Chevron makes gas discovery in Bangladesh
Energy group Chevron has made the biggest gas discovery in at least a decade in energy-starved Bangladesh, almost
doubling the size of a field it is drilling there, a government official said. The US firm has told authorities its
Bibiyana gas field in Sylhet, north-eastern Bangladesh, contains 6.6 tcf (186 bn cm) of gas, up from its original
size of 3.4 tcf, Muktadir Ali, chairman of state-owned Petrobangla said.
"Out of the amount, some 4.4 tcf is recoverable. It's the biggest new gas finding in at least a decade," said Ali,
whose company shares production with Chevron.
A Chevron spokesman in Bangladesh said the company had submitted its latest reserve figure to Petrobangla recently
but wouldn't comment on exact figures. Bangladesh has been facing an acute shortage of gas since 2008, resulting in
production cuts in hundreds of factories.
"The new findings mean we can now scale up gas production within a year and our gas reserve would last a few more
years than originally thought," Ali said.
The country has proven recoverable gas reserves in the Bay of Bengal of more than 15 tcf, but some 60 % of the amount
has already been used. Petrobangla had said gas reserves in the South Asian country will start declining from 2012
and dry up by 2014-15 at present consumption rates if there were no new discoveries.
The figure was released nearly a month after the country awarded three offshore exploration blocks to companies to
search for oil and gas in the disputed waters of the Bay of Bengal.
The government granted two blocks to the US energy giant ConocoPhillips (COP) and another to Irish company Tullow
despite ownership claims on some of the territories by neighbouring India and Myanmar. Experts have forecast major
reserves of gas in the Bangladesh waters of the Bay of Bengal, after huge discoveries were made in the Myanmar and
Indian areas of the bay.
Bangladesh needs urgently to locate new sources of energy as the government forecasts the nation's current gas
reserves will run out by 2014-15 at present consumption rates.
