Monday, February 18, 2013

Petronas Makes $2.8B Buyout Offer to LNG Shipper MISC

State-backed Petronas has made a $2.8 billion (MYR8.8 billion) offer to buy out other shareholders in liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipping unit MISC and delist it, both companies confirmed in disclosures released late Thursday.

Petronas, which owns 62.7 percent of MISC, made an offer for the remaining shares at $1.71 (MYR5.30), according to a statement posted by MISC. This works out to a 19 percent premium to MISC's closing price of $1.43 (MYR1.13)

Commenting on its decision to acquire MISC, Petronas said in a statement: "The prevailing industry backdrop and uncertain global economy have made efforts to sustain and transform the business of MISC challenging. The offer represents a significant step by Petronas to take MISC private and obtain full control of the company which will provide Petronas with greater flexibility in deciding MISC’s strategic direction."

Petronas reaffirmed MISC that it has no plans to dismiss or make redundant the employees of MISC as a direct result of the offer.
MISC in the shipping arm of Petronas; the former is involved in LNG transportation and operations and has in its fleet two LNG vessels which are converted into floating storage units (FSUs).

With MISC's capabilities in LNG transportation, the business appears to be a good fit for Petronas, given the oil giant’s long-term focus on developing its LNG operations.

Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak said in a public address in September last year that he aims to establish the country as Asia's LNG trading hub by 2020 with the establishment of a $1.3 billion LNG terminal in the Pengerang Integrated Petroleum Complex. In late November last year, Petronas confirmed a massive discovery of two major gas reserves, totaling over 4 trillion cubic feet, offshore Sarawak.

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

Brazil Oil Workers to Vote on Wider Petrobras Strike

Brazil Oil Workers to Vote on Wider Petrobras Strike

RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazilian oil workers will vote to approve a five-day strike at state-run energy company Petroleo Brasileiro, or Petrobras, that would likely interrupt oil production at the company, a union official said Friday.

The strike is tentatively scheduled to start Feb. 20, said Joao Antonio de Moraes, general coordinator for the Brazilian Oil Workers Federation, or FUP. FUP is an umbrella union representing about two-thirds of Petrobras's 80,000 employees.

If approved, the strike would come at a delicate time for Petrobras. Petrobras has struggled with flagging crude-oil production over the past year because of declining recovery rates at mature fields and maintenance shutdowns at ageing offshore platforms. The company's finances have also been stretched because of heavy imports of gasoline and diesel fuel that the company is forced to sell at a loss in the domestic market.

Petrobras reports fourth-quarter earnings results Monday, with year-on-year net profits expected to rise about 20%. The company's full-year profit, however, is expected to be the worst in nearly a decade.

Workers are protesting Petrobras's latest profit-sharing offer, which the union contends short-changes workers to the benefit of shareholders. Workers could accept a lower slice of Petrobras's profits if the company also reduced dividends paid to shareholders, Mr. Moraes said.

"The negotiations are very difficult" this year, the union chief added. While FUP has sought out further negotiations with Petrobras and the government, nothing has been scheduled so far, Mr. Moraes said.

Petrobras said that it used the same criteria for its profit-sharing proposal as previous years. "The company remains open to negotiations with labor groups so that all parties may come to an understanding," Petrobras said in an email.

The broader strike would follow a 24-hour "warning" strike held Monday. Workers declined to change shifts at refineries and terminals, while workers at offshore platforms only performed routine duties. The strike did not aim to affect production, union officials said.

That's not the case this time around, Mr. Moraes said. "It's safe to say that production will be affected by a strike lasting five days," Mr. Moraes said.

The last major strike at Petrobras took place in July 2008, when oil workers walked off the job for five days to protest work issues and profit-sharing proposals. The strike cost Petrobras about 63,000 barrels of crude oil production per day.

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

Enegi Oil Farms Out North Sea Block to Azimuth

Junior explorer Enegi Oil announced it has reached an agreement to farm out to Azimuth part of Block 3/23 in the UK North Sea. The block holds the Malvolio prospect, as well as a number of potential exploration opportunities.

Enegi said the deal will see Azimuth earn a 50-percent interest in the exploration area in exchange for the completion of an agreed work program that includes certain geological, geophysical and reservoir analysis that will use existing seismic and well data in respect of both the Malvolio area and the exploration area.

Enegi will retain a 100-percent working interest in the Malvolio area.

Enegi CEO commented in a statement:

"We are delighted to have reached agreement with the Azimuth team. We were only offered this Block just over three months ago and the fact that we are already moving ahead with our plans for it shows our desire to deliver and prove up the value that we believe is inherent not only in this asset, but also across our portfolio.

"We know the Azimuth team well and are delighted to be working with them on this project. They are a hugely experienced team backed by leading industry specialists with access to extensive resources, both in terms of data and people."

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

Incremental Oil and Gas Starts Sidetrack Operations, Spuds New Well

Incremental Oil and Gas disclosed Friday that it has started on sidetracking operations at the Patti 32-29 well. The company noted that the Capstar 311 rig began operations on Jan.17.

A hole was milled in the casing of the existing Patti well - which had produced over 300 barrels of oil while drilling the initial well, but was never completed commercially - and a horizontal well drilled through the productive Pierre Formation to a total measured depth of 4,367 feet. The horizontal section of the well was over 1,000 feet long.

Separately, the company spudded the Aurora 24-21 well on Jan. 28. The deviated well is designed to target a seismically defined anomoly.

"Excellent shows with free oil to surface were encountered below 2,910 feet. The current operation is finishing the running of a casing to the total depth of 3,260 feet," Incremental Oil and Gas said.

The company plans to complete both of the wells with a cheaper workover rig.

"The nature of naturally fractured reservoirs means that it is not possible to predict the productivity of the wells until they are brought onto production in the coming weeks. Production rates will only be reported once flow rates are stabilized," Incremental Oil and Gas said.

Incremental Oil and Gas added that the Capstar rig will be placed on standby for about a week amid construction for the locations of the third and fourth well of the company's drilling campaign, which is taking place in its wholly owned Florence oilfield in Colorado.

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

Energy Secretary Chu to Resign

U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu will resign from his position, with plans to return to teaching and research in California, Chu told U.S. Department of Energy employees in a letter Friday.

"I came with dreams, and am leaving with a set of accomplishments that we should all be proud of," said Chu, noting that his time as energy secretary had been "incredibly demanding but enormously rewarding".

Chu, who won the Noble Prize in Physics in 1997, has been an advocate for more research into renewable energy and nuclear power and away from fossil fuels. Chu was director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the time of his appointment as energy secretary.

Chu's list of accomplishments did not include mention of Solyndra, the Fremont, California-based manufacturer of solar cells and a start-up company that received DOE funding. The company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2011. Instead, Chu noted the growing private sector investment seen in the last two years in renewable energy, including investments by Warren Buffet, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Google.

"Through the Recovery Act, the Department of Energy made grants and loans to more than 1,300 companies," Chu commented. "While critics try hard to discredit the program, the truth is that only one percent of the companies we funded went bankrupt. That one percent has gotten more attention than the 99 percent that have not."

The test for America's policy makers will be whether they are willing to accept a few failures in exchange for any successes, Chu added.

"America's entrepreneurs and innovators who are leaders in global clean energy race understand that not every risk can – or should – be avoided. Michelangelo said, 'The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short, but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark.'"

Chu's list of accomplishments in the letter include bringing from the drawing board to reality the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), which was designed to support high-risk, high-reward technology development, and to "swing for game-changing home runs" that can fundamentally transform energy technologies.

The program has earned the respect of industry and academia for its outstanding funding choices, and active, thoughtful program management. In the programs first few years, 11 of the companies funded with $40 million have attracted over $200 million in combined private investment.

"While it is too early to tell if we have home runs like ARPA-net, there are a number of investments that have certainly rounded second base," Chu commented.

ARPA-E's initial $400 million budget was part of the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. ARPA-E has requested $350 million from U.S. Congress for Fiscal Year 2013 and is awaiting final appropriation.

The ARPA-E approach is being used in other areas of the DOE, including SunShot, the DOE's revitalized solar photovoltaic program. During his term as secretary, Chu also sought to encourage development of more economical utility scale solar energy, as well as advancing research into batteries for plug-in electric hybrid vehicles and development of batteries for plug-in EVs that would revolutionize the U.S. electrical distribution system and renewable energy use.

Chu also pointed to tangible signs of success during his term, including the doubling of wind and solar energy, a $36 billion investment through the Recovery Act to create clean energy jobs, and the launch of President Obama's Better Buildings Challenge, which helped one million low income homeowners weatherize their homes.

Under Chu's oversight, DOE also administered a program that generated a portfolio of loans and loan guarantees to 33 clean energy and advanced automotive manufacturing projects that Chu said would support 60,000 jobs and create $55 billion in economic investment.

The portfolio includes the construction, retooling and reopening of over a dozen auto manufacturing plants, the first national scale rooftop solar project, the first nuclear power plants in three decades, and wind arms, solar photovoltaic and concentrating solar power plants that will be among the largest worldwide, Chu commented.

Finally, Chu emphasized the importance of DOE's missions to U.S. economic prosperity, dependency on foreign and climate change. He noted that the U.S. spent approximately $430 billion on foreign oil imports in 2012, and spent many billions more on keeping oil shipping lanes open.

He also noted that overwhelming scientific consensus is that human activity has had "a significant and likely dominant role in climate change."

Chu acknowledged that the U.S.' ability to find and extract fossil fuels continues to improve, and economically recoverable reservoirs worldwide are likely to keep pace with rising demand for decades, and said the boom in U.S. shale gas production as made possible by DOE research from 1978 to 1991. But he added that the same opportunity lies before the U.S. with energy efficiency and clean energy.

"The cost of renewable energy is rapidly becoming competitive with other sources of energy, and the Department has played a significant role in accelerating the transition to affordable, accessible and sustainable energy," Chu concluded.

Chu said he would stay on as Secretary past the ARPA-E Summit at the end of this month and perhaps longer to allow DOE to name a new secretary.

Karen Boman has more than 10 years of experience covering the upstream oil and gas sector. Email Karen at kboman@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

Seadrill Orders Two Jackups from Dalian Shipbuilding

Deepwater drilling specialist Seadrill announced Friday that it has ordered two jackups for delivery in the first half of 2015 from Chinese firm Dalian Shipbuilding Industry Offshore.

The two units, which will cost $230 million per rig, will be based on the F&G JU2000E design, with water depth capacity of 400 feet and drilling depth of up to 30,000 feet. Seadrill has also arranged option agreements with Dalian to construct an additional two rigs for delivery in the third and fourth quarters of 2015, said the firm.

Seadrill Chairman John Fredriksen commented in a statement:

"These newbuilds position us for additional growth in a strengthening jackup market, providing further earnings upside for Seadrill. The premium jackup market continues to demonstrate strength as evidenced by increasing day rates and utilizations. Customers continue show preference for newer units from drilling contractors with proven track records of safe and efficient operations.

"Currently 312 jackups, or 65 percent of the total fleet of 483 jackups are older than 25 years. These two new firm orders increases our fleet of modern jackups to 25 rigs with an average age of three years, and further strengthens our position as the leading operator of premium modern, high-quality drilling units."

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.
For More Information on the Offshore Rig Fleet:
RigLogix can provide the information that you need about the offshore rig fleet, whether you need utilization and industry trends or detailed reports on future rig contracts. Subscribing to RigLogix will allow you to access dozens of prebuilt reports and build your own custom reports using hundreds of available data columns. For more information about a RigLogix subscription, visit http://www.riglogix.com/.

View the original article here

Brazil Oil Workers to Vote on Wider Petrobras Strike

Brazil Oil Workers to Vote on Wider Petrobras Strike

RIO DE JANEIRO - Brazilian oil workers will vote to approve a five-day strike at state-run energy company Petroleo Brasileiro, or Petrobras, that would likely interrupt oil production at the company, a union official said Friday.

The strike is tentatively scheduled to start Feb. 20, said Joao Antonio de Moraes, general coordinator for the Brazilian Oil Workers Federation, or FUP. FUP is an umbrella union representing about two-thirds of Petrobras's 80,000 employees.

If approved, the strike would come at a delicate time for Petrobras. Petrobras has struggled with flagging crude-oil production over the past year because of declining recovery rates at mature fields and maintenance shutdowns at ageing offshore platforms. The company's finances have also been stretched because of heavy imports of gasoline and diesel fuel that the company is forced to sell at a loss in the domestic market.

Petrobras reports fourth-quarter earnings results Monday, with year-on-year net profits expected to rise about 20%. The company's full-year profit, however, is expected to be the worst in nearly a decade.

Workers are protesting Petrobras's latest profit-sharing offer, which the union contends short-changes workers to the benefit of shareholders. Workers could accept a lower slice of Petrobras's profits if the company also reduced dividends paid to shareholders, Mr. Moraes said.

"The negotiations are very difficult" this year, the union chief added. While FUP has sought out further negotiations with Petrobras and the government, nothing has been scheduled so far, Mr. Moraes said.

Petrobras said that it used the same criteria for its profit-sharing proposal as previous years. "The company remains open to negotiations with labor groups so that all parties may come to an understanding," Petrobras said in an email.

The broader strike would follow a 24-hour "warning" strike held Monday. Workers declined to change shifts at refineries and terminals, while workers at offshore platforms only performed routine duties. The strike did not aim to affect production, union officials said.

That's not the case this time around, Mr. Moraes said. "It's safe to say that production will be affected by a strike lasting five days," Mr. Moraes said.

The last major strike at Petrobras took place in July 2008, when oil workers walked off the job for five days to protest work issues and profit-sharing proposals. The strike cost Petrobras about 63,000 barrels of crude oil production per day.

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

Petronas Makes $2.8B Buyout Offer to LNG Shipper MISC

State-backed Petronas has made a $2.8 billion (MYR8.8 billion) offer to buy out other shareholders in liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipping unit MISC and delist it, both companies confirmed in disclosures released late Thursday.

Petronas, which owns 62.7 percent of MISC, made an offer for the remaining shares at $1.71 (MYR5.30), according to a statement posted by MISC. This works out to a 19 percent premium to MISC's closing price of $1.43 (MYR1.13)

Commenting on its decision to acquire MISC, Petronas said in a statement: "The prevailing industry backdrop and uncertain global economy have made efforts to sustain and transform the business of MISC challenging. The offer represents a significant step by Petronas to take MISC private and obtain full control of the company which will provide Petronas with greater flexibility in deciding MISC’s strategic direction."

Petronas reaffirmed MISC that it has no plans to dismiss or make redundant the employees of MISC as a direct result of the offer.
MISC in the shipping arm of Petronas; the former is involved in LNG transportation and operations and has in its fleet two LNG vessels which are converted into floating storage units (FSUs).

With MISC's capabilities in LNG transportation, the business appears to be a good fit for Petronas, given the oil giant’s long-term focus on developing its LNG operations.

Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak said in a public address in September last year that he aims to establish the country as Asia's LNG trading hub by 2020 with the establishment of a $1.3 billion LNG terminal in the Pengerang Integrated Petroleum Complex. In late November last year, Petronas confirmed a massive discovery of two major gas reserves, totaling over 4 trillion cubic feet, offshore Sarawak.

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

PTTEP Posts Strong Increase in Net Profit, O&G Production Volume

PTT Exploration and Production (PTTEP) said late Thursday net profit for the full year 2012 surged 28 percent, on increased oil production and higher crude prices.

Net profit for 2012 was $1.9 billion, compared with $1.5 billion a year ago. Revenue rose 26 percent to $7 billion, as compared to $5.7 billion in 2011.

"Sales volume went up 275, 923 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boed) compared with 265,047 boed in 2011. Contributing to the increased sales were petroleum products from Bongkot South field, the Vietnam 16-1 project and the S1 project," PTTEP's CEO Tevin Vongvanich said in a statement Friday.

Vongvanich,also noted that PTTEP's average sale price of a barrel of oil (boe) for 2012 is $64.86, as compared to $55.49 boe in 2011.

PTTEP disclosed that one of the key progresses for 2012 was the S1 project's ability to increase the production to the highest rate at 35,176 barrels per day (bpd). The Bongkot project's production rate was around 596 million standard cubic feet per day (mmscfd), while the production of Bongkot South was 320 mmscfd.

This year, PTTEP is targeting a sales volume of 310,000 boe. Vongvanich revealed Jan.24 that the bulk of its increased oil sales will be derived from the start of commercial operations at its Montara oil field offshore Australia.

The Montara incident which occurred Aug. 21, 2009, saw 29,600 barrels of crude oil leak into the water over a 74-day period, after a jackup burst into flames. The well was subsequently killed Nov. 3, 2009. PTTEP is aiming to restart operations.

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