Thursday, February 28, 2013

Schneider Seeks Drivers for Growing San Antonio Market

Schneider National, Inc., a premier provider of transportation, logistics and intermodal services, announced Wednesday it was adding 200 new truck-driving positions in the greater San Antonio area. The company's growth in the area is the result of expansions with customer accounts in the oil and gas industry. Schneider is adding 150 of the driving positions immediately. The remaining 50 positions will be added between April and June.

Drivers on the accounts will deliver equipment and materials to local sites and can earn up to $65,000 per year depending on experience, productivity and safety performance. A complete benefits package and paid orientation are also provided. The new opportunities also provide drivers predictable work schedules and paychecks along with daily time at home.

"We are excited to grow in the San Antonio area," said Mike Hinz, vice president at Schneider National. "We are seeing tremendous growth and demand for our crude and sand-hauling services due to our investment in equipment, long-standing commitment to safety and proven service capabilities."

Drivers interested in applying or learning more about Schneider National can visit the website.

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Marubeni to Spend $1B for Gulfstar One Stake

Marubeni to Spend $1B for Gulfstar One Stake

Marubeni confirmed Wednesday that it will buy a 49 percent stake in Gulfstar One, the latter – a company launched by William Partners – is currently constructing a floating platform at the offshore Tubular Bells field held by Hess Corporation and Chevron.

The $1 billion deal could pave a way for Marubeni to participate in North America's expanding shale gas segment.

"Infrastructure projects related to oil and gas production, processing, transportation and distribution have been one of the focused business areas for Marubeni, as represented by its recent investments in gas processing, transportation and distribution projects in Australia," the company said in a statement.

"Marubeni aims to grow this business segment through participation in this project and development of their relationship with Williams," the company added.

The Gulfstar spar platform, designed to process 60,000 barrels of oil per day and 200 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, will be installed in Block 768 of the Gulf of Mexico's Mississippi Canyon area in 4,300 feet of water.

Marubeni and Williams also inked an agreement to cooperate on petrochemical downstream projects, and oil and gas infrastructure developments utilizing gas produced in North America including shale plays.

The Tubular Bells prospect on the Mississippi Canyon Block 725, roughly 135 miles (217 kilometers) southeast of New Orleans, was discovered by the Deepwater Horizon semisub Oct. 29, 2003. The discovery well, drilled to a depth of 31,131 feet (9,489 meters) in approximately 4,300 feet (1,311 meters) of water, found 190 feet (58 meters) of net oil pay. Following the Tubular Bells discovery, a successful appraisal well was drilled in 2006 and encountered hydrocarbons 5 miles (8 kilometers) from the initial well.

BP hired Ocean Confidence (UDW semisub) to drill two sidetrack wells to further delineate the field. A sidetrack well was completed in 1Q 2007, followed by a further appraisal well spudded in October of that same year.

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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Lamprell Bags Contract to Build Jackup for Jindal Group

UAE-based Lamprell disclosed Wednesday that it has won a contract from Dev Drilling - a company within the Singapore's Jindal Group - to build and deliver a LeTourneau-design, self-elevating unit of a Super 116E (Enhanced) Class design.

The rig is designed to operate in water depths of up to 350 feet and will have a rated drilling depth of 30,000 feet. Lamprell will fabricate the jackup rig in its yard in Hamriyah. The construction phase of this project is expected to take approximately 18 months.

This is the second rig that Lamprell will construct for Jindal, following on from the announcement on Nov.8, 2011, when Lamprell revealed that it is constructing a Super 116E rig for delivery to Jindal in November this year.

Jindal has the option to order a second rig; exercisable during a period of six months from the effective date of the original contract.

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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/.

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Pemex Workers Briefly Leave Offices on Gas Fears

MEXICO CITY - Mexico's state-run oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, said Wednesday that some workers were briefly evacuated from an office building at its Mexico City headquarters after the smell of rotting food caused them to fear the presence of gas. The incident came six days after a gas explosion killed 37 people at the site and injured more than 120.

Pemex press officials said Wednesday's worries of leaking gas turned out to be a "false alarm," and that it didn't affect workers at Pemex's 48-story office tower.

Company spokesman Ignacio Duran said the smell was limited to a small area of an administrative building, and that some people decided to leave. He said workers last week had left behind many personal objects, when the entire corporate complex was evacuated after the Thursday blast, including food that had since decomposed.

Pemex workers had returned to the offices, except for the damaged building, earlier on Wednesday. Mexican officials have said an accumulation of gas caused the explosion that damaged the lower floors of the B2 administrative building, raining debris down on workers and visitors.

Experts haven't determined the source of the gas, officials said, but did say it was safe for workers to return to the other buildings Wednesday. The B2 building remains closed.

Benjamin Ruiz Loyola, a chemist at Mexico City's National University and a member of the forensics team looking into the blast, said in a radio interview on Tuesday that the source of the natural gas in the basement of the B2 building could have come from a pipeline under the building, or from rotting organic matter.

"The source is what isn't clear," Mr. Ruiz told Radio Formula.

He also said there were no indications at all of an explosive device, which would have clearly left behind signs of the explosion coming from a concentrated source, and not a diffuse source, like a gas cloud. He said the gas explosion caused the cement floors of the building to be pushed upwards, and then to crash down.

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

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The Quest for Oil Continues in the Falklands

The Quest for Oil Continues in the Falklands

Around this time last year, there was much anticipation about a four-well drilling campaign offshore the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic Ocean.

The particular focus was on the South Falkland Basin and many observers of Falkland explorers, not to mention investors in these companies, were hoping that similar success could be achieved to Rockhopper Exploration's discovery of up to 1.4 billion barrels of oil at its Sea Lion prospect in the North Falkland Basin in the spring of 2011.

As it turned out, none of the exploration wells drilled by Falkland Oil and Gas (FOGL) and Borders & Southern found commercial oil, although Borders' Darwin well did find an estimated 190 million barrels of condensate (with an API of between 46 and 49 degrees).

The condensate at Darwin "could be close to being commercial" and it has "the potential to act as the cornerstone for a hub development," analysts at investment bank Goldman Sachs said in a December research report. Since then, in late January, Borders announced it had upgraded its Darwin find to a mid-case of 210 million barrels of condensate.

Borders' Stebbing well – drilled in the summer – encountered very strong gas shows but was unable to reach its lower targets due to anomalous pressure conditions, and was plugged and abandoned.

Meanwhile, both of FOGL's wells, which were drilled late last year, found gas.

The Scotia exploration well – drilled to a depth of 18,225 feet in November – encountered what the company described as "strong gas shows", although Goldman Sachs described these results as "disappointing" and ascribed no value to Scotia as a consequence. However, FOGL previously scored a success with its Loligo well in September, finding multiple gas-bearing zones with more than 328 feet holding hydrocarbons.

"Obviously one of the things we have to do is evaluate the results of those two wells and see what they mean," FOGL Chief Executive Tim Bushell told Rigzone in a recent phone call.

"All four wells that were drilled last year found hydrocarbons, identified as gas or gas condensate, which – in market terms – I guess has raised a few questions about the South Basin in terms of whether there is any oil there."

"I think we continue to believe that the answer to that is a definite yes, but obviously we didn't find any in the four wells that were drilled last year. But that doesn't mean there's none there.

"So, one of the aims going forward... is going to be trying to target the more oily parts of that basin. But the full results from the wells are only just coming in now, so it will take another three or four months to understand exactly what they are telling us. But there's nothing in there that says there isn't oil in the basin and we were pleased with the results last year because they have basically proven there is a hydrocarbon system working the basin, which was pretty good considering it's a new area... a frontier area."

The firm's partner, U.S. company Noble Energy (which farmed in for a 35-percent stake in both FOGL's southern and northern area licenses in the South Falkland Basin), has also embarked on a 1,544-square mile (4,000-square kilometer) 3D seismic survey over the mid-Cretaceous Diomedia fan complex, which is located in the southern area licenses. A second 3D seismic survey, a joint survey with Borders and Southern, is expected to begin in February.

"We have some lookalike features to Darwin next door, so we're going to be shooting 3D over that," said Bushell.

"And then, because you can't shoot seismic through the southern hemisphere weather window, we will come back probably around October to do a third survey that will run into next year."

Goldman Sach's oil analysts stated that they continue to believe that FOGL's acreage offers "significant upside potential and that the upcoming 3D seismic campaign may be better suited than the existing 2D seismic data to pick sweet spots on the large stratigraphic traps that are a feature of the acreage".

But what are the options if FOGL and Noble fail to find any oil or condensate and perhaps just find more gas?

"One is to look at gas and the commercialization of gas and gas liquids, and there are a number of different ways you can do that in the Falklands. On one end of the spectrum... is simply to try and strip the liquids out, the condensates out, and then put the gas back in the ground. I know that's something they are looking at for Darwin. At the other end of the spectrum is taking all the gas and liquids that may exist now or in the future around the Falklands, and putting them through a land-based LNG plant on the Falklands," said Bushell.

According to Bushell, it is certainly possible to lay a pipeline from the Loligo discovery to the Falklands and build an LNG plant there, and he pointed out that similar projects have been achieved before. For example, the LNG facility that services the Snøhvit field, and two other gas fields, in the Barents Sea was built on a hollowed-out island in northern Norway with the LNG plant built in Spain and brought in by barge.

"That, as a concept, could easily be done in the Falklands," said Bushell, although he cautioned: "We recognize that a land-based LNG project is: a) very expensive and b) a long-term project. So, it's something we'll look at but our preference in the short-to-medium term would be to also find some oil."

Interest from Noble Energy in the South Falkland Basin is a huge vote of confidence in the view that oil does reside there, Bushell added.

"Noble [has] taken on a lot of the operatorship. And while they don't dismiss gas they are very focused on the oil potential of the basin," he said.

"This basin is the size of the North Sea and even now it's only got five wells in it. Up to the beginning of last year it had only one well in it. A lot of companies recognize the huge potential but obviously with that go some fairly big risks. And we believe the four wells drilled last year have significantly reduced a lot of the risk about the key things you look for in a basin."

Meanwhile, in the North Falkland Basin not much activity is expected in 2013, with the main focus being on development plans for the one commercial oil field found so far: Sea Lion.

After Rockhopper's discovery in 2011, independent firm Premier Oil paid an initial $231 million to farm into a 60-percent share of the Falklands-focused junior's license interests in the region last summer. Premier also gained operatorship of the Sea Lion project and is committed to spend $722 million funding Rockhopper's development expenditure as well as a further $48 million of the junior's share of three exploration wells planned for 2014 in the North Falkland Basin.

Premier now has a detailed pre-FEED (front end engineering design) work program for the Sea Lion development underway, with concept validation and pre-FEED studies expected to be completed by mid-2013. First oil from the field is targeted before the end of 2017.

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.

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Total Signs Up for Cyprus Exploration

NICOSIA - Cyprus on Wednesday signed an agreement with French energy major Total S.A. to conduct exploratory drilling for gas and oil in two blocks off its southern shore.

The deal comes as Cyprus aspires to become a regional energy hub with the prospect of oil as well as natural gas being tapped beneath the sea bed.

"With today's act the government has completed one of the most crucial aims in its energy policy, that of successfully conducting a second round of licensing," Commerce Minister Neoclis Sylikiotis told reporters after the signing ceremony.

Total signed a deal to exploit blocks 10 and 11 that are adjacent to a large natural gas find in block 12 and said it seeks to proceed in drilling for oil as well as gas reserves in the said blocks.

Turkey has protested strongly against Nicosia's energy search, branding it illegal and beginning its own exploratory drilling off the breakaway north of the island.

Ankara has warned that companies involved in the Cyprus process could be shut out of Turkey's energy investment.

Mr. Sylikiotis said that having countries such as France, America and Italy involved in the island's hydrocarbon exploration acted as a "political shield" against Turkish threats.

Cyprus has been divided since 1974, when Turkish troops invaded and occupied its northern third in response to an Athens-engineered coup in Nicosia aimed at union with Greece.

It is estimated that there could be around 60 trillion cubic feet of gas lying in the 13 blocks that make up Cyprus's 51,000 square kilometer exclusive economic zone.

Some analysts believe Cyprus is sitting on potential energy revenues of EUR600 billion.

Cyprus is banking on its energy bonanza to eventually rescue it from recession as it seeks a European Union bailout.

Last month, Cyprus signed licence agreements with Italy's ENI and South Korea's Kogas for exploratory drilling aimed at exploiting offshore oil and gas deposits.

In October, drilling permits subject to negotiation were approved for blocks 2, 3, 9 and 11 of Cyprus's Exclusive Economic Zone, and in December block 10 was added to the list.

An Italian-South Korean partnership signed a deal worth EUR150 million ($200 million) for permits to explore blocks 2, 3 and 9.

U.S. firm Noble Energy Inc. was the first to drill when awarded Block 12, and in December 2011 said it had discovered gas reserves of up to 8 trillion cubic feet (226.5 billion cubic metres), with an estimated value of EUR100 billion.

This would satisfy domestic needs for decades and could enable Cyprus to become a regional player by exporting gas to Europe from 2019.

It plans to bring gas onshore in 2018 and build a liquefied natural gas plant.

In the long term, Cyprus estimates it can supply up to 10% of the EU's energy demand, making the bloc less dependent on Russia. 

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

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Crude-Oil Futures Pare Losses on US Stockpiles Data

U.S. crude-oil futures pared early losses Wednesday after weekly government data showed a smaller increase in crude-oil stockpiles than many analysts were anticipating.

U.S. crude-oil inventories rose 2.6 million barrels last week, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, below the 2.9-million-barrel increase forecast in a Dow Jones Newswires survey of analysts.

Additionally, stockpiles in Cushing, Okla., fell by 300,000 barrels, offering evidence that the supply glut at the key transit hub is slowly dissipating.

Light, sweet crude oil for March delivery recently traded 30 cents lower at $96.34 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after trading as low as $95.04 a barrel earlier in the session. Brent crude oil on the ICE futures exchange traded 19 cents lower at $116.33 a barrel.

Market watchers said the bounce Wednesday following the data reflected a move by traders to lock in profits on bearish bets. While the decline in Cushing stockpiles raised some hopes for an end to the supply glut, other indicators in the weekly report signalled that rising U.S. production is keeping domestic supplies robust, which should translate into lower prices.

Gasoline stockpiles increased by 1.7 million barrels, well above the 900,000-barrel increase analysts had forecast. In addition, oil imports fell 6.2% last week as refineries continued to seek cheaper, domestic oil in place of more expensive barrel from overseas.

Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citi Futures Perspective, said an increase in East Coast gasoline stockpiles, coupled with falling imports, could keep a lid on any gains.

"The U.S. refineries don't need it, so we're keeping the oil offshore," Mr. Evans said. "You can almost squint real hard and see the tankers loading up in Nigeria turning towards Europe rather than the U.S."

Still, oil prices remain under pressure as a result of a strengthening dollar, which can push down futures by making oil more expensive for buyers in other currencies. European markets saw broad declines Wednesday, which sent the euro lower against the dollar. The euro was recently trading 0.4% lower at $1.3537 compared to Tuesday.

"It's a general risk-off scenario. The dollar is up and risk assets are down," said Bob Yawger, director of energy futures at Mizuho.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was recently down 0.1% to 13968.

Front-month March reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, recently traded 1.33 cents lower at $3.0241 a gallon. March heating oil recently traded 0.51 cent lower at $3.1862 a gallon.

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

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Argentina's YPF CEO Meets With UAE Oil Companies, Investors

BUENOS AIRES - The head of Argentina's state-run oil company, YPF SA met Wednesday with oil companies and investors in the United Arab Emirates to discuss partnering to produce oil and gas in the South American nation.

YPF CEO Miguel Galuccio met with Abdul Jaleel Al Khalifa, chief executive of Dragon Oil PLC in Dubai. Later in Abu Dhabi, Mr. Galuccio met with Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak, chief executive of Mubadala Development Corporation, the Abu Dhabi government's sovereign-wealth fund.

"In the meetings, the funds and energy companies from the Emirates appeared very interested in having a greater presence in Latin America, and in the case of our country, being able to have investments alongside a company like YPF," a YPF official told Dow Jones Newswires.

Last year, Mubadala said it would invest $2 billion to buy into the sprawling business empire of Brazil's richest man, Eike Batista, a move that seemed set to lead to further investments by the Gulf state in Latin America.

Dragon Oil executives could visit Argentina in a month or so to look closer at developing conventional oil and gas products, the YPF official said.

Mr. Galuccio also plans to meet with executives from Abu Dhabi National Energy Co. PJSC and International Petroleum Investment Company before concluding the trip. Argentine Planning Minister Julio De Vido and Deputy Economy Minister Axel Kicillof, who both oversee energy policy in Argentina, are accompanying Mr. Galuccio on the trip.

Mr. Galuccio, who took over YPF when it was expropriated from Spain's Repsol SA last year, has been courting international partners to boost output and help Argentina reduce its dependence on imported energy.

The YPF boss has also recently held talks with Norway's Statoil ASA, Russia's government-controlled gas company, Gazprom, and Chevron Corp., among others.

In December, YPF inked a deal with a company linked to Argentina's Bulgheroni family to invest $1.5 billion together over the next two years to develop shale-gas and oil resources.

YPF also announced an accord with Chevron that could see the California-based company and YPF spend about $1 billion to drill 100 wells for unconventional energy in Argentina's resource-rich Neuquen Province.

If that plan works, the companies could finalize plans to drill an estimated 2,000 wells for about $15 billion in coming years. But the plan faces an important obstacle.

A $19 billion embargo on the assets of Chevron's local subsidiary, stemming from a decades-old case involving environmental damage claims in Ecuador, has raised questions about Chevron's ability to move forward in Argentina as long as the embargo is still active. Chevron has said it will use all legal means available to reverse the embargo.

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

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Marathon Oil 4Q Net Falls 41% on Lower Exploration, Production Income

Marathon Oil 4Q Net Falls 41% on Lower Exploration, Production Income

Marathon Oil Corp.'s fourth-quarter earnings fell 41%, partly due to write-downs and other charges, and the company fell short of analysts' expectations as high taxes and exploration costs offset increased oil and gas sales.

Marathon Oil spun off its downstream and petroleum assets in 2011, creating Marathon Petroleum Corp., in order to focus its drilling efforts on oil-rich unconventional fields in the U.S. The company's profits from oil and gas operations have risen in recent quarters as its production has exceeded expectations.

In the fourth quarter, the company reported a profit of $322 million, or 45 cents a share, down from $549 million, or 78 cents, a year earlier. Taking out items such as impairment, pension settlement and unrealized gains on crude-oil derivative instruments, earnings from continuing operations fell to 55 cents from 78 cents. Revenue jumped 11% to $4.24 billion. Marathon's fourth-quarter results came in 12 cents under the 67 cents per-share forecast of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, who had anticipated revenue of $3.93 billion.

The company reported that its exploration-and production segment's income fell 10% to $501 million from the year-before period, as higher costs offset increased production volumes. Since last year, Marathon has seen a more-than-four-fold increase in average net production in the south Texas Eagle Ford formation, from about 15,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day in December 2011 to more than 65,000 BOE/D in December 2012. Output in the oil-rich Bakken formation increased by 45% in the same period. However, higher costs have accompanied the production ramp-up in those areas, the company said.

The fourth quarter also included an $85 million in expenses associated with the Innsbruck well in the Gulf of Mexico, a dry hole, and the company reported another well in Iraq's Kurdistan is being plugged and abandoned.

Raymond James analyst Stacey Hudson said Marathon's production came in ahead of expectations and prices held up well. In a note, Raymond James analysts wrote that the rate at which Marathon's reserves are being replaced through organic growth is "solid." But taxes were also higher than Ms. Hudson anticipated.

"It's taxes eating up the upside," she said. Late last year, Marathon resumed production in Libya, where the company has reported a statutory tax rate of 93%.

Marathon said in December it would bump up this year's capital, investment and exploration budget to $5.2 billion from $5 billion in 2012 and spend most of it in oil-bearing shale formations such as the Bakken in North Dakota, the Anadarko Woodford in Oklahoma and the Eagle Ford in South Texas. The company expects the effort to give it a 6% to 8% production boost this year.

Oil and mining income dropped 70% to $19 million while integrated-gas income climbed 75% to $35 million.

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