Friday, June 7, 2013

Sound to Spud Nervesa Well Within Weeks

Italy-focused Sound Oil expects to spud its first appraisal well on its onshore Nervesa discovery within weeks, after it announced Thursday that a land rig currently being used in the Netherlands is about to be released to the company.

LP Drilling, the owner of the contracted TB2100S drilling rig, has informed Sound that its operations in the Netherlands are being finalized, with mobilization to Italy expected to begin within the next fortnight. The estimated time taken to transport the rig to Italy is up to six days, while rigging up the rig will take another six days after which the well will be spud. Preparations at the Nervesa sites are now "materially complete", Sound said.

Drilling and logging is expected to take up to 30 days, while six days has been set aside for completion and clean up. Well testing should then take an additional five days.

Sound CEO James Parsons commented in a company statement:

"Nervesa is a 21 billion standard cubic feet gas discovery which was discovered by ENI in 1985, flowed for a couple of years and has an independently assessed base case value of circa $60 million.

"Following the decision to drill a second Nervesa well in 2013, the company estimates initial annual cash flows in a success case scenario of circa $21 million per annum, after tax and after the CSTI funding.

"The successful drilling of this flagship asset will be the first step in unlocking the significant value inherent in the Sound Oil portfolio. April and May will be critical months for the company."

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Shell Faces New Probe Into Alaska Drilling

Shell Faces New Probe Into Alaska Drilling

Another probe is under way into Royal Dutch Shell's 2012 Alaska drilling season, this time for possible violations of international marine environmental rules, Reuters reported on its website Thursday citing a U.S. Coast Guard official.

The Coast Guard has asked federal prosecutors to consider taking action on possible violations of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships committed in the operations of Shell's Kulluk drillship, said Rear Admiral Thomas Ostebo, head of the Coast Guard in Alaska, in the report.

Rear-Adm. Ostebo said he had commissioned one investigation already launched into the Dec. 31 grounding of the Kulluk and that the Coast Guard has forwarded findings of safety and environmental violations on the Noble Discoverer, Shell's other Alaska drillship, to U.S. prosecutors for possible enforcement action.

"Last week, I also referred a separate Kulluk investigation into potential MARPOL violations from 2012 to the Department of Justice for their review and potential follow-on action," Rear-Adm. Ostebo was quoted as saying at a field hearing convened by Senator Mark Begich.

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Iraqi Oil: Once Seen as US Boon, Now It's Mostly China's

Ten years after the United States invaded and occupied Iraq, the country's oil industry is poised to boom and make the troubled nation the No. 2 oil exporter in the world. But the nation that's moving to take advantage of Iraq's riches isn't the United States. It's China.

America, with its own homegrown energy bonanza, isn't going after the petroleum that lies beneath Iraq's sands nearly as aggressively as is China, a country hungry to fuel its rise as an economic power.

Iraq remains highly unstable in terms of security, infrastructure and politics. Chinese state-owned oil companies appear more willing to put up with that than Americans are.

"The Chinese have a higher tolerance for risk," said Gal Luft, a co-director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, a Washington research center focused on energy.

The International Energy Agency expects China to become the main customer for Iraq's vast oil reserves. Fatih Birol, the agency's chief economist, recently declared "a new trade axis is being formed between Baghdad and Beijing." Birol said that about 80 percent of Iraq's future oil exports were expected to go to Asia, mainly to China.

Iraq's potential for oil production is huge. The International Energy Agency predicts that Iraqi production will more than double in the next eight years and that the country will be by far the largest contributor to growth in the global oil supply over the next two decades. By the 2030s, the agency expects Iraq to become the second-largest global oil exporter, overtaking Russia.

American oil companies, in the meantime, are "barely active" in Iraq, said Robin Mills of Dubai-based Manaar Energy Consulting. There's Exxon Mobil, which is locked in a dispute with the Iraqi government and is looking to sell at least some of its stake in the giant West Qurna-1 oil field, with the state-owned PetroChina discussed as a likely buyer. The other U.S. firm operating in Iraq is Occidental Petroleum Corp., Mills said, a company that has just a minority, non-operating stake in the Zubair oil field.

Iraq hasn't become the bonanza for big Western international oil companies that some might have expected when the U.S. invaded 10 years ago.

It's a different story, though, for the U.S. oil field services and engineering companies that have established dominant positions in Iraq. That includes Halliburton, the company that Iraq War booster Dick Cheney led before he became vice president.

Bush administration officials suggested shortly after the invasion that revenue from Iraq's oil fields could largely pay the cost of rebuilding the country. That turned out to be wrong, and $60 billion in American taxpayer funds ended up going into the reconstruction of Iraq. The war devastated Iraq's oil industry, as kidnappings, sabotage and attacks on infrastructure made it virtually impossible to do business.

While the industry's improvement in Iraq since 2009 has been substantial, according to analysts, the country remains a tough place to work. Huge problems remain with infrastructure, security and logistics.

The contract terms the Iraqi government offers oil companies also aren't attractive, said Trevor Houser, an energy specialist with the New York-based Rhodium Group consulting firm. China is expanding in Iraq because it needs the energy and it doesn't have alternatives that are as good as those of Western oil companies, he said.

The most profitable places in the world to work as an oil company are the North American unconventional fields _ such as shale deposits in the Eastern U.S. _ and the deepwater fields in West Africa or the Gulf of Mexico, Houser said. China has limited opportunities in those places, he said, with the state-owned oil company PetroChina lacking the technological sophistication needed for deepwater production.

"The fact that (PetroChina) is expanding in Iraq is not to me a sign of their strength, it's a sign of their relative weakness," Houser said.

Birol, the chief economist at the International Energy Agency, said that nearly a third of the future oil production in Iraq was expected to come from fields that either were directly owned or co-led by Chinese companies.

Oil companies from the U.S. and other Western nations have been more interested in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, a largely autonomous area that doesn't take orders from Baghdad. Kurdistan offers more stability and better contract terms to the international oil companies, to the fury of the Baghdad government, which is charged with handling international affairs and calls the contracts illegal.

Western oil companies generally have more attractive global investment opportunities than Iraq, said Luft, who's an adviser to the U.S. Energy Security Council, a nonprofit group that works to lessen dependence on fossil fuels.

They also need to answer to their shareholders, and they see the world differently from the way state-owned Chinese companies do, he said.

"The Chinese oil companies are more in tune with the geopolitical agenda of their government and respond less to shareholders," Luft said. "If Exxon operates somewhere and has to close down operations for a month, that would have an impact on investors. When the Chinese go into one of those places and something bad happens, there is not the consequence in terms of stock."

Luft said he didn't see Chinese development of Iraq's oil as a case of China enjoying the spoils of a war for which the U.S. had paid dearly both in lives and taxpayer dollars.

It's a myth that U.S. energy security relies on Middle Eastern imports, he said. Oil from the region makes up just a small percentage of what America uses. The U.S. will benefit if China or anyone else can get Iraqi's huge reserves developed and onto the market, he said. Since oil is a global commodity, he said, more oil on the market brings down prices.

"Energy security is about not only the availability of the resource but also about the cost," Luft said. "Anything that brings down global oil prices is positive for U.S. energy security."

Copyright 2013 McClatchy Washington Bureau

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Pacific Rubiales Farms-In to Bilby Well Offshore Brazil

Pacific Rubiales Energy has exercised its option to acquire a 35-percent interest in Block S-M-1166 located in the Santos Basin offshore Brazil. The block is held by Karoon Gas Australia Ltd. (Karoon) and Pacific will exercise its right to acquire a stake through the funding and participation in the Bilby-1 exploration well.

This marks the third exploration well within the Karoon blocks that Pacific has participated in, following the Kangaroo-1 and Emu-1 wells.

As for the Bilby-1 well, Pacific will complete the minimum work commitments required to retain a stake in all five blocks (S-M-1037, -1101, -1102, -1165 and -1166) and request operatorship of the project. The transaction is subject to regulatory approval.

"Although we are in early exploration stages, we are pleased with the results to date and our partnership with Karoon," said Ronald Pantin, CEO of Pacific Rubiales, in a statement. "Our first well, Kangaroo-1, discovered oil in an Eocene structure and we are looking forward to following up with an appraisal well as soon as a suitable drilling rig can be sourced and mobilized to the Kangaroo-2 location."

Karoon spud the Kangaroo well in December 2012 using the Blackford Dolphin (mid-water semisub). Currently, the rig is drilling the Emu-1 well and it is expected that Karoon will use the same rig to drill the Bilby-1 well.

The Emu-1 well in the Santos Basin reached total depth with initial wireline results showing the main objective to be water bearing, said Tudor Pickering & Holt in a March 28 analyst report.

"It does not change our view on geological chance of success in the basin."

It is estimated that Bilby, situated in a water depth of 1,320 feet, contains a potentially significant sized Eocene accumulation with multiple targets at several geological levels, including the Santonian, Campanian, Maestrichtian, Eocene and Miocene. The well is expected to reach total depth in 2Q.

Karoon currently holds 100 percent interest in the Santos Basin Blocks.

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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BP to Proceed with Clair Phase 3 Appraisal

BP announced Thursday that it and its partners have decided to proceed with a two-year appraisal program that will look at developing a third phase of the giant Clair field in the North Sea, west of Shetlands.

The initial commitment involves a two-year program to drill five appraisal wells. This could increase to between eight and 12 wells, depending on results from these first wells. Drilling of the first well commenced recently.

The objectives of the program are to provide greater certainty on overall reservoir volumes, including their distribution and fluid characteristics; to evaluate technologies to improve recovery from Greater Clair; and to test the possibility of new standalone developments and linkages to Clair Ridge.

BP Regional President for the North Sea Trevor Garlick commented in a company statement:

"This is a major milestone and a further big commitment to the west of Shetland by BP and its co-venturers. If successful, the appraisal programme could pave the way for a third phase of development at Clair – this is now a real possibility."

UK Energy Secretary Ed Davey added:

"This announcement by BP of a two year appraisal programme for the Greater Clair area West of Shetland is excellent news. It shows the industry's commitment to maximise the potential in this area, which could hold up to 17 percent of our oil and gas reserves."

"Greater Clair proves there is still a long future for oil and gas production in the North Sea and will give confidence to new recruits that the industry offers a career for life."

Discovered in 1997, the Clair field is located almost 50 miles west of Shetland and extends over an area of 85 square miles. Hydrocarbons initially in place have been estimated at around eight billion barrels of oil equivalent.

So far, the first development phase at Clair have seen BP and its partners process around 90 million barrels. Phase 2, in which production is expected to commence in 2016, is expected to lead to an estimated 640 million barrels of oil produced over 40 years, and will also provide a hub for future expansion.

BP is the operator of Clair, with a 27.62-percent interest. Partners in the field include: Britoil (0.98%), ConocoPhillips UK Sigma (24%), Chevron North Sea (19.42%), Enterprise Oil Limited (18.68%) and Shell Clair UK (9.3%).

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South Sudan: 160 Killed in Border Clashes With Rebels

KAMPALA, Uganda - More than 160 people were killed this week in border battles between soldiers and rebels in South Sudan's Jonglei state, officials said on Friday.

At least 143 rebels and 20 soldiers died in several clashes since Tuesday, South Sudan military spokesman Col. Phillip Aguer told The Wall Street Journal.

South Sudan has been trying to quash a rebellion that started earlier this month so it can resume crude-oil shipments.

"Our forces dealt a severe blow to the rebels," Col. Aguer said. "We are now in control of the airstrip which these rebels have been using to get supplies."

The rebels are led by tribal war lord and defeated local-election candidate David Yau Yau. South Sudan accuses former civil war enemy Sudan of backing the insurgent. It denies this.

Landlocked South Sudan seceded from Sudan in July 2011 and retained 75% of the country's oil fields. However, South Sudan relies on pipelines running through Sudan to get its crude oil to ports.

The two disagree over the location of their border. In January last year South Sudan halted crude-oil shipments as the border disagreement escalated.

Earlier this month they agreed to resume shipments after international intervention.

Until January 2012 South Sudan shipped as much as 350,000 barrels a day to refiners in China and Malaysia.

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

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BP to Proceed with Clair Phase 3 Appraisal

BP announced Thursday that it and its partners have decided to proceed with a two-year appraisal program that will look at developing a third phase of the giant Clair field in the North Sea, west of Shetlands.

The initial commitment involves a two-year program to drill five appraisal wells. This could increase to between eight and 12 wells, depending on results from these first wells. Drilling of the first well commenced recently.

The objectives of the program are to provide greater certainty on overall reservoir volumes, including their distribution and fluid characteristics; to evaluate technologies to improve recovery from Greater Clair; and to test the possibility of new standalone developments and linkages to Clair Ridge.

BP Regional President for the North Sea Trevor Garlick commented in a company statement:

"This is a major milestone and a further big commitment to the west of Shetland by BP and its co-venturers. If successful, the appraisal programme could pave the way for a third phase of development at Clair – this is now a real possibility."

UK Energy Secretary Ed Davey added:

"This announcement by BP of a two year appraisal programme for the Greater Clair area West of Shetland is excellent news. It shows the industry's commitment to maximise the potential in this area, which could hold up to 17 percent of our oil and gas reserves."

"Greater Clair proves there is still a long future for oil and gas production in the North Sea and will give confidence to new recruits that the industry offers a career for life."

Discovered in 1997, the Clair field is located almost 50 miles west of Shetland and extends over an area of 85 square miles. Hydrocarbons initially in place have been estimated at around eight billion barrels of oil equivalent.

So far, the first development phase at Clair have seen BP and its partners process around 90 million barrels. Phase 2, in which production is expected to commence in 2016, is expected to lead to an estimated 640 million barrels of oil produced over 40 years, and will also provide a hub for future expansion.

BP is the operator of Clair, with a 27.62-percent interest. Partners in the field include: Britoil (0.98%), ConocoPhillips UK Sigma (24%), Chevron North Sea (19.42%), Enterprise Oil Limited (18.68%) and Shell Clair UK (9.3%).

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Japan Public, Private Sectors to Create LNG Futures

Japan is planning to launch the world's first futures contract for liquefied natural gas, marking the latest step toward creating a global market for the fuel.

The market for LNG--the chilled and exportable form of natural gas--is poised to expand rapidly in the coming years, analysts say, as the U.S. ramps up exports and global demand rises. The price of gas varies widely across different regions. Japan, the world's biggest importer of LNG, pays about $18 per British thermal units, versus $4 for the product in gaseous form in the U.S.

Japan's LNG imports rose after the March 2011 Fukushima disaster sidelined most of the country's nuclear reactors. The cost of those imports is linked to crude oil, reflecting historic ties between prices in the two energy markets. But many users say U.S. production unleashed by the shale boom has weakened the connection between LNG and the oil market. A futures contract would allow LNG producers and consumers to determine gas prices independently from oil, and provide a way to protect themselves against price swings.

While oil is a global market, the price of natural gas varies among regions because consumers tend to buy from suppliers within their own region. In the U.S., abundant supplies have caused gas prices to plunge from as high as $15 per million Btus in 2005. Japan pays a premium because it has little domestic output and transporting LNG is expensive.

"Japan definitely has an interest in something more in line with a global price of LNG to offset their price with regions that have weaker demand," said Eric Bickel, commodity analyst with Schneider Electric, an energy-consulting firm. "They're sort of spreading that load."

The parties behind the push for the new contract--which include electricity and gas utilities, trading houses, traders and government officials--will aim to list the dollar-denominated futures on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange by March 2015.

Certain details of the contract still have to be worked out, said Takashi Ishizaki, who oversees futures-trading regulations in Japan as the commerce director for the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.

LNG prices could fall if U.S. exports rise, analysts say. The U.S. Energy Department is reviewing more than a dozen applications for liquefied natural-gas export terminals and may begin to make decisions as soon as early this year. However, U.S. manufacturers, utilities and others that benefit from cheap domestic gas have spoken out against exports.

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Oil Futures Finish Higher as S&P 500 Aims for Record

Oil futures finished higher Thursday, setting a six-week high as the Standard & Poor's 500 was poised to finish at a record.

Light, sweet crude for May delivery settled 65 cents, or 0.7%, higher, at $97.23 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That's the highest settlement since Feb. 14.

Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange settled 33 cents, or 0.3% higher, at $110.02 a barrel.

Futures rallied as the benchmark S&P 500 pushed higher and was set to surpass its previous record set in October 2007. The index recently rose 0.3%, to 1567.08.

"The stock-market record for the S&P is chipping in here," said John Kilduff, founding partner at Again Capital in New York. "It's a risk-on day."

Oil futures and equities often trade in tandem since both are considered risky assets that investors use as a bet on economic growth. In addition, crude traders often turn to equities as a barometer of broader economic sentiment.

Despite Thursday's strong stock market performance, several reports put a damper on the crude market earlier in the session, keeping it in negative territory for much of the morning.

Jobless claims rose by a bigger-than-expected 16,000 to a seasonally adjusted 357,000 last week. The figure was the second straight weekly increase in the filing of unemployment benefits, underscoring the weak pace of hiring in the U.S.

Meanwhile, the U.S. government released its final revision on fourth-quarter economic growth, saying the U.S. grew at an annualized rate of 0.4%, below the 0.5% rate forecast by economists.

"The jobs numbers today were not very inspiring and GDP was kind of in line," said Phil Flynn, analyst at Price Futures Group, a brokerage in Chicago.

Nymex crude prices have notched gains of roughly 6% so far in March. But analysts have attributed the rally to expectations that the supply glut in the central U.S. had begun to ease, lifting prices there.

The price of Brent crude, regarded as a more reliable global benchmark, is down about 1.2% in March.

Front-month April reformulated gasoline blendstock, or RBOB, settled 1.01 cent, or 0.3%, lower, at $3.1054 a gallon. April heating oil settled 0.02 cent lower at $2.9152 a gallon.

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