Sunday, May 5, 2013

PRD Energy Scoops Up License Duo in Germany

PRD Energy Inc. has been awarded the Ostrohe Exploration License covering approximately 156,000 acres as well as the Prasdorf Production License, covering approximately 2,000 acres. Both licenses are located in the state of Schleswig-Holstein, and are within the Northwest German Basin. The licenses have been awarded to PRD Energy GmbH, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company.

The Northwest German Basin has a history of significant petroleum discoveries and a number of these discoveries have been made within close proximity to the Ostrohe license. The Ostrohe license is awarded for an initial period of five years and includes all rights surface to basement. Pursuant to the terms of the license, PRD is committed to bringing one well onto production within the initial five year term. The award of this license is subject to the review and approval by various municipal and state government authorities in Germany.

The Prasdorf Production License previously produced petroleum and was abandoned by its former operator in 1992. The Prasdorf Production License covers approximately 2,000 acres and is awarded for an initial period of three years and includes all rights surface to basement. Pursuant to the terms of the license, PRD is committed to bringing one well onto production within the initial three year term. The award of this license is subject to the review and approval by various municipal and state government authorities in Germany.

PRD Energy GmbH has also applied for several other exploration and production licenses in Germany on behalf of PRD, and anticipates responses to these applications in the coming months.

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Energy Boom Helps Fuel West Texas, Great Plains Population Growth

The boom in Bakken and Permian Basin oil and gas activity helped fuel population growth in North Dakota and Texas from 2011 to 2012, the U.S. Census Bureau reported Thursday.

Midland, Texas ranked as the fastest-growing metro area from July 1, 2011 to July 1, 2012, with population growth of 4.6 percent. Neighboring Odessa, Texas, ranked fifth, with Casper and Cheyenne, Wyo., and Bismarck, N.D. ranked among the top 20 fastest-growing metropolitan areas.

"After a long period of out-migration, some parts of the Great Plains – from just south to the Canadian border all the way down to West Texas –are experiencing rapid population growth," said Thomas Mesenbourg, the Census Bureau's senior adviser and acting director, in a statement. "There are probably many factors fueling this growth on the prairie, but no doubt the energy boom is playing a role. For instance, the Permian Basin, located primarily in West Texas, and North Dakota accounted for almost half of the total U.S. growth in firms that mine or extract oil and gas, during a recent one-year period."

In micropolitan areas, which contain an urban cluster of between 10,000 and 49,999 people, Williston, N.D. topped the list of fastest-growing cities with 9.3 percent. Dickinson, N.D. ranked third among fastest-growing micropolitan areas with 6.5 percent.

Eleven Texas counties ranked among the 50 fastest-growing as well as among the 50 highest numeric gainers from July 1, 2011 through July 1, 2012. Bexar County, which encompasses San Antonio and close to the core South Texas counties impacted by Eagle Ford shale activity, ranked 11th among the largest numeric gainers in this timeframe, a U.S. Census Bureau spokesperson told Rigzone in an email.

Dimmitt County, located on the Texas-Mexico border, ranked 20th on the list of U.S. counties that experienced the largest percentage gain in population from 2011 to 2012. Guadalupe County, just east of San Antonio, ranked 49th among the counties nationwide with the largest percent gain in population.

Two North Dakota counties, Williams and Stark, ranked among the five fastest-growing counties with populations of 10,000 or more.

Exploration and production activity from Permian Basin and Eagle Ford helped bolster Texas oil production to nearly 1.5 million barrels of oil per day, an almost 50 percent increase in crude oil production since 2011, Texas Railroad Commissioner Christi Craddick said in a Feb. 28 statement. Craddick added that Texas now represents nearly a fourth of total U.S. crude oil production, and noted that the oil and gas energy sector created 427,761 jobs in Texas and paid $9.25 billion in state taxes in 2011.

The surge in exploration and production (E&P) activity in the Eagle Ford supported nearly 50,000 full-time jobs in 20 counties and contributed more than $25 billion to the South Texas economy, according to a March 13 report by the Eagle Ford Shale Task Force. However, the surge in E&P activity has created infrastructure challenges for South Texas, including the need for a sustainable housing plan for the region and roads wearing down from greater traffic.

The Permian Basin continues to play a significant role in Texas oil production as the increased use of enhanced oil recovery practices in the Permian Basin has substantially impacted U.S. oil production. More than 270 million barrels of oil were produced in the Permian Basin in 2010, and over 280 million barrels of oil were produced in 2011, according to the Texas Railroad Commission.

In 2011, North Dakota was the fourth largest crude oil producing U.S. state, accounting for more than 7 percent of U.S. oil production, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). A 35 percent increase in production from 2010 to 2011 was primarily driven by horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing in the Bakken formation.

EIA expects U.S. crude oil production to keep growing rapidly over the next two years, growing from an average 6.5 million barrels per day in 2012 to an average 7.3 million bpd in 2013 and 7.9 million bpd in 2014. Drilling in tight oil plays in the onshore Williston, western Gulf of Mexico and Permian Basins, is expected to account for the bulk of that forecasted production growth, EIA reported in its March 12 Short-Term Energy Outlook.

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

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Exillon Well Ahead of Growth Target for 2P Reserves

Onshore Russia-focused junior Exillon Energy reported an update Friday in which the firm highlighted that it was well ahead target when it comes to both production and reserves.

In the statement, Exillon CEO Mark Martin said:

"The three components of our growth strategy are to increase our production, EBITDA and reserves. Our production during 2012 grew by 45 percent, our EBITDA by 137 percent and our 2P reserves by 96 percent.

"Our target was to double our 2P reserves within three years. We have done this in one year."

Exillon reported that its total proved (1P) reserves increased by 56 percent in 2012 to 196 million barrels, while its proved plus probable (2P) reserves almost doubled to 520 million barrels from 265 million barrels at the end of 2011.

At Exillon's ETP II-III field at Timan-Pechora in northern Russia, 2P reserves increased by 110 percent to 107 million barrels. At the firm's EWS I field in Western Siberia, 2P reserves increased 75 percent to 180 million barrels.

Recent acquisitions by Exillon in Timan-Pechora added seven million barrels of 2P reserves, although they also added 95 million barrels of 3P reserves, said the firm.

Exillon said that it plans to drill 24 wells this year, which represents a 50-percent increase on the firm's 2012 drilling activity.

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ONGC, Oil India in Mozambique Gas Field Bid

ONGC, Oil India in Mozambique Gas Field Bid

NEW DELHI - India's state-run Oil & Natural Gas Corp. and Oil India Ltd. have made a joint bid for a 20% stake in a Mozambique oil and gas field operated by Anadarko Petroleum Corp., a person with direct knowledge of the matter said Friday.

The move underscores the South Asian nation's interest in buying hydrocarbon assets overseas, even if that means it may have to work in alliance with Chinese companies in future.

ONGC's wholly owned unit, ONGC Videsh Ltd., and Oil India have bid for shares being sold by U.S.-based Anadarko and India's Videocon Industries Ltd., said the person, who didn't want to be named.

If the bid by the companies is approved and eventually results in a stake purchase, analysts say it could be India's biggest foreign deal in the oil and gas sector and may also see India and China--who have a history of frosty relations--working together.

The bid follows Thursday's agreement between oil producer Eni SpA and China National Petroleum Corp. under which the Italian oil producer would sell a 20% stake in its Mozambique offshore natural-gas field to the Chinese company for $4.21 billion.

Eni and Anadarko have an agreement to coordinate on their offshore Mozambique reservoirs. The companies last year agreed to conduct separate but coordinated activities, as well as to build common on-shore LNG liquefaction facilities on the northern part of the African country.

The person with knowledge of the matter said Anadarko is planning to bring down its stake in block-1 of the Rovuma offshore field by 10% to 26.5% to raise funds for the project. Videocon plans to sell its 10% stake, the person added.

The person declined to give any financial details and didn't say when the bids will be considered.

ONGC Videsh Managing Director D.K. Sarraf declined comment, while Videocon Chairman Venugopal Dhoot didn't reply to an email seeking comment. Anadarko spokesman John Christiansen said as a matter of policy, it will not discuss any specifics until it has an agreement.

Anadarko's Mozambique assets currently estimated to hold up to 65 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves. According to Eni its oil field has potential reserves of 75 trillion cubic feet of gas in place-equivalent to about four years of total European gas demand, said Bernstein Research. It is Eni's largest gas find.

Sanjay Kaul, President at University of Petroleum and Energy Studies in India, said the stake that the Indian companies are bidding to buy will be valuable.

"Good assets have a good price tag," he added.

ONGC Videsh's $5 billion offer in November to buy an 8.4% stake from ConocoPhillips in a Kazakhstan field is so far the biggest overseas bid by an Indian energy company. The deal has yet to get the approval of the governments in India and Kazakhstan.

Mr. Kaul expects India and China to "cross roads" in the African country as both are working toward achieving energy security for their expanding population. "But I don't see it [China's presence] as a threat to India's interest."

India and China--two energy-deficient countries--already work together on several international oil projects and are also in pact to explore assets overseas. But their bilateral relations aren't often friendly, troubled by a long-simmering border dispute; India's hosting of Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama; and Chinese support for Pakistan.

India meets more 75% of its oil and gas requirements through imports and its companies have been scouting for energy assets overseas amid falling output from ageing local assets.

Mr. Kaul said state-run companies need to go through several rounds of bureaucratic checks to buy foreign companies, delaying their overseas plans. He said, most foreign acquisitions by Chinese companies are state-supported.

China has been more successful than India in getting oil and gas equity stakes across the globe, often providing large loans and funding for infrastructure projects in developing nations to tie up deals signed by its four state-owned energy giants.

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

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Norway Reports Lower Hydrocarbon Production for February

Oil and gas production on the Norwegian Continental Shelf declined in February, according to the latest figures from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

Production of oil, natural gas liquids and condensate was down some 88,000 barrels per day at 1.79 million barrels per day during February, while total gas sales for the month fell by 60 billion cubic feet to 310 billion cubic feet.

The NPD explained that the Oseberg, Skarv, Troll and Valhall field had reduced production during February due to a range of technical problems. The Grane field had reduced production during the month because of maintenance work.

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Russian Tycoons Sound Out Ex-BP Chiefs about Oil Deals

Representatives of the Alfa Group, set to earn billions of dollars from the sale of Anglo-Russian oil venture TNK-BP, have sounded out former BP CEOs John Browne and Tony Hayward about investing jointly in international oil projects, Reuters reported on its website Wednesday.

German Khan, one of four Russian businessmen who shared control of TNK-BP with BP PLC for a decade, met Mr. Browne and Mr. Hayward and other potential deal partners in London last month, Reuters cited sources familiar with the discussions as saying.

Mr. Khan effectively heads TNK-BP and is Mikhail Fridman's partner in the Alfa Group consortium.

The Alfa-Access-Renova consortium will receive cash of $28 billion for selling their one-half stake in TNK-BP to Russian state-owned oil company OAO Rosneft.

Alfa will get half of that and wants to reinvest much of the money in oil and gas, as well as in telecoms, the sources said in the report.

The other two partners in AAR, mining tycoon Viktor Vekselberg of the Renova Group and Len Blavatnik of Access Industries, are likely to bow out and focus on other ventures and charity work, sources close to TNK-BP and AAR said.

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

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Georgian Govt OKs Mtsare Khevi Pipeline for Frontera

Frontera Resources Corp. announced that it has received approval to proceed with the installation of the 5-mile (8-kilometer) pipeline and related facilities within the Mtsare Khevi field from the Georgian government. As previously announced, equipment required for the gas pipeline has been procured, mobilized, and stacked in the field and in key staging areas. First gas production is now expected within 120 days. The infrastructure will accommodate production from currently shut-in wells, and the Company is targeting production of approximately 2 million cubic feet per day of gas (57,000 cubic meters per day).

The Mtstare Khevi Field is situated within a larger play area of approximately 31 square miles (80 square kilometers) referred to as the Mtsare Khevi Gas Complex and encompasses gas targets found between 984 and 16,404 feet (300 and 5,000 meters) in depth. Based on Frontera's internal estimates, analysis has revealed significant gas potential throughout this area of up to approximately 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas in place (28 billion cubic meters) and up to approximately 700 billion cubic feet of recoverable gas (19.8 billion cubic meters). An integrated geologic study, including data from a number of existing wells within the area such as the V-#18 well, previously referenced in the Company's Jan. 31, 2012 announcement, is currently in progress to better understand and define the extent of this potential throughout the greater Mtsare Khevi Gas Complex.

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Eni Confirms 20% Sale of Mozambique Area 4 for $4.2B

Eni Confirms 20% Sale of Mozambique Area 4 for $4.2B

Italian major Eni confirmed Thursday that it has sold a 20-percent share of its Area 4 license block in Mozambique to China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), as rumored in a news report last Friday. The company also announced that it has reached an agreement with CNPC for cooperation on the development of the Rongchang shale gas block in the Sichuan Basin, onshore China.

Eni said that Petrochina CEO Zhou Jiping and Eni CEO Paulo Scaroni met in Beijing to sign the Area 4 deal. (Petrochina is controlled by CNPC.)

The agreed price for CNPC's stake in Area 4 was $4.2 billion. Eni will retain a 50-percent interest in the license.

Eni pointed out that CNPC's entrance into the license is "strategically important for the project thanks to the worldwide relevance of the new partner in the upstream and downstream sectors".

ENI and CNPC also signed a joint study agreement to work together on the development of the Rongchang shale gas block, which covers around 760 square miles in the Sichuan Basin. The area, which is closely located to the important consumer markets in China, has already been de-risked by research activities and production tests carried out in nearby blocks, said Eni.

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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Norway Reports Lower Hydrocarbon Production for February

Oil and gas production on the Norwegian Continental Shelf declined in February, according to the latest figures from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

Production of oil, natural gas liquids and condensate was down some 88,000 barrels per day at 1.79 million barrels per day during February, while total gas sales for the month fell by 60 billion cubic feet to 310 billion cubic feet.

The NPD explained that the Oseberg, Skarv, Troll and Valhall field had reduced production during February due to a range of technical problems. The Grane field had reduced production during the month because of maintenance work.

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