Friday, February 1, 2013

Brazil's HRT: Namibia Regulators Approve Stake Sale to Galp

RIO DE JANEIRO--Brazilian oil startup HRT Participacoes em Petroleo SA (HRTPY, HRTP3.BR) said late Thursday that Namibia's Mines and Energy Ministry approved the sale of a stake in three offshore blocks to Portugal's Galp Energia (GALP.LB).

In the deal, first announced in November, the two companies said that Galp had acquired a 14% stake in the three exploration blocks in return for covering a portion of drilling costs.

The deal helps clear the way for HRT to start drilling in the highly prospective region off Namibia's coast, which geologists believe could hold an area similar to Brazil's subsalt because the two areas were connected millions of years ago. Billions of barrels of crude oil were discovered under a thick layer of salt in the Atlantic Ocean off Brazil.

"We can confirm we will commence operations in [first-quarter 2013] for our exploratory campaign in Namibia," HRT Chief Executive Marcio Rocha Mello said in a statement. Earlier this month, HRT recently received the drilling rig that will be used to drill exploration wells in the offshore blocks.

Oil-industry consultants DeGolyer and MacNaughton pegged average prospective resources for HRT's offshore acreage in Namibia at 7.4 billion barrels of oil equivalent. Average prospective resources are a preliminary measure used by the industry to indicate oil volumes that could be recovered from undiscovered deposits.

HRT holds operating stakes in 10 blocks and minority shares in two others in the Walvis, Orange and Namibe basins.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Post a Comment Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Aker Wins Umbilicals Contract for Aasta Hansteen Field

Norwegian oilfield services firm Aker Solutions announced Friday that it has won a $50 million (NOK 280 million) contract with Statoil to supply deepwater umbilicals for the Aasta Hansteen field on the Norwegian Continental Shelf.

Aasta Hansteen is a deepwater project consisting of three structures – Luva, Haklang and Snefrid South – at a water depth of 4,265 feet. The structures are located 186 miles west of Bodø and 87 miles north of the nearest existing offshore infrastructure Norne.

The planned field development for Aasta Hansteen includes a SPAR platform, which will be the first such installation on the Norwegian Continental Shelf. SPAR is a floating installation consisting of a vertical column moored to the seabed. The installation features conventional topsides with processing facilities.

Subsea umbilicals are deployed on the seabed to supply necessary controls and chemicals to subsea oil and gas wells, subsea manifolds and any system requiring remote control.

The scope of Aker's work includes the design, engineering and manufacturing of dynamic and static umbilicals, a riser base and ancillary equipment. The steel tube umbilicals will be manufactured and delivered out of Aker's facility in Moss, Norway – supported by project management, design and engineering in Fornebu – while the umbilical riser base will be made at Aker's facility in Egersund.

Tove Røskaft, head of Aker's umbilicals business, commented in a statement:

"The Aasta Hansteen field represents an important milestone in harsh environment development on the Norwegian Continental Shelf. Aker Solutions is proud to be part of this major project and we look forward to safeguarding valuable infrastructure and securing production success."

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Vanoil Receives Extension on Kenya PSC

Vanoil Energy reported Friday that the Kenyan Ministry of Energy has extended the deadlines within which Vanoil must satisfy the work program obligations defined in its Production Sharing Contract (PSC).

Previously, Vanoil was obligated to finish drilling its first well by April 30, 2013. Now, under the terms of the latest extension, Vanoil must only commence drilling its first well before July 31, 2013 and, with sufficient technical justification, Vanoil may place its first two wells anywhere within the boundaries of Block 3A and 3B to satisfy the work program obligations within the Initial Exploration Period of its PSC.

Aaron D'Este, the company's president and CEO, stated; "We were very pleased to secure this key extension. Vanoil is the first company to complete 3D seismic onshore in Kenya and our exploration program is among the most robust ever completed in country. The time extension granted to Vanoil allows us to fully realise value from our 3D data and to drill our first two wells in rapid succession. The ability to place both wells anywhere within the boundaries of 3A and 3B also gives Vanoil the flexibility to target its most exciting prospects. We view 2013 as a transformational year for the Company and we now have the time and operational flexibility to extract maximum value from our assets."

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Carl Icahn Acquires 5.61% of Transocean's Shares -Filing

Activist investor Carl Icahn increased his stake in Transocean Ltd. (RIG) to 5.6% and urged the company to declare a $4-a-share dividend, saying he believes the company's shares are undervalued.

Shares were up 2.5% to $58.20 after hours. The stock is up 26% over the past six months.

According to a regulatory filing, Mr. Icahn and his affiliates have had talks with Transocean management and plan to have further discussions with them. Mr. Icahn "strongly believes" Transocean should return capital to shareholders and should declare a per-share dividend of at least $4.

Swiss law stipulates, according to the filing, that a shareholder has the right to propose a dividend at a company's annual meeting, and the dividend will be declared upon majority shareholder support regardless whether the company's board is supportive. Mr. Icahn plans to propose the $4 a share dividendat this year's annual meeting if Transocean's board doesn't declare one of at least that amount.

Mr. Icahn also plans additional discussions with Transocean management to discuss the business and strategies, as well as the potential addition of shareholder-selected nominees to the board.

Mr. Icahn and his affiliates now hold roughly 20.2 million shares in the company, at an aggregate purchase price of about $525.7 million. Transocean had 359.4 million shares outstanding as of Oct. 23.

In view of the Swiss takeover rules, Mr. Icahn notes that nothing in the filing should be viewed as an indication that he plans to launch, or is considering, a public takeover of the company.

Last week, Transocean disclosed that Mr. Icahn had taken a stake of more than 3% in the offshort driller. Mr. Icahn had told the company he was planning to acquire more than $682 million of stock in total, which was about 3.4% of Transocean's outstanding shares. That would make him the second largest shareholder in the company, which is based in Zug, Switzerland, after Capital Research and Management Co., which owns more than 5%.

Mr. Icahn has been active in energy investments in the last year, taking stakes in such companies as refiner CVR Energy Inc. (CVI) and Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK), the second-largest natural gas producer in the U.S. His Chesapeake investment helped spur major corporate-governance changes at the company, including the replacement of a majority of the board.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Talisman Prepares for Job Cuts as Canada's Oil Patch Struggles

Talisman Prepares for Job Cuts as Canada's Oil Patch Struggles

CALGARY (Globe and Mail)--Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM.T, TLM) is preparing to cut its workforce as it works to substantially reduce office costs amid a broader push toward better profitability.

Talisman expects to slash its general and administrative (G&A) costs by "at least 20 per cent overall," Helen Wesley, the company's executive vice-president of corporate services, told the CIBC Whistler Institutional Investor Conference Thursday morning. "And that's a combination of both people and indirect costs."

She said the company will act in "a couple of weeks." Talisman is "rationalizing the size" of its operations both on the corporate side and in the many regions it operates in. That is likely to result in the company backing away from certain countries, she suggested.

"When we start exiting countries, we take out the G&A associated with those countries directly, but then all of the associated work that happens to make a country like Poland and Peru function. Pretty significant," she said. "Because we've had such a distributed focus over the last few years, I think the company will function differently as a result of being more streamlined in terms of the portfolio."

Talisman currently spends C$1.3-billion a year on its general and administrative costs budget. It's unclear what percentage of its workforce, which stood at 3,700 at the end of 2011, will be let go. Talisman spokeswoman Phoebe Buckland said cuts will include "people, offices, travel, IT. It's the overhead as well as the people cost."

The looming layoffs are the latest sign of widespread difficulty in the Canadian oil patch. Oil sands companies, faced with high costs and heavily discounted crude prices, have begun to scale back growth plans. Gas companies, which have faced a longer run of low prices, have largely managed by selling off pieces of their property, mostly through joint ventures with foreign companies.

Talisman's changes, which include the departure of executive vice-president of special project Tony Meggs, come months after long-time Calgary corporate leader Hal Kvisle took over as chief executive officer.

The company is now in the midst of deep corporate surgery designed to improve its performance. The company's shares, after touching nearly C$25 in early 2011, now sit at just above C$12. Talisman has acknowledged that of the three legs of its corporate stool -- the Americas, the North Sea and southeast Asia -- only the latter is generating free cash flow today.

"Our goal is to make sure that all three of these regions are generating free cash," said Richard Herbert, executive vice-president of exploration, on Thursday. "We will divest non-core assets that are outside these regions, but will also look at divesting non-core assets within these regions. We will high-grade the portfolio wherever we look."

In North America in particular, Talisman is looking to back out of a number of operational areas. It is currently involved in five so-called "resource plays." It wants "to focus on 3.5 of those," Mr. Herbert said.

"Through a combination of divestment or joint ventures, and we're looking at all of the options that are possible, we're going to reduce our footprint in North America."

The company's difficult financial circumstances have largely ruled out even more dramatic moves, said Mr. Herbert. Last year, Talisman "took a look to see what options did we have, ranging from asset sales or joint ventures, all the way through to splitting up the company," he said. But it's tough to hive off companies that aren't especially profitable.

"We wouldn't be able to set up a North American business independently, for example, with the current debt that we've got," he said.

Plus, he added, the company's relationships with big state-owned companies like Malaysia's Petronas "to some extent depend on Talisman being a sort of global player, and being of the scale and size that it is."

Selling the company, he added, is "not something that we're putting any focus on right now."

Talisman is not looking to expand its oil and gas production in 2013, although it is hoping to shift its output toward oil, which in North America has seen far stronger pricing than natural gas. Some of that effort has been challenged by delays in gaining community and environmental permits in Colombia, where "we're moving at a slower pace than we had hoped a year ago, but it is now moving ahead," Mr. Herbert said.

He was eager to highlight Talisman's efforts in Iraqi Kurdistan, where it has drilled three wells and is now drilling two more. Finding and development costs -- the amount it takes to discover new barrels -- there are "probably one of the lowest ... left in the world," he said, and the company has found an "oil column" nearly 150 metres thick, although it may be thicker.

"Whether we choose to stay in this and develop it, bring in partners to do that or monetize it entirely and exit are all choices for the future," Mr. Herbert said. "Right now, we think the right thing to do is continue to grow value by appraising what's clearly a very exciting discovery."

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Samsung Heavy Cuts First Steel for Ichthys LNG Semisub

Inpex revealed Friday that Ichthys LNG is on track to deliver first gas by year-end 2016, with the first steel cutting of the project’s semisubmersible platform conducted by Samsung Heavy Industries in South Korea Friday.

The 492-foot by 361-foot (150 meter by 110 meter) large central processing facility (CPF) will displace 140,000 tonnes and have a peak gas export rate of 1,657 million standard cubic feet per day, making the semisub platform the largest of its kind.

"This is one of the most exciting parts of the project – the first materialization of what has been many years of hard work; it's when the design comes to life," Inpex's President Director Australia Seiya Ito said in a statement.

The platform's hull will be moored by 28 anchor chains weighing more than 25,000 tonnes, while the project's floating production storage offloading (FPSO) vessel will be moored by an additional 15,000 tonnes of anchor chain.

"The total represents more than the yearly worldwide production of large-scale anchor chains," Inpex noted in its disclosure.

Spain's Vicinay is the sole supplier of anchor chains for the Ichthys liquefied natural gas (LNG) Project.

Earlier in the week, the first steel plates of the FPSO vessel's turret were cut in Singapore.

"This is a momentous week for the Ichthys LNG project as it takes its first big step towards reaching its goal of watching the facilities sail from [South Korea] to Australia in late 2015," Ito remarked.

The development plan for Ichthys includes several subsea wells tied-back to the CPF and the FPSO for condensate. A 528-mile (850-kilometer) subsea pipeline will be constructed to transport the gas to a LNG processing plant in Blaydin Point, Darwin.

Onshore installations consist of two LNG trains with a capacity of 4.2 million tonnes per year each and facilities for the extraction and the export of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and condensate. In addition to its LNG production, the Ichthys project is expected to generate 1.6 million tonnes per year of LPG and 100,000 barrels of condensate a day at peak.

The entire annual production of LNG from Ichthys LNG (8.4 million tons per year) has already been sold for 15 years under oil-linked price contracts, mostly directed to third-party consortiums of Taiwanese and Japanese buyers.

Ichthys is operated by Inpex with a 66.07 percent interest. The remaining stakes are held by Total (30 percent), Tokyo Gas (1.575 percent), Osaka Gas (1.200 percent), Chubu Electric (0.735 percent) and Toho Gas (0.420 percent).

Quintella has reported on the upstream and downstream oil and petrochemicals markets from 2004. Email Quintella at quintella.koh@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Talisman Prepares for Job Cuts as Canada's Oil Patch Struggles

Talisman Prepares for Job Cuts as Canada's Oil Patch Struggles

CALGARY (Globe and Mail)--Talisman Energy Inc. (TLM.T, TLM) is preparing to cut its workforce as it works to substantially reduce office costs amid a broader push toward better profitability.

Talisman expects to slash its general and administrative (G&A) costs by "at least 20 per cent overall," Helen Wesley, the company's executive vice-president of corporate services, told the CIBC Whistler Institutional Investor Conference Thursday morning. "And that's a combination of both people and indirect costs."

She said the company will act in "a couple of weeks." Talisman is "rationalizing the size" of its operations both on the corporate side and in the many regions it operates in. That is likely to result in the company backing away from certain countries, she suggested.

"When we start exiting countries, we take out the G&A associated with those countries directly, but then all of the associated work that happens to make a country like Poland and Peru function. Pretty significant," she said. "Because we've had such a distributed focus over the last few years, I think the company will function differently as a result of being more streamlined in terms of the portfolio."

Talisman currently spends C$1.3-billion a year on its general and administrative costs budget. It's unclear what percentage of its workforce, which stood at 3,700 at the end of 2011, will be let go. Talisman spokeswoman Phoebe Buckland said cuts will include "people, offices, travel, IT. It's the overhead as well as the people cost."

The looming layoffs are the latest sign of widespread difficulty in the Canadian oil patch. Oil sands companies, faced with high costs and heavily discounted crude prices, have begun to scale back growth plans. Gas companies, which have faced a longer run of low prices, have largely managed by selling off pieces of their property, mostly through joint ventures with foreign companies.

Talisman's changes, which include the departure of executive vice-president of special project Tony Meggs, come months after long-time Calgary corporate leader Hal Kvisle took over as chief executive officer.

The company is now in the midst of deep corporate surgery designed to improve its performance. The company's shares, after touching nearly C$25 in early 2011, now sit at just above C$12. Talisman has acknowledged that of the three legs of its corporate stool -- the Americas, the North Sea and southeast Asia -- only the latter is generating free cash flow today.

"Our goal is to make sure that all three of these regions are generating free cash," said Richard Herbert, executive vice-president of exploration, on Thursday. "We will divest non-core assets that are outside these regions, but will also look at divesting non-core assets within these regions. We will high-grade the portfolio wherever we look."

In North America in particular, Talisman is looking to back out of a number of operational areas. It is currently involved in five so-called "resource plays." It wants "to focus on 3.5 of those," Mr. Herbert said.

"Through a combination of divestment or joint ventures, and we're looking at all of the options that are possible, we're going to reduce our footprint in North America."

The company's difficult financial circumstances have largely ruled out even more dramatic moves, said Mr. Herbert. Last year, Talisman "took a look to see what options did we have, ranging from asset sales or joint ventures, all the way through to splitting up the company," he said. But it's tough to hive off companies that aren't especially profitable.

"We wouldn't be able to set up a North American business independently, for example, with the current debt that we've got," he said.

Plus, he added, the company's relationships with big state-owned companies like Malaysia's Petronas "to some extent depend on Talisman being a sort of global player, and being of the scale and size that it is."

Selling the company, he added, is "not something that we're putting any focus on right now."

Talisman is not looking to expand its oil and gas production in 2013, although it is hoping to shift its output toward oil, which in North America has seen far stronger pricing than natural gas. Some of that effort has been challenged by delays in gaining community and environmental permits in Colombia, where "we're moving at a slower pace than we had hoped a year ago, but it is now moving ahead," Mr. Herbert said.

He was eager to highlight Talisman's efforts in Iraqi Kurdistan, where it has drilled three wells and is now drilling two more. Finding and development costs -- the amount it takes to discover new barrels -- there are "probably one of the lowest ... left in the world," he said, and the company has found an "oil column" nearly 150 metres thick, although it may be thicker.

"Whether we choose to stay in this and develop it, bring in partners to do that or monetize it entirely and exit are all choices for the future," Mr. Herbert said. "Right now, we think the right thing to do is continue to grow value by appraising what's clearly a very exciting discovery."

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

RusPetro to Boost Production with New Heat Exchanger

RusPetro reported Friday that a heat exchange system is expected to come on line on the firm's Krasnoleninsky Arch field, which is located in the Khanty-Mansiysk region of West Siberia.

RusPetro said that the heat exchanger will enable condensate production to increase from a current level of 1,400 barrels of oil per day (bopd) towards 4,000 bopd, bringing total crude and condensate production from around 6,500 bopd to approximately 9,000 bopd.

The firm has updated its development plan and aims to produce average crude and condensate at a rate of 10,000 bopd in 2013, with a targeted exit rate of 13,000 bopd for the year. For the end of 2014 and 2015, it plans exit rates of 20,000 bopd and 31,000 bopd respectively.

RusPetro also announced that it has strengthened its balance sheet. The firm has commenced an offering of senior secured notes, which will be used to repay a senior term loan and for general corporate purposes. It is also proposing to convert Limolines Transport's outstanding shareholder loan into new shares in the company. Most significant, however, has been the establishment of a new revolving credit facility at an initial level of $50 million with Sberbank.

RusPetro Chief Executive Don Wolcott commented in a company statement:

"We are delighted to announce our plans for strengthening of our balance sheet through a range of actions today, including the notes offering, Limolines loan conversion and the new Sberbank facility. These will simplify our capital structure and raise new funds that can be deployed in to the field. Our business is now operating cash flow positive and we believe that our strategic development plan will put the business on a firm trajectory for growth in 2013 and beyond."

Analysts who follow the company at London-based FoxDavies Capital saw the update as positive.

A former engineer, Jon is an award-winning editor who has covered the technology, engineering and energy sectors since the mid-1990s. Email Jon at jmainwaring@rigzone.com.

Post a Comment Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here