Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Aker Buys Scottish Well Control Specialist

Aker Solutions announced Tuesday that it has agreed to buy a majority stake in Aberdeen-based subsea well control specialist Enovate Systems.

Enovate, which was founded in 2002 and now employs 62 people, has developed a range of patented components and products for use in open water workover systems, in riser workover systems, rigless intervention systems and drilling safety systems. In 2012, it had revenues of approximately $23.6 million (GBP 15 million), with an EBITDA profit of $7.8 million (GBP 5 million).

"Enovate has developed and qualified unique technology for safe and efficient well control. Components from Enovate are also important building blocks for systems within workover and well-intervention services for high pressure and ultra-deep water fields worldwide," Aker Chief Technology Officer Åsmund Bøe commented in a statement.

Aker added that Enovate will continue to be developed as an independent supplier of well control components.

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U.S. M&A Activity Hits 10-Year High in 4Q2012

Merger and acquisition (M&A) activity in the U.S. oil and gas industry hit a 10-year high during the fourth quarter of 2012 with 75 deals, according to PwC US. A number of factors drove this activity, including private equity (PE) interest, foreign buyers, shale plays, and companies looking to get deals done before the end of the year with the looming fiscal cliff and proposed tax changes. In fact, that flurry of fourth quarter activity pushed overall deal volume in 2012 to a ten-year high at 204 transactions (for deals valued at over $50 million), representing $146.2 billion – the second highest total deal value in 10 years.

During the final three months of 2012, total deal value reached $56.2 billion, marking the second highest level seen in 10 years (behind the $79.1 billion total deal value seen during the fourth quarter of 2011).

"M&A activity in the U.S. oil and gas sector was extremely robust in 2012, with the vast majority of that activity happening in the final three months of the year as many deals got pulled forward due to the uncertainty surrounding the fiscal cliff," said Rick Roberge, principal in PwC’s energy M&A practice. "This past year was a watershed moment for the industry, with private equity involvement reaching an all-time high, shale deal volume at a two-year high during the fourth quarter, and a jump in asset transactions as companies have shifted their focus to adding more profitable liquid rich shale plays to their portfolios.

"We expect to see a slight pause in M&A during the first part of 2013 as companies focus on the recent wave of deals announced, but believe 2013 will be another banner year for deals as the U.S. oil and gas industry is ripe for continued consolidation. In fact, our recent PwC Global CEO Survey found that energy CEOs are among the most confident on growth prospects for this year than any other industry."

Private equity deal activity in the oil and gas industry marked an all-time high in 2012 with 34 transactions (which represented $28.4 billion). In the fourth quarter of 2012, there were 11 financial sponsor-backed deals worth $6.9 billion, a slight drop from the 13 PE deals in the fourth quarter of 2011 that totaled $13.6 billion. Additionally, there were 170 strategic deals in all of 2012 that contributed $117.8 billion, compared to 163 strategic deals in 2011 with a total deal value of $136.5 billion. During the fourth quarter of 2012, there were 64 strategic deals, a 64 percent increase from the 39 deals during the same time period last year. Total deal value for strategics was $49.2 billion during the last three months of 2012, a decline from the $65.5 billion in the fourth quarter of 2011.

PwC noted that during 2012, master limited partnerships (MLPs) were involved in 42 transactions, representing more than 20 percent of total 2012 deal activity, continuing the trend of increased MLP involvement over the past two years (MLPs represented 15.6 percent of total deal activity in 2010 and 18.4 percent in 2011).

For deals valued at over $50 million, upstream deals accounted for 53 percent of activity in the fourth quarter of 2012 with 40 transactions, representing $38.0 billion, or 68 percent of total fourth quarter deal value. The number of oil deals within the upstream sector totaled 22, a significant difference compared to five gas deals in the quarter. There were 21 midstream deals that contributed $10.9 billion. Nine downstream deals during the fourth quarter of 2012 added $5.9 billion, while oilfield services contributed five deals worth $1.4 billion.

Asset transactions dominated total M&A deal volume during the fourth quarter of 2012 with 56 deals, a continuation of a trend that PwC noted during the third quarter of 2012, marking the highest volume of asset transactions in at least ten years. Total deal value for those asset transactions represented $27.2 billion, the second highest value in ten years. For all of 2012, there were 158 asset deals worth $89.3 billion.

Also marking a ten-year high, there were 19 corporate transactions (with values greater than $50 million). Those deals had a total deal value of $29.0 billion during the fourth quarter of 2012. For full year 2012, there were 46 corporate transactions that contributed $56.9 billion.

According to PwC, there were 27 deals with values greater than $50 million related to shale plays in the fourth quarter of 2012, totaling $16.3 billion, an increase from the 22 shale-related deals during the fourth quarter of 2011, although total deal value was flat. For all of 2012, there were 77 shale deals that contributed $51.7 billion, an increase of two deals when compared to full year 2011, but a drop from the $72.7 billion in shale deal value from 2011. Included in the shale deals for fourth quarter 2012 were two transactions from the Marcellus Shale with a total deal value of $685 million and one Utica Shale deal worth $372 million.

PwC also noted that the volume of upstream and midstream shale deals increased in the fourth quarter of 2012 when compared to the same quarter in 2011. There were 17 total shale deals in the upstream sector, accounting for $9.0 billion, which was one more deal when compared to Q4 2011, although deal value had decreased from $12.3 billion last year. Midstream shale-related deals totaled 10 for the fourth quarter of 2012, representing $7.3 billion, an increase from the six midstream deals worth $4.0 billion during the fourth quarter of 2011.

"Throughout 2012, we continued to see a fair amount of repositioning and realignment with companies around midstream assets in the Marcellus Shale and Utica Shale as they looked to build the infrastructure needed to transport the extracted oil and gas," said Steve Haffner, a Pittsburgh-based partner with PwC’s energy practice. "Given the disparity in commodity prices, we expect to see continued movement during the year from the Marcellus to the Utica, as the Utica is a more attractive play due to its higher liquid content."

The most active shale plays for M&A with values greater than $50 million during the fourth quarter of 2012 include the Bakken in North Dakota, which had seven deals with a total value of $4.1 billion, followed by the Eagle Ford in Texas with six deals representing $3.1 billion.

"As we look out at the deal landscape throughout 2013, we believe the fundamentals are in place for continued transactions, including the potential for some very large deals to get done,” added Roberge. “The combination of independents who still control the majority of resources and the majors who have strong balance sheets and financial muscle may result in consolidation, as the capital requirements to develop shale plays continues to grow. We also expect PE to remain active in new investments."

Foreign buyers announced nine deals in the fourth quarter of 2012, which contributed $3.2 billion, versus seven deals valued at $10.4 billion during the same period last year.

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NCS Survey Acquires Two AUVs

NCS Survey has expanded its growing autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) fleet with the purchase of two Teledyne Gavia AUVs.

These vehicles are the latest in the Gavia Offshore Surveyor series and are equipped with high-resolution side scan sonar, a multi-beam echo sounder, a sub-bottom profiler, an ultra-short baseline positioning system, long baseline (LBL), GPS and an inertial navigation system. The AUVs are used to provide ultra-high-resolution data for pipeline and platform inspections; scour monitoring surveys; cable and pipe route surveys; and offshore wind farm surveys. For three years, NCS Survey has operated these vehicles in difficult access and remote areas including the southern tip of Argentina. Additionally, the company has a high level of repeat business from clients like Shell, BP and ConocoPhillips.

This purchase underlines NCS Survey’s position as the global leader in the use of portable AUVs in the offshore survey market as it now has the largest commercial fleet in the world. The vehicles are rated to 3,280 feet (1000 meters) but regularly operate in depths as shallow as 6.5 feet (two meters). They can perform in currents of more than 2 knots, under jackup drilling rigs and very close to fixed platform structures. Their modularity offers ease of transportation as no module weighs more than 25kg in its transit case.

"The addition of these Gavia AUVs to our fleet is a reflection of a growing demand from current and potential clients for AUV services in 2012," said NCS Survey President Andy Gray. "As a global leader in the use of this equipment, we are constantly growing and expanding in accordance to our clients’ demands. This is an ideal representation of that."

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Crude-Oil Futures Climb to 19-Week High; Gasoline Futures Rally for 8th Day

NEW YORK--Crude-oil futures prices posted modest gains Monday, settling at a 19-week high, while concerns over tight mid-Atlantic gasoline supplies pushed futures up for an eighth straight day.

Oil futures climbed early as the Commerce Department said December U.S. durable goods orders rose 4.6% from November, much stronger than the consensus call for a 2% rise. The data is the latest of recent strong indicators of a recovery in the U.S., the world's biggest oil consumer.

But after sluggish data on home sales and weakness in the broader equities market, crude turned down before regaining traction to tick up to a fresh high after failing to hold gains above $96 a barrel in the three prior sessions.

Light, sweet crude oil for March delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange settled up 56 cents at $96.44 a barrel, but off from its session high of $96.81 a barrel. The modest gain was enough to push crude to its highest settlement since Sept. 18, but traders said the path to further gains may not be smooth.

ICE North Sea Brent for March delivery settled up 20 cents at $113.48 a barrel, the highest price since Oct. 16.

"We've been gaining on signs of an economy recovery," which would spark higher demand for oil, said Carl Larry, president of Oil Outlooks and Opinions. Prospects for more gains are on hold until the market gets a read on U.S. oil inventory data, the view from the Federal Reserve's policy-making board, and the January nonfarm payrolls report.

Mr. Larry said crude oil prices, with the $97-a-barrel level in sight, may be poised to challenge $100 a barrel next week for the first time since May if the payroll report due Friday is supportive and heavy refinery maintenance work doesn't create a glut of crude oil in inventories.

Refiners last week cut crude oil processing rates to a 30-month low and sustained declines are expected.

Traders will be watching U.S. oil inventory data due at midweek to show the scope of inventory gains and refinery operations.

"If we don't get a big crude build, we will be going higher. That's the X factor here. It's all about the refineries," Mr. Larry said. He expects crude oil stocks to rise by 1.75 million barrels, which is at the low end of early forecasts.

Analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expect crude stocks to rise by 2.5 million barrels, with refinery operations inching up 0.1 percentage point from a 10-month low last week amid what is expected a busy quarter for seasonal maintenance work.

Jim Ritterbusch, president of Ritterbusch & Associates, said he sees crude struggling to hold above $96 in the near term due to reduced refiner demand. He estimated that first-quarter maintenance work could cut crude processing by about 9% to 10% of capacity, compared with a 7% in the first quarter of 2008, a period of heavy shutdowns. That would translate to around 1.6 million to 1.7 million barrels a day of crude capacity off line.

Concerns that refinery maintenance will further tighten gasoline inventories in the heavily populated mid-Atlantic region have thrust reformulated gasoline blendstock futures into the spotlight at a time when gasoline demand is the weakest of the year.

Heavy maintenance is expected to reduce gasoline production and tighten inventories. Gasoline stocks are high nationwide, but in the mid-Atlantic region, which includes the New York Harbor delivery point of the Nymex contract, they are nearly 15% below their five-year average level for this time of year, government data show.

Inventories were slim before Hurricane Sandy disrupted operations at refineries and terminals in the region, and haven't rebounded.

The specter for tighter-still supplies increased on Monday, when Hess Corp. said it will permanently shut its small Port Reading, N.J., refinery by the end of February. Energy Department data show the plant produces 27,000 barrels a day of gasoline, a fraction of the three million barrels a day or so consumed along the entire East Coast. Still, traders said, the closure will increase the need for imports to the region.

Gasoline prices in the mid-Atlantic region are among the highest in the nation, in part because crude imports in the region are tied to the price of internationally traded Brent crude oil, rather than abundant crude oil supplies in the Midwest, which keep prices down.

February-delivery contracts for reformulated gasoline blendstock futures settled 5.94 cents higher, or 2.1%, at $2.9348 a gallon, the highest price since Oct. 11. Prices have rallied 8.4%, or 22.82 cents a gallon, in the past eight sessions. That is the longest string of gains since the summer of 2011.

Gasoline demand is weakest at this time of year and can lag peak summer demand by as much as one million barrels a day.

RBOB for May delivery, so far this month, has averaged nearly 16 cents a gallon more than the February price. That is the highest May-to-February premium in four years, and suggests investors believe gasoline stocks will still be tight as the peak demand season begins.

February heating oil settled down 0.48 cent, at $3.0616 a gallon. The February heating oil and RBOB contracts expire at Thursday's settlement.

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

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Vanoil Extends Agreement with Rwanda

Vanoil Energy announced Tuesday it has executed a two month extension to its Technical Evaluation Agreement with the Rwandan Ministry of Natural Resources.

The agreement provides Vanoil with the exclusive right to negotiate a Production Sharing Contract (PSC) covering approximately 629 square miles (1,631 square kilometers) of the East Kivu Graben, located beneath Lake Kivu, Rwanda.

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Deadline Extended for CNOOC Takeover of Nexen

Deadline Extended for CNOOC Takeover of Nexen

Canada's Nexen and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) have mutually agreed to extend the closing date of CNOOC’s $15.1 billion takeover of the Canadian oil and gas producer by 30 days to March 2, 2013, CNOOC confirmed Monday in a disclosure.

Nexen revealed the same in a statement released Sunday, adding that it would also postpone the release of its 2012 fourth quarter financial results. Nexen did not specify a date for the release of its results.

"Completion of the Agreement remains subject to the receipt of the United States regulatory approval and the satisfaction and waiver of other customary closing conditions. Key regulatory approvals have been received from Canada, the United Kingdom, the European Union and the People’s Republic of China," Nexen said in its issued statement.

In December last year, Canada approved CNOOC's proposed acquisition of Nexen, clearing a major hurdle for the Beijing-based energy giant in completing what would be China's biggest ever foreign acquisition. It is also the most ambitious bid by a foreign government-owned entity so far to enter North America's booming energy industry.

CNOOC and Nexen were already partners in developing Canada's oil sands. The Chinese company acquired Nexen's bankrupt partner, OPTI Canada Inc., which was involved in the Long Lake oil sands project, in 2011. CNOOC launched its all-cash bid for Nexen on July 23, offering $27.50 a share, or a premium of over 60 percent versus the share price on the last trading day before the two companies announced their proposed transaction.

As part of the acquisition, CNOOC will make Calgary the head office of its North and Central American operations. This office will oversee the operation and growth of Nexen's assets in North and South America, Europe and West Africa and CNOOC 's portfolio in Canada, the United States and Central America.

CNOOC plans to retain Nexen's current management team and employees, and intends to list its common shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

For CNOOC, the Nexen deal comes seven years after the Chinese company's 2005 failure to acquire Unocal Corp. for $18.5 billion.

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

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GE Opens New Iraq Hub to Help Boost Production

Underlining its commitment to help strengthen Iraq’s energy infrastructure, GE Oil & Gas has established a new technology and service center near Basra City, in the heart of the oil-rich North Rumaila region. The facility, which was opened earlier this month, brings the latest GE technology and expertise to local customers to help boost production in the Rumaila oil field.

In addition to being a base for the supply of pressure control equipment to Iraq’s drilling and production sector, the new center provides a wide range of services including installation and maintenance, testing, inspections, repair and storage. Future services will include complete non-destructive testing capabilities, machine, welding and heat treatment, blasting and painting and API certification and recertification.

Rami Qasem, president and chief executive officer for the Middle East, North Africa and Turkey of GE Oil & Gas, said: “The new Basra center provides a broad spectrum of solutions under one roof and is situated locally to meet our customers’ demands for rapid drilling and production support. Through our investment in strengthening our local presence, we are able to significantly improve our delivery time for products and services, while also giving us a base for training and developing a local work force.

“The center not only builds on our long-term commitment to the country but also complements the government’s focus on promoting job creation and nurturing the technical skills of the Iraqi professionals. The center supports our global strategy to be closer and more responsive to our customers, wherever in the world that we do business.”

Rumaila is one of the largest oil fields in the world, and its continued development is a key to Iraq’s long-term economic growth. More than 250 production wells currently are operating in the field, located near the Kuwaiti border in southern Iraq. The oil produced from the field represents about 40 percent of Iraq’s total oil production.

In addition to supplying equipment and services, GE continues to increase its in-country presence. As part of its plans for expansion in Iraq, GE opened three offices in Baghdad, Erbil and the southern oil and gas hub of Basra, building on its 40-year history of operations in the country.

Join the conversation at our GE Hewar blog: http://middleeast.geblogs.com/

Copyright 2013 ITP Business Publishing Ltd. Provided by Syndigate.info, an Albawaba.com company. All Rights Reserved.

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Inspection, Rectification Works to Start at Patricia-Baleen Gas Processing

Nexus disclosed Tuesday that a vessel with the capability to inspect and potentially rectify electrical faults is scheduled to arrive at Santos' Patricia-Baleen gas processing facility on Feb.1, 2013.

Earlier on Jan.14, Nexus revealed that an electrical outage which had taken place at an offshore facility caused operation works at the Longtom field to be suspended. A Santos spokesperson clarified on the same day that the affected facility is the Patricia-Baleen gas processing unit.

The facility, sited in the Gippsland Basin, 15 miles (23 kilometers) offshore the northeastern coast of Victoria, processes gas from Nexus’ offshore Longtom development in the VIC/L23 permit.

Nexus added in its disclosure issued Tuesday that the vessel is slated to start inspection and rectification works on arrival, weather permitting.

"All parties are working cooperatively to identify and remedy the fault and return the plant to continuous production as quickly as possible," Nexus said in its disclosure.

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

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UTEC Consolidates Middle East Position

Independent offshore survey company UTEC has consolidated its presence in the Middle East and has completed another significant contract for a major international pipelay contractor.

This is the second year in succession that UTEC has provided support to the contractor in the region.

The UAE (Dubai) project involved UTEC supporting the state-of-the-art DP pipelay vessel in extremely shallow water providing enhanced USBL methodologies as well as the provision of survey support services on two additional DP vessels which provided diver support and remedial services to the pipelay vessel.

UTEC is one of the world’s largest independent offshore survey companies and provides a wide range of survey services including offshore positioning and construction support, geophysical and AUV surveys, dimensional control surveys, laser scanning and modeling, and geotechnical sampling. UTEC has offices located around the world including: Houston, Aberdeen, Rio de Janeiro, Calgary, Perth, Singapore, St. John’s, Naples and Dubai.

Global Sales and Marketing Director Trevor Hughes commented: "Based on our prior year’s performance the contractor as well as the end client has recognized UTEC’s extensive experience in supporting pipelay activity in harsh acoustic environments, by developing procedures and redundancy alleviating risk from the project."

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