The prospecting mission, taking place under an existing $2.3 million cooperation agreement, will seek reserves in 3 regions: Samarkand, Jizzakh in central Uzbekistan, and Surkhandarya in the south.
Another team will prospect for mineral resources, including metals, at deposits already identified in the Amantazau–Kuljuktau area of the Kyzylkum desert in central Uzbekistan.
The size of Uzbekistan’s proven gas reserves is a matter of debate.
The government says it boasts 1.8 trillion m3, while the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, the industry’s bible for such matters, puts them at 800 billion m3.
The government hopes the Uzbek-U.S. missions will further its target of boosting prospective reserves (which are not proven but have a good chance of commercial extraction) by 35 billion m3 of gas and 1 million tons of liquid hydrocarbons this year, via prospecting and exploration at 20 new fields.
The extraction of oil & gas from inside shale rock by injecting a high-pressure mixture of water, sand and chemicals is controversial because of the potential for the contamination of water supplies and air pollution, and the chances of causing earth tremors.
It also uses large quantities of water, a resource which is in short supply in Uzbekistan.
The government, however, sees fracking as one solution to realizing its ambitious vision for the gas industry.
It is targeting a 20 % rise in gas output, which has been stagnant at somewhere below 60 billion m3 a year for a decade, by 2030.
According to official data, Uzbekistan produced 53.8 billion m3 of gas last year.
That was up on the 47.1 billion m3 produced in 2020, when the pandemic strangled demand and the government slashed production, but down on the 57.4 billion m3 extracted in 2019.
This year Tashkent is targeting a 4 % rise in gas output, to 56.3 billion m3.
But to achieve that leap in output by the end of the decade, it urgently needs to find new reserves.
Even while targeting that exponential rise, officials plan to end gas exports altogether by 2025.
In January, Tashkent suspended exports, almost all of which go to China, to redirect gas to generate power to tackle the energy shortages that grip Uzbekistan every winter. It has not stated when, or if, it plans to resume them.
The government says it can generate far greater revenues from processing gas into fuel and in-demand products such as plastics than exporting it raw.
In December, Uzbekistan opened one of its flagship projects for the sector: a $3.6 billion gas-to-liquids plant that will process gas into diesel, liquefied gas and jet fuel.
Its annual output of 1.5 million metric tons will save Uzbekistan $1 billion per year in fuel imports, officials say.
Author: Joanna Lillis




