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Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035 Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035 Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035 THE REPORT PROVIDES* n Disposition by region — internal market vs. export n Country-by-country analysis Resources and state of development Political, environmental and regulatory considerations Production forecasts New heavy oil projects and expansions • Costs n Heavy crude value and pricing Valuation of crudes in the refining market Heavy crude oil prices and differentials Pricing outlook *Includes Maps of Heavy Oil Basins and Existing Heavy Oil Pipelines The only report available to help you understand each region of the world from the Canadian tar sands, Mexico and the Orinoco, to China’s reserves, offshore Brazil fields, developments in Africa and more... WHO SHOULD READ THIS REPORT Petroleum Refiners Oil & Gas Companies Traders and Transportation Companies Investors Governments Licensing Technology Suppliers Heavy Equipment Manufacturers Engineering & Construction Firms www.hartenergy.com

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Page 1: Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035pdfs.hartenergy.com/HartEnergySite/HCOFlyer_2012.pdf · 2015-10-15 · Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035

Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035

Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035

Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035

THE REPORT PROVIDES*

n Disposition by region —internal market vs. export

n Country-by-country analysis• Resources and state of development• Political, environmental and regulatory considerations

• Production forecasts

• New heavy oil projects and expansions• Costs

n Heavy crude value and pricing• Valuation of crudes in the refining market

• Heavy crude oil prices and differentials • Pricing outlook

*Includes Maps of Heavy Oil Basins and Existing Heavy Oil Pipelines

The only report available to help you understand each region of the world fromthe Canadian tar sands, Mexico and the Orinoco, to China’s reserves, offshoreBrazil fields, developments in Africa and more...

WHO SHOULD READ THIS REPORT

• Petroleum Refiners

• Oil & Gas Companies

• Traders and TransportationCompanies

• Investors

• Governments

• Licensing TechnologySuppliers

• Heavy Equipment Manufacturers

• Engineering & Construction Firms

www.hartenergy.com

Page 2: Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035pdfs.hartenergy.com/HartEnergySite/HCOFlyer_2012.pdf · 2015-10-15 · Heavy Crude Oil: A Global Analysis and Outlook to 2035

www.hartenergy.com

Laura AtkinsDirector of

Petroleum [email protected]

Dr. Michael WarrenExecutive Director, [email protected]

Rodrigo FavelaExecutive Director, Refining,Planning and [email protected]

Terrence HigginsExecutive Director,

Refining and Special [email protected]

Greg A. HaasManager of Research,Integrated Oil & Gas

[email protected]

Raphael HudsonDirector, Latin America

[email protected]

Narmadha NavaneethanResearch Analyst

[email protected]

CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS REPORT

I. Executive SummaryII. Introduction and Global ContextII.1 DefinitionsII.2 Resources and ReservesII.3 Recoveries and Production Techniques

III. North AmericaIII.1 CanadaIII.1.1 History and Description of the ResourceIII.1.2 Companies and ProjectsIII.1.3 Upgrading and Synthetic Crude OilIII.1.4 BlendingIII.1.5 Costs and EconomicsIII.1.6 OutlookIII.1.7 Environmental Impacts

III.2 MexicoIII.3 United StatesIII.3.1 Companies, Projects and CostsIII.3.2 Long-Term PotentialIII.3.3 Outlook

II.4 North American Crude Oil PipelinesIII.5 North America Heavy Oil Disposition

IV. South and Central AmericaIV.1 BrazilIV.1.1 Projects, Companies and CostsIV.1.2 Outlook

IV.1.3 Infrastructure and ExportsIV.2 VenezuelaIV.2.1 Projects, Companies and CostsIV.2.1.1 Orinoco Current Joint Venture ProjectsIV.2.1.1 Future Orinoco ProjectsIV.2.2 OutlookIV.2.3 Long-Term PotentialIV.2.4 Infrastructure, Exports and Consumption

IV.3 Colombia, Ecuador and PeruIV.3.1 ColombiaIV.3.2 EcuadorIV.2.3 PeruIV.5 Disposition

V. Middle EastV.1 Oman V.1.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.1.2 OutlookV.1.3 Exports and Consumption

V.2 Iran V.2.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.2.2 OutlookV.2.3 Exports and Consumption

V.3 IraqV.3.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.3.2 Outlook

V.3.3 Exports and ConsumptionV.4 KuwaitV.4.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.4.2 OutlookV.4.3 Exports and Consumption

V.5 Saudi Arabia and BahrainV.5.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.5.2 OutlookV.5.3 Exports and Consumption

V.6 SyriaV.6.1 Companies, Projects and CostsV.6.2 OutlookV.6.3 Exports and Consumption

VI. Asia PacificVI.1 ChinaVI.1.1 Companies and ProjectsVI.1.2 OutlookVI.1.3 Consumption and Infrastructure

VI.2 IndonesiaVI.2.1 Companies and ProjectsVI.2.2 Infrastructure and Consumption

VI.3 IndiaVI.4 Asia Pacific Heavy Oil Disposition

VII. AfricaVII.1 Angola

VII.1.1 Companies and ProjectsVII.2 Chad and CameroonVII.2.1 Companies and Projects

VII.3 CongoVII.4 EgyptVII.4.1 Companies and Projects

VII.5 MadagascarVII.5.1 Companies and Projects

VII.6 NigeriaVII.7 Other CountriesVII.8 OutlookVII.9 Consumption, Exports and InfrastructureVII.10 Africa Heavy Oil Disposition

VIII. Europe, Russia and Central AsiaVIII.1 North SeaVIII.1.1 Companies, Projects and CostsVIII.1.2 Long-Term Heavy Oil ProspectsVIII.1.4 OutlookVIII.1.5 Infrastructure, Consumption and Exports

VIII.2 Continental EuropeVIII.3 RussiaVIII.3.1 Companies and ProjectsVIII.3.2 Outlook

VIII.4 KazakhstanVIII.4.1 Companies and ProjectsVIII.4.2 Outlook

VIII.5 Europe, Russia and Central Asia Infrastructure and Disposition

IX. Heavy Crude Value and Pricing IX.1 Valuation of Crudes in the Refining marketIX.2 Heavy crude oil process and commercial

implications for the refining industryIX.3 Heavy Crude Oil Prices and DifferentialsIX.4 Pricing Outlook

X. Summary: Impact on Global Liquid Suppliesand Global DispositionX.1 Heavy Oil Costs and Comparison with Other

Crude SourcesX.2 Global Outlook and Impact on SuppliesX.3 Global Crude Disposition Summary

Sources

FROM THE EXPERTS AT HART ENERGYWith offices in more than 10 worldwide locations, Hart Energy provides expertise to major energy companies, key international organizations such as OPEC, CEN, ASTM, JPEC, ISO, APEC, UNPCFV and governmental bodies like US EPA, US DOE, White House Council on Environmental Quality, EU Commission,EU Parliament, Chinese Ministry of Environment Protection and many more...