Saturday, March 23, 2013

China Clears ConocoPhillips to Resume Operations at Offshore Oilfield

BEIJING - ConocoPhillips was cleared to resume full operations at an offshore Chinese oilfield after being sanctioned by Beijing over 2011 oil spills.

China's State Oceanic Administration said on Saturday that the Penglai 19-3 oilfield in China's northern Bohai Bay could resume operations after making a number of unspecified changes. The move came after China's National Energy Administration approved in December a revised overall development plan for the field.

ConocoPhillips' China unit owns 49% of the field and operates it, while China's CNOOC Ltd. owns 51%.

The Penglai 19-3 field was ordered by China's State Oceanic Administration to halt production in September 2011 after it spilled 3,345 barrels of oil and oil-based drilling mud into the ocean. The leaks brought harsh criticism by Chinese media and authorities, largely directed at ConocoPhillips. The company has said it regrets the accidents.

Last year, ConocoPhillips and CNOOC agreed to pay $161 million to settle compensation claims resulting from the oil spills. ConocoPhillips, as operator of the field, would provide the money, while CNOOC would allocate part of an ecology fund it had set up to help restore and preserve fishing resources in the Bohai area.

ConocoPhillips' share of oil production from the Penglai 19-3 field was 62,000 barrels a day before the spills. The Houston-based company gradually resumed output last year, but its share of production was only 45,000 barrels a day at the end of the third quarter, it said.

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

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New Well Spud on Kharsang Field

India-focused Jubilant Energy announced Tuesday the spudding of well KPL-3E-7, the first of a six-well development drilling campaign in the oil-producing Kharsang field in the state of Arunachal Pradesh.

The Phase-III-Extension campaign was approved by the management committee for the Kharsang field in January after the conclusion of what Jubilant described as a successful seven-well Phase-III drilling campaign between July 2011 and August 2012. Six of the seven wells in the Phase-III campaign have been put into production and currently produce around 700 barrels of oil per day.

KPL-3E-7, which is located in the northwestern area of the field, is being drilled as an infill development well, with the H-00 reservoir sand layer as its primary objective and G-00 and D-00 sand layers as secondary objectives. The well is expected to take approximately three weeks to drill, said Jubilant.

Jubliant holds a 25-percent interest in the Kharsang field.

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Rosneft in Japan for Arctic Shelf Talks

MOSCOW - The head of Russia's state-controlled oil giant OAO Rosneft is traveling to Japan Tuesday to discuss partnerships on offshore projects, as the company tries to attract foreign firms to help tap the potentially vast but difficult-to-recover reserves on Russia's Arctic shelf.

The trip comes after Rosneft Chief Executive Igor Sechin spent two days in China for talks, including discussions on potential offshore projects with CNPC, Sinopec and CNOOC. Rosneft already has offshore partnerships with Exxon Mobil Corp., Eni SpA and Statoil ASA.

A spokeswoman for Rosneft declined to name the Japanese firms Mr. Sechin would meet with.

Russia is looking to the Arctic to maintain output in the long term as production at Soviet-era fields in western Siberia wanes.

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

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BMT Cordah Advises on 27th Licensing Round

BMT Cordah reported Tuesday that it has recently advised several major companies in applications for the latest UK oil and gas licensing round.

BMT Cordah – a subsidiary of maritime, environmental and engineering consultancy BMT Group – said it provided environmental support for UK Continental Shelf operators, including Endeavour Energy UK, bidding for licenses in the UK's 27th Offshore Oil and Gas Licensing round. This included the preparation of screening assessment, which are required to summarize the sensitivities and potential environmental impacts of seismic and exploration drilling activities in license areas the firms were interested in.

To enable the UK Government’s Department for Energy and Climate Change to assess environmental competence, BMT assisted customers with their submission under four key environmental areas: Pollution Liability; Environmental Regulations and Organisation; Legislative Compliance and Environmental Sensitivities and Issues.

BMT Cordah Managing Director Norman Di Perno commented in a statement:

"A comprehensive understanding of the relevant environmental regulations, directives and international agreements is key when supporting our customers through this detailed application process."

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JX Nippon Receives Approval for Mariner Field Development Plan

The UK's Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) has approved JX Nippon Exploration and Production's (JXNEPUK) field development plan for the Mariner oil field in the North Sea, the latter's parent – JX Nippon Oil and Gas Exploration – disclosed in a statement late Monday.

The Mariner heavy oil field, one of the four major assets in the UK, is sited in Block 9/11a in the North Sea, 93 miles (150 kilometers) east of Shetlands in a water depth of 360 feet (110 meters). The total investment in the field, including drilling, will be in excess of $7 billion, JX Nippon revealed.

Discovered in 1981, the Mariner field is estimated to have recoverable reserves of more than 250 million barrels of oil and 55,000 barrels of average daily oil production for the first four years.

Life of the oil field is expected to be around 30 years from 2017.

JX Nippon's development plan for the field involves building of a production, drilling and quarters platform along with a floating storage and offloading system. The company is also expecting to drill a significant number of production wells after startup in 2017.

"The Mariner field is one of our major assets in the UK, and we expect that it will contribute to the achievement of our long term daily production goal of 200,000 barrels of oil equivalent by 2020," JX Nippon noted in its statement.

Statoil is the operator of the field with a 65.11 percent interest. JXNEPUK and Cairn Energy hold the remaining stakes at 28.89 percent and 6 percent respectively.

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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UKOOG: Shale Gas and CBM will Save the Day

UKOOG: Shale Gas and CBM will Save the Day

Shale gas and coal-bed methane reserves will contribute "significantly" to the UK's energy mix as the country struggles to meet future energy needs, the UK Onshore Operators Group (UKOOG) stated Tuesday in response to concerns raised by UK energy regulator Ofgem about a possible shortfall in electricity-generating capacity in years to come.

Earlier Tuesday, Ofgem Chief Executive Alistair Buchanan warned that a combination of the closure of UK power plants, foreign gas supplies shrinking and electricity demand rising has made the country's energy reserves "uncomfortably tight".

According to Buchanan, around 10 percent of the UK's current electricity generation capacity will be lost in March as coal and oil-fired power stations close earlier than expected to meet environmental targets. The forced closure of ageing coal and oil power stations will combine to provide a "unique challenge for securing electricity supply from 2015 to 2020", Buchanan said in a newspaper article.

Responding to the comments, UKOOG Chief Executive Ken Cronin issued a statement in which he said:

"We were interested to see today’s comment by Alistair Buchanan, chief executive of Ofgem, about the UK’s dependence on gas imports to meet its energy needs going forward. The onshore oil and gas industry in the UK is already a significant contributor to the UK’s energy mix and this is expected to increase significantly in the next few years as the UK’s reserves of shale gas and coal bed methane are exploited.

"There are large reserves of gas under the UK with a resource density that would make it significantly accessible. Getting that gas to market in the UK is aided by already having an infrastructure in place. The industry can make a significant contribution to the energy needs of the UK both in terms of electricity and heating in a safe and environmentally sensitive manner working alongside the local communities in which it operates delivering significant benefits both locally and nationally."

Currently, only one company – Cuadrilla Resources – is actively drilling for shale gas in the UK, while Australian firm Dart International recently conducted a successful flow test of a coal-bed methane well in Scotland.

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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Technip Wins Subsea Contract in Malaysia

French oilfield services firm Technip announced Monday that it has been awarded a subsea contract for two oil fields offshore Malaysia.

Technip reported that Sarawak Shell Berhad has awarded it an engineering, procurement, installation, construction and commissioning contract for two new gas-export lines at the Laila and D12 fields. Laila is located some 30 miles northwest of Miri at a water depth of 245 feet, while D12 is approximately 85 miles from Bintulu at a water depth of 165 feet.

The contract covers the design, fabrication and installation of a three-mile and a six-mile flexible pipes with respective diameters of seven and 12.8 inches, as well as the installatyion of riser clamps at both jacket platforms, pre-commissioning of flowlines and project management.

Technip's operating center in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, will execute the contract, which is scheduled for completion in the first half of 2014. Technip's new Deep Orient multipurpose vessel will be used for the installation.

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BMT Cordah Advises on 27th Licensing Round

BMT Cordah reported Tuesday that it has recently advised several major companies in applications for the latest UK oil and gas licensing round.

BMT Cordah – a subsidiary of maritime, environmental and engineering consultancy BMT Group – said it provided environmental support for UK Continental Shelf operators, including Endeavour Energy UK, bidding for licenses in the UK's 27th Offshore Oil and Gas Licensing round. This included the preparation of screening assessment, which are required to summarize the sensitivities and potential environmental impacts of seismic and exploration drilling activities in license areas the firms were interested in.

To enable the UK Government’s Department for Energy and Climate Change to assess environmental competence, BMT assisted customers with their submission under four key environmental areas: Pollution Liability; Environmental Regulations and Organisation; Legislative Compliance and Environmental Sensitivities and Issues.

BMT Cordah Managing Director Norman Di Perno commented in a statement:

"A comprehensive understanding of the relevant environmental regulations, directives and international agreements is key when supporting our customers through this detailed application process."

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BHP Billiton CEO Marius Kloppers to Retire

MELBOURNE - BHP Billiton Ltd. Wednesday said Marius Kloppers is retiring as chief executive after more than five years, in the latest leadership change among the world's biggest mining companies as they grapple with slowing commodities demand and falling profits.

Mr. Kloppers will be succeeded in May by Andrew Mackenzie, a 56-year-old Scot who was lured away by Mr. Kloppers from rival Rio Tinto PLC and has run BHP's non-ferrous division since joining in 2008.

South Africa-born Mr. Kloppers has been dogged by criticism for failed acquisitions attempts, including a bid for rival Rio Tinto PLC, and hefty writedowns including against U.S. shale gas assets bought on his watch in 2011.

Mr. Mackenzie's appointment adds to a flurry of changes at the world's top mining companies after Rio Tinto last month replaced chief executive Tom Albanese with Sam Walsh, the head of the company's big iron ore division, after more than $14 billion in writedowns pushed the company to its first full-year loss. Anglo American PLC's chief executive Cynthia Carroll is also preparing to stand down and hand control to AngloGold Ashanti Ltd.'s Mark Cutifani, having faced criticism from shareholders for cost overruns and delays at a key iron ore development in Brazil and troubles at its South African platinum operation.

BHP in November said it had begun searching for a replacement for Mr. Kloppers and was using a recruitment agency to look outside the company for possible candidates.

"Marius was appointed chief executive just prior to the global financial crisis," Chairman Jacques Nasser said in a statement Wednesday. "Despite an exceptionally difficult economic environment during his tenure, Marius and his team have delivered for shareholders, significantly outperforming our peers in terms of total shareholder returns."

Mr. Mackenzie will take over from Mr. Kloppers on May 10 and join the company's board on that date. He has strong oil and gas experience as well a background in minerals at a time when BHP is emphasizing its broad asset base and growing petroleum business.

"He has an impressive resume," said Tim Schroeders, a fund manager at Pengana Capital in Melbourne, which owns shares in BHP. "But we'll have to wait and see what he brings to the table compared with what Marius [Kloppers] did."

Mr. Schroeders said the company's focus is likely to remain on containing costs that have risen sharply for mining companies in recent years as they have sought to expand production to meet growing demand from China and other developing economies, and on investing in more profitable businesses.

Mr. Mackenzie grew up in the industrial town of Kirkintilloch near Glasgow, Scotland, at a time when nearby coal mines were in decline. He began his career as a geologist and geochemist, before spending 22 years with BP PLC where he rose to vice president of petrochemicals in the U.S. He moved to Rio Tinto in 2004 as chief executive of industrial minerals.

"One of the first decisions I made when I became CEO was to bring Andrew into BHP Billiton, and I look forward to working closely with him," Mr. Kloppers said.

The leadership change was announced by BHP alongside a 58% fall in its first-half profit to $4.24 billion following a sharp fall in commodity prices. However, BHP tempered the weaker earnings with a 3.6% rise in its interim dividend payout.

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

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US Judge OKs Transocean's $1B Civil Spill Settlement

Deepwater Horizon Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

US Judge OKs Transocean's $1B Civil Spill Settlement

A New Orleans judge has approved Transocean Ltd.'s settlement agreement with the Justice Department to pay $1 billion in civil penalties for its part in the 2010 Macondo oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier stated in his ruling Tuesday that there is "no just reason for delay" in approving the civil settlement, The Associated Press reported.

"We are not commenting on this piece - we will let the settlement speak for itself," said Lou Colasuonno, spokesperson for Transocean, in an exclusive Rigzone phone interview.

Another U.S. federal judge approved Transocean's $400 million criminal settlement Feb. 14, in which the company pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge, resulting in one of the largest criminal Clean Water Act fines and penalties in U.S. history.
In total, Transocean will pay $1.4 billion in criminal and civil penalties.

Transocean, which employed nine of the 11 workers killed in the accident, owned the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that exploded and sank over BP's Macondo well in April 2010.

With more than 10 years of journalism experience, Robin Dupre specializes in the offshore sector of the oil and gas industry. Email Robin at rdupre@rigzone.com.

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