Thursday, March 14, 2013

Technip Names New Construction Vessel

French oilfield services firm Technip announced Monday that it named its latest vessel in Vigo, Spain.

The Deep Orient, a new-build medium construction vessel, will be dedicated to subsea construction and flexible pipe-laying projects.

Technip said the vessel was completed within a tight time frame thanks to strong cooperation between its Marine New Builds Team in Aberdeen, Scotland and the firm's Metalships & Docks shipyard in Vigo.

The Deep Orient is equipped with a 250-metric ton main crane, dynamic positioning (DP2) station-keeping capability, two work-class remotely operated vehicles and a large deck area for ample storage of equipment while working on remotely located projects. The vessel can accommodate 120 people and complies with the latest marine environmental standards.

The vessel is to be mobilized at Technip's facility in Le Trait, France, before undertaking its first projects in Norway.

Technip CEO Thierry Pilenko commented in a statement:

"The introduction of the Deep Orient is the latest initiative in offering our clients a fit-for-purpose fleet to help them with their projects. Today, Technip has the capabilities to answer the industry's needs, from deep to shore. The Deep Orient confirms our integrated services strategy for offshore field development, subsea construction, fabrication and installation of submarine pipes across the world."

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DNO Made Record Profit in 2012

Norway's DNO International announced Tuesday that it made a record net profit in 2012 of $180 million (NOK 1.04 billion) after its fourth quarter production increased to 46,398 barrels of oil equivalent per day (compared to an average of 38,354 for the year as a whole).

The company spent $220 million on exploration and development in 2012.

"We are thrilled to have surpassed the billion NOK mark in net profits," DNO Executive Chairman Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani said in a company statement.

"DNO doubled exploration and development spending in 2012 and funded the program from operating cash flow. Based on current plans, we expect to boost spending another 50 percent to NOK 1.75 billion [$315 million] in 2013."

Based in Norway, DNO is focused on the Middle East and North Africa and holds stakes in 17 licenses that are at various stages of exploration, development and production in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, the Republic of Yemen, the Sultanate of Oman, the UAE and the Tunisian Repulic.

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Crude Prices Fall on Lower Expectations for Global Oil Demand

Crude-oil futures edged lower Wednesday after a closely watched industry forecast cut estimates for global crude demand in 2013.

The Paris-based energy watchdog International Energy Administration projected that 2013 global oil consumption would grow by 840,000 barrels a day, or 90,000 barrels a day less than the group's estimate last month. The group pegs global consumption at 90.7 million barrels a day.

The IEA said predictions of higher oil use may be overly optimistic, particularly for China, the world's second-largest oil consumer. The report questioned whether a steep increase in Chinese imports in recent months would translate into higher long-term demand. Chinese crude imports jumped 6.1% in December and 7.4% in January, versus the previous year.

"The Chinese data has been better than expected, but people seem to be getting a little ahead of themselves with the optimism about Chinese demand," said Tariq Zahir, managing member of New York-based commodity fund Tyche Capital Management.

Light, sweet crude for March delivery settled 50 cents, or 0.5%, lower at $97.01 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange settled 6 cents higher at $118.72 a barrel.

The IEA forecasts added uncertainty to the crude market, traders and analysts said. The projections came a day after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and the U.S. Energy Information Administration both raised their expectations for 2013 global demand.

"The IEA report was bearish, while the OPEC and EIA reports were both bullish, so what really matters now is Chinese economic data in the next few months," said Dominick Chirichella, an oil analyst at the Energy Management Institute in New York.

Separately, a weekly report from the EIA on Wednesday showed U.S. crude-oil inventories rose by 600,000 barrels last week, below the 2.3 million-barrel increase forecast by analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires.

A smaller-than-expected increase in inventories points to stronger demand, but crude-oil prices fell after the report. Analysts said some in the market had been lulled into thinking the stockpiles would sharply decline after a survey by the American Petroleum Institute late Tuesday. That survey saw crude inventories plunging 2.3 million barrels.

"Given that we saw this huge drawdown from the API figures last night, people had been expecting something more like that," said Matt Smith, energy analyst at Summit Energy.

Also, the EIA report showed a 1.2 million-barrel drop in crude stockpiles at the oil hub of Cushing, Okla., indicating that a glut of oil in the Midwest may be easing.

The glut has put pressure on U.S. oil prices for the last two years as production from shale oil discoveries in the U.S. and Canada has flooded into the Midwest, which lacked adequate infrastructure to transport it elsewhere. That situation was exacerbated last month by problems with the Seaway pipeline, which carries crude from Cushing to key refiners in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico region.

"The bottleneck in the Seaway pipeline may not be as much of a problem as it was a couple weeks ago," Mr. Chirichella said.

Front-month March reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, settled 1.49 cents, or 0.5%, lower at $3.0354 a gallon. March heating oil settled 1.74 cents, or 0.5%, lower at $3.2188 a gallon.

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

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Rosneft, Exxon Mobil Broaden Arctic Shelf Joint Venture

NOVO-OGARYOVO, Russia - U.S. energy giant Exxon Mobil Corp. and Russia's OAO Rosneft agreed Wednesday to broaden their joint venture by adding seven more licenses to develop oil and gas resources on Russia's Arctic shelf and mull a proposal to export liquefied natural gas from the Russian Far East.

The companies also signed a separate deal to give state-controlled Rosneft the option of buying a 25% interest in Exxon's Point Thomson Unit, which Exxon says is estimated to hold a quarter of the known natural gas resources buried beneath Alaska's North Slope. Exxon owns 62.5% of Point Thomson.

The deal, signed by Rosneft Chief Executive Igor Sechin and Exxon's Deputy Chief Executive Stephen Greenlee, further strengthens the budding relationship between two of the world's largest oil companies while competition to unlock the Arctic's vast trove of oil and gas wealth heats up.

The Arctic is one of the few remaining places that can move the needle for oil giants in terms of production and reserves, but the technical challenges are formidable. Earlier this week Royal Dutch Shell Plc said it was sending two Arctic ships operating in Alaska to Asia for repairs following a series of mishaps, a move that is likely to make the Anglo-Dutch oil giant miss the short summer drilling season that starts in July.

Exxon and Rosneft formed an alliance in 2011 to develop potentially huge but largely untapped reserves on Russia's Arctic shelf and shale oil in Western Siberia. The original deal also gave Rosneft the option of participating in U.S. shale developments. Fadel Gheit, an analyst with Oppenheimer & Co., says that Exxon's strategy to allow Russian participation shows that the most successful way to negotiate with Russian oil companies is to deal with them as equal partners. "They want to make it a two-way street," Mr. Gheit said.

Rosneft also has partnership deals with Italy's ENI SpA and Norway's Statoil ASA to develop offshore resources.

Rosneft is currently buying competitor TNK-BP in a deal worth $55 billion that will create the largest listed oil producer in the world and will hand BP PLC a 19.8% stake in the oil giant.

Exxon and Rosneft will conduct a feasibility study on constructing a liquefied natural gas plant on the island of Sakhalin off Russia's Pacific coast. Rosneft is lobbying to be allowed to export LNG, which only OAO Gazprom currently is permitted to do by law.

Angel Gonzalez contributed to this article.

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

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JKX Oil & Gas Raises Funds

Eastern Europe-focused JKX Oil & Gas announced Wednesday that it has arranged to raise $40 million through a placing of convertible bonds with institutional investors.

Already this month, JKX has made a series of announcements regarding the progress of its operations in Ukraine.

On Monday this week, JKX said the remaining reserves for its Elizavetovskoye field near Poltava, Ukraine, had been revised upwards to 22 billion cubic feet of gas.

On Tuesday, the company confirmed that it was on track to achieve its second-quarter fracture stimulation project on a horizontal section of its R-103 well in the Rudenkovskoye deep tight-gas field in Ukraine.

JKX also announced in a separate statement Wednesday that the equipment it requires to upgrade its LPG plant at the Novo-Nikolaevskoye Complex in Ukraine has been shipped from a construction yard in Alberta, Canada. The new equipment, which is expected to be commissioned in May 2013, will enable the recovery propane and deliver an overall 15-percent increase in LPG production, said the company.

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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Caldus Engineering Appoints New MD

UK-based oilfield services firm Caldus Engineering announced Wednesday that it has appointed Brian Green as its new managing director.

Green joins the firm from First Subsea and has more than 35 years' experience in the offshore industry. At Caldus, he will be responsible for developing the offshore market for the firm's integrity management, high-pressure/high-temperature monitoring and control systems and remote 3D seismic monitoring devices.

Caldus specializes in down-hole tools, subsea oil and gas and extreme geothermal engineering. The firm is a subsidiary of Norway's Badger Explorer.

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DOJ Sues ATP Over Alleged Oil, Chemical Discharges in Gulf

The U.S. Department of Justice brought a suit against an oil producer in the Gulf of Mexico, alleging the company illegally allowed discharges of oil and chemicals from a floating oil-and-gas-production platform.

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement discovered violations during an inspection of the ATP Oil & Gas Corp. platform, located in the Mississippi Canyon block of the Gulf, last March and referred the matter to the Justice Department.

According to the Justice Department's complaint, filed Monday in the District Court for Louisiana's Eastern District, ATP discharged more oil than it was allowed to into the ocean, and masked this with a chemical "dispersant" added to the wastewater through a concealed metal tube. The dispersant acted to break apart oil molecules into smaller, dispersed droplets. On board the platform, it was referred to as the "soap" or the "sheen-buster," according to the government's complaint.

Though the complaint states that the dispersant had been used from at least October 2010 to March 2012, the tube was connected in such a way that the additional chemical was added after the point where compliance testing samples were taken, so the additive wasn't detected.

The government is seeking civil penalties under the Clean Water Act and injunctive relief for violations of the Clean Water Act and the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act.

ATP Oil & Gas is engaged in the development and production of oil and natural gas in the Mediterranean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the North Sea, according to its website. A spokesman didn't immediately respond to request for comment. The company filed a petition for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in August, according to the website.

ATP owned the platform from at least 2006 to March 6, 2009, according to the complaint. ATP Infrastructure Partners LP, which is also named in the suit, is a limited partnership company formed in March 2009 by ATP Oil & Gas and GE Energy Financial Services to own and operate the platform.

The Justice Department is asking for ATP Oil & Gas to pay up to $32,500 per day for each violation through Jan. 12, 2009, and up to $37,500 per day for each violation after that date. The department also is seeking to assess penalties of up to $37,500 per day against ATP Infrastructure Partners for each violation on and after March 6, 2009.

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

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Rigzone Crossword for Week of Feb. 4-8


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Rosneft Approves $14.2B Deal to Buy TNK-BP

Rosneft Approves $14.2B Deal to Buy TNK-BP

Russia's Rosneft announced Wednesday that its board of directors has approved a $14.2 billion financing deal to pay for the acquisition of 50 percent of TNK-BP.

The firm said its board met Monday to make the decision to execute the financing from a group of international banks in order to purchase shares owned by the Alfa-Access-Renova (AAR) consortium.

The meeting also saw the directors agree to expand its cooperation with ExxonMobil and to remove Gani Galiyev from its management board, while appointing two new members: Vice President Yuri Kalinin and acting VP Andrey Votinov. 

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