(Reuters) - “A rose by
any other name would smell as sweet,” William Shakespeare wrote in “Romeo and
Juliet”. But he was not working for the U.S. government and trying to define
what constitutes condensate and natural gas liquids.
A simple and workable definition
might have baffled even the undisputed master of the English language.
In the world of
condensates and natural gas liquids, a rose is never just a rose, and
producing simple and consistent definitions has eluded federal regulators.
OPEC, which includes
crude but not condensate in its production quotes, has also struggled and
failed to agree on common definitions.
In the past, the
inconsistent treatment of condensates in the United States did not matter
because they were a relatively small proportion of total petroleum production.
But thanks to the shale revolution, condensate production is rising faster than
the output of either crude oil or natural gas.
Output of natural gas
liquids from gas processing plants and oil refineries has risen by more than 1
million barrels per day (50 percent) since 2010 to over 3 million barrels per
day in July 2014.
Production of
condensate directly from oil and gas fields is not recorded separately. But it
probably accounts for a significant proportion of the 3 million barrels per day
increase in crude production reported over the last four years.
Because of the current
record-keeping system, however, there is no way to accurately estimate
condensate production.
Intelligently
regulating and managing a resource is obviously impossible if neither industry
nor government knows how much is actually being produced.
On Oct. 3, the U.S.
Energy Information Administration, the statistical and analysis arm of the
Department of Energy, held a closed-door “Condensate Workshop” for officials
from several government agencies and experts from the industry in an effort to
come up with a new and more consistent definition.
“We hope to have this
sorted out so that policymakers will know what the numbers are,” EIA
Administrator Adam Sieminski had told a conference in September. (“U.S. oil
industry’s billion-dollar question: what is condensate?” Oct 8)
This was the first
step in what is likely to be a long, drawn-out process.
NOT CRUDE, NOT GAS
Condensates and
natural gas liquids (NGLs) occupy an intermediate position in the spectrum of
hydrocarbons, which ranges from natural gas at one end to heavy crude oils at
the other.
Some of the lighter
NGLs are gases at standard atmospheric pressure and temperature but become
liquid easily with only moderate compression and cooling. Ethane, propane and
butane are gases at room temperature but condense at minus 88 degrees, minus 42
degrees and minus 1 degree Celsius, respectively. But methane condenses only at
minus 164 degrees.
Heavier NGLs and
condensates are already liquid at standard pressure and temperature but are volatile
and vaporise readily. Pentane, hexane and heptane become gases at just 36
degrees, 68 and 98 degrees Celsius.
In the real world, the
distinction between natural gas, condensate and crude oil production is blurred. Most oil and gas
wells produce some of all three, mixed together.
Some crude and
condensates are suspended in the methane produced from gas wells. These liquids
are removed from the gas flow by field separation facilities (in which case
they are called “lease condensate”) or more complex natural gas processing
plants (where they are termed “plant condensate” or “natural gas plant liquids”
depending on the degree of processing).
Oil wells usually
produce some dissolved gas, which is separated at the well head. It contains
condensates that can be recovered either at field separators or natural gas
plants.
In addition, some
proportion of the crude will consist of light hydrocarbons such as propane,
butane, pentane and hexane, which are recovered at refineries (where they are
termed “liquefied refinery gases”).
The point is that
there are many names and ways of producing the light hydrocarbons that occupy
an intermediate position between natural gas and crude.
PRODUCTION METHOD
From the industry’s
point of view, what matters is chemistry and the uses of different
hydrocarbons, each of which is marketed and traded as a commodity, either separately or in blends.
But from a regulatory
perspective, what matters is how hydrocarbons are produced. Broadly speaking
any light liquid hydrocarbons recovered from natural gas processing plants
(NGPLs) and oil refineries (LRGs) are treated as refined products, while those
reclaimed from simple field separators (lease condensate) are treated as crude
oil.
This focus on
production stems from historical differences in the way the oil and gas
industries were regulated by federal and state governments (usually with
separate statutes, taxes and record-keeping systems for oil and gas
production).
Differences in
treatment based on production have become enshrined in federal regulations. For
example, the regulations controlling crude oil exports count lease condensate
as crude, which cannot normally be exported except to Canada, but liquefied
refinery gases are refined products that can be sent abroad without
restriction.
The production
approach is also enshrined in the way the U.S. Energy Information Administration
(EIA) collects and presents statistics on the production and consumption of
natural gas liquids. It was still central to a set of revised definitions that
the agency introduced in 2013.
Under the EIA’s
definitions, lease condensate is aggregated together with crude oil, while the
products from natural gas processing plants and refineries are reported
separately. This made sense at one time, when natural gas liquids and
condensates were relatively minor byproducts of natural gas production and the
refining industry.
But as they become
increasingly important, the inconsistent and confusing definition of natural
gas liquids reduces transparency and makes sensible policymaking impossible.
New and more
consistent definitions are needed that harmonize the classification of natural
gas liquids and other condensates, whether they come from an oil field, a gas
field, a gas processing plant or a refinery.
API GRAVITY
DEFINITION?
The obvious approach
is to define condensate by its physical characteristics or chemical
composition.
Condensates and
natural gas liquids are typically lighter than most crudes, so one option would
be to base a new definition on the API measure of specific gravity, where
lighter hydrocarbons have higher numbers.
Much of the oil
industry already employs this approach. “The API gravity of condensate is
typically 50 degrees to 120 degrees,” according to Schlumberger’s online
Oilfield Glossary.
Some experts have
suggested that the federal government define condensates as any hydrocarbons
that are liquid at standard pressure and temperature and have an API gravity of
more than 50 degrees.
Hexane has an API
gravity over 80, pentane over 90 and butane over 110, which are all well above
the suggested 50-degree threshold.
But some other light
crudes would also be caught by this definition. The challenge will be setting
the cut-off point to minimize the incentive for oil producers to claim that
their light crude is actually condensate or natural gasoline
to secure more favorable regulatory treatment.
Once a definition of
condensate based on API gravity is agreed, the data collection system, export
controls and other parts of the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations will all then
need to be revamped to use the new definition.
Then and only then
will policymakers, regulators and the industry be able to get a clear sense of
how much is being produced and what controls, if any, should be maintained on
exports.
(editing by Jane
Baird)
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