature, size &
the estimated production capacity of the
project.
- There is freedom of choice with regard to
the legal form of the project.
- There is freedom of transferring the profits
& the invested money and re-exporting it.
- There is freedom in giving operations to
others in order to utilize their excess
capabilities.
- There is freedom of determining the prices
of products as well as the percentage of
profits.
- Foreign investors are given facilities in
residence, and the foreign workers are given
residence licenses upon the project request.
- There is no limit on the volume of the
capital, as the law gives the owners of the
project the freedom to determine the volume of
the capital in the light of the nature, size &
the estimated production capacity of the
project.
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Article is copied from
www.egyptoil-gas.com |
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