Dominican Republic Kicks Off Licensing Round

by Gary McWilliams
Wednesday, July 10, 2019

The Dominican Republic's first oil licensing round will be a success if it awards more than two of the 14 blocks on offer this year, a government official said at an event disclosing the Caribbean nation's fiscal terms.

The licensing round, which began on Wednesday with disclosure of contract terms, comes after Brazil, Guyana and Mexico attracted billions of dollars in oil investment. Cuba and Panama also have taken steps to attract producers with new contract terms, offering new areas, and by making seismic exploration data available.

Dominican Republic is marketing itself with simple terms that provide low risk and low cost of entry for operators willing to commit to minimum investment, said Alberto Reyes, Dominican Republic's vice minister of hydrocarbons.

Licensing terms include minimum investment of $2 million for onshore blocks and $4 million for offshore blocks. Bidders can propose their own geographic blocks in the next two months if they do not like the original areas, he said.

The country is providing seismic exploration data for all the areas on offer. First awards are expected to be released by late November.

About a dozen major oil producers, including U.S., Chinese and European companies, have expressed interest in bidding, said Reyes. Executives from Repsol SA, Total, CNOOC Ltd, Noble Energy Inc and Exxon Mobil Corp were signed up to attend Wednesday's launch.

"From the interest we have gathered, I’m pretty sure we’ll award more than two blocks," Reyes said. "There is reasonable interest in the Caribbean and we're right in the middle of the Caribbean Sea, our basins are facing Colombia and Venezuela," two nations with significant oil production.

Dominican Republic is marketing as low-cost, business-friendly, with transparent terms and a growing economy.

"We have a stable economy, a lot of infrastructure including eight airports, and have the second-biggest natural gas demand in the region," said Reyes.


(Reporting by Gary McWilliams; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Matthew Lewis)

Categories: Offshore Energy Drilling North America Regulations

Related Stories

IEA Expects Gradual Hormuz Recovery, Oversupplied Market in 2027

Oil Slumps as US-Iran Reach Initial Peace Deal to Reopen Strait of Hormuz

ADNOC Looks to Canada for Upstream and LNG Growth Through XRG

Velesto’s Jack-Up Rig Up for Gulf of Thailand Drilling Campaign

Velesto Secures Malaysia Drilling Deal with Hibiscus

Global Businesses Face Mounting $25 Billion Fallout From Iran War

PV Drilling Secures Jack-Up Rig Deal from Zarubezhneft off Vietnam

Oil Prices Edge Higher Amid Uncertainty Over Iran Deal

IEA: Middle East Conflict Reshaping Medium-Term Gas Outlook

Brent Near $114 as Middle East Conflict Continues

Current News

ONGC Completes 44 Offshore Rig Moves Ahead of Monsoon Season

ONGC Expands BP Partnership with Western Offshore Basin Services Contract

Walking Into the Future: ADNOC Drilling Unveils First AI-Powered Island Rig

Yinson Production Names FSO for Murphy's Lac Da Vang Project off Vietnam

Jadestone Brings First Malaysia Campaign Well Online at 3,000 bpd

Saipem to Sell Saudi Shallow-Water Drilling Business to ADES for $285M

Oman Opens Alternative Hormuz Lanes as Shipping Recovery Continues

ASCO Sets Up Shop in Qatar to Drive Middle East Expansion

Oil Falls as Signs of Hormuz Recovery Weigh on Market

Mako Offshore Field Takes Step Toward First Gas with PT PAL Contract Award

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com