Showing posts with label Second. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Second. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2013

Second DST Test Successfully Completes Lengo Appraisal

AWE Limited reported that a second successful drill stem test was conducted at the Lengo-2 appraisal well that is situated in the Bulu Production Sharing Contract offshore East Java, Indonesia. The test achieved a maximum gas flow rate of 21.2 million standard cubic feet per day (MMcf/d).

AWE, a partner on the field, reported that two further cores were cut in the Kujung I reservoir from 2,485 to 2,571 feet, recovering an estimated 79 feet of carbonate Kujung I reservoir formation. Gas samples were collected and a final result of the compositional analysis from both DST tests is expected in coming weeks.

"The results from the two DSTs at Lengo-2, combined with the data we have previously acquired from the Lengo-1 well, will be used by the Joint Venture as the basis for evaluating the future commercial development potential of the Lengo field," said Bruce Clement, AWE's managing director in a statement. "The growing domestic energy market in East Java is an attractive destination for this gas resource, should it prove commercial."

The Randolph Yost (300' ILC) jackup is drilling the appraisal well to a total depth of about 2,717 feet. Upon completion of the logging program, the well will be plugged and abandoned as planned.

KrisEnergy Satria Limited operates the license with a 42.5 percent stake. Partners include AWE Limited (42.5%), PT Satria Energindo (10%) and PT. Satria Wijaya Kusuma (5%).

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.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
For More Information on the Offshore Rig Fleet:
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/.

View the original article here

Sunday, August 4, 2013

Second DST Test Successfully Completes Lengo Appraisal

AWE Limited reported that a second successful drill stem test was conducted at the Lengo-2 appraisal well that is situated in the Bulu Production Sharing Contract offshore East Java, Indonesia. The test achieved a maximum gas flow rate of 21.2 million standard cubic feet per day (MMcf/d).

AWE, a partner on the field, reported that two further cores were cut in the Kujung I reservoir from 2,485 to 2,571 feet, recovering an estimated 79 feet of carbonate Kujung I reservoir formation. Gas samples were collected and a final result of the compositional analysis from both DST tests is expected in coming weeks.

"The results from the two DSTs at Lengo-2, combined with the data we have previously acquired from the Lengo-1 well, will be used by the Joint Venture as the basis for evaluating the future commercial development potential of the Lengo field," said Bruce Clement, AWE's managing director in a statement. "The growing domestic energy market in East Java is an attractive destination for this gas resource, should it prove commercial."

The Randolph Yost (300' ILC) jackup is drilling the appraisal well to a total depth of about 2,717 feet. Upon completion of the logging program, the well will be plugged and abandoned as planned.

KrisEnergy Satria Limited operates the license with a 42.5 percent stake. Partners include AWE Limited (42.5%), PT Satria Energindo (10%) and PT. Satria Wijaya Kusuma (5%).

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.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
For More Information on the Offshore Rig Fleet:
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/.

View the original article here

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

For CEOs Like McClendon, Buyout Game Can Be Second Act

For CEOs Like McClendon, Buyout Game Can Be Second Act

As Aubrey McClendon's days as Chesapeake Energy Corp.'s chief executive tick down, he's exploring ways to remain in the energy game.

Less than two months after agreeing to leave Chesapeake under pressure from shareholders over his free-spending ways, Mr. McClendon is meeting with private-equity investors and others to discuss potentially teaming up for new ventures, according to several people familiar with the discussions.

Mr. McClendon also has spoken with energy executives who in the past worked with buyout shops. At this juncture, Mr. McClendon is asking more questions than he is sharing details of future plans. Among his queries: How much autonomy and control would he have if he received financing from a Wall Street firm, according to one person he's spoken with.

Mr. McClendon, 53 years old, has some employees for his next venture, according to a person familiar with the matter, and secured office space in a six-story, glass-and-concrete building in Oklahoma City. His new digs are about a mile east of the sprawling, university-like campus he helped design for Chesapeake, the energy power he co-founded in 1989.

Mr. McClendon declined to comment.

If Mr. McClendon ends up in private equity, he will be following a path trod by other high-profile executives who have landed on their feet in the private-equity world.

Robert Nardelli, the former chief executive of Chrysler Group LLC and Home Depot, in 2009 joined private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP. He left a year ago to focus on his own investment firm, he said at the time. He declined to comment.

Lord John Browne, who resigned as chief executive officer of BP in 2007, joined Riverstone Holdings LLC. He couldn't be reached for comment.

The relationship can be symbiotic: Private-equity firms crave the expertise and Rolodexes of former top managers, while the executives like working away from public scrutiny and the tyranny of quarterly earnings.

Performance isn't judged on "what happens from quarter to quarter, it's about what happens to the fund over the life of the fund," said David B. Miller, who co-founded private-equity firm EnCap Investments LLC after running an energy company, Maze Exploration Inc.

One challenge, Mr. Miller said, is that institutional investors tend to have lower risk tolerance than shareholders in public stock markets.

Set to step down from Chesapeake by April 1, Mr. McClendon is leaving on a low note. After building Chesapeake into the nation's second-biggest natural-gas producer after Exxon Mobil Corp., his last year at the company was marred by a wrong-way bet on natural gas that left the company exposed to a collapse in prices.

Meanwhile, Mr. McClendon's personal borrowing practices ignited a governance controversy last year. Shareholders soured on his spending amid the stock's recent disappointments, leading to his ouster. Some private-equity investors said the controversy might reduce the enthusiasm of some to work with the Chesapeake co-founder.

Still, Mr. McClendon is regarded by some as a visionary who helped lead a revolution in American energy extraction.

"I think he'll likely have several opportunities to partner with private-equity firms interested in energy," says Scott Sperling, co-president of Thomas H. Lee Partners. "After a few months out of the news, people probably will just remember that he was a guy who did some pretty interesting things" rather than someone who left his company amid negative headlines.

Any foray by Mr. McClendon into energy would be complicated by his contractual restrictions not to compete with Chesapeake.

Mr. McClendon's contract with Chesapeake bars him from using confidential information he acquired there for a year. It also prohibits him from acquiring, or helping someone else acquire, oil and gas interests immediately adjacent to the company's holdings while he continues to receive severance payments. Chesapeake has drilling rights to 15 million acres nationwide, spanning some of the country's most prolific oil-and-gas-producing zones, which could make it difficult for Mr. McClendon to operate in the same regions-even if he weren't directly involved.

"He can't do indirectly what he can't do directly," said Michael P. Maslanka, a partner at Dallas-based Constangy Brooks & Smith LLP who specializes in employment law. "You can wall him off, but the question becomes, 'How effectively did you wall him off?'"

Though Chesapeake said it would pay him a severance of nearly $50 million over four years, Mr. McClendon's next move will likely require other people's money. The executive once owned 33.5 million Chesapeake shares-worth $2.3 billion at their 2008 peak--and pledged them as collateral for loans to buy more shares. When Chesapeake's stock tumbled later that year, the value of his collateral fell below the level required and he was forced to sell most of his shares. Much of his personal fortune, including a 19.2% stake in the Oklahoma City Thunder basketball team, has been pledged as collateral to secure loans.

Through a controversial perk, Mr. McClendon can choose whether to invest in every well Chesapeake drills. The disclosure of his borrowing--he pledged his interests in the wells to secure up to $1.4 billion in loans from a private-equity group that also did business with Chesapeake--triggered shareholder lawsuits. The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating the arrangement.

Chesapeake's board said in February it found no "intentional misconduct" by Mr. McClendon, who agreed to terminate the perk in June 2014.

T. Boone Pickens, whose own wrong-way bet on natural gas-prices in the 1990s led to his ouster at the energy company he had built, later went on to found a hedge fund. He says he recently met with Mr. McClendon, a fellow Oklahoma native, and that his friend's problem was having more ideas than money to finance them.

"He tried to buy the world," said Mr. Pickens, whose hedge fund sold all of its half-million Chesapeake shares last year.

Still, he said Mr. McClendon won't have any trouble raising money. "I'd invest with him," he said.

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

Post a Comment Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Jubilant Spuds Second Kharsang Extension Well

India-focused Jubilant Energy reported Monday that it has spud the second well of its Phase III Extension development drilling campaign on the oil-producing Kharsang field in the Upper Assam Basin, onshore northeast India.

The KPL-3E-4 well, located in the northwestern area of the field, is being drilled as an infill development well with the H-00 reservoir as the primary objective and the G-00 reservoir as the secondary target. The well is to be deviated by approximately 1,170 feet towards the southeast from the existing plinth of well KSG No. 27 and will be drilled to a target depth of approximately 3,550 feet measured depth.

The well is expected to take up to three weeks to drill.

The first development well of the current campaign on the Kharsang field, KSG No. 65, was spud Feb. 18 and was successfully drilled to a target depth of 3,755 feet. Nine potentially hydrocarbon-bearing sands were encountered in the well, with total net pay being 144 feet. Eight of these sands appear to be oil-bearing.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Monday, April 29, 2013

Edge Completes Second Saskatchewan Well in Spring Campaign

Edge Resources Inc. has finished drilling the second well of the Company's Spring drilling program in Primate, Saskatchewan. The well was successfully drilled and cased without incident and is now being prepared for production.

The horizontal well was drilled into a new formation and cased with a slotted liner in 1,624 feet (495 meters) of horizontal pay. Completion and equipping operations will commence immediately and continue during breakup. The rig was released to an all-weather rack site as Spring break-up conditions would not allow the rig to be moved to another drilling location.

Brad Nichol, President and CEO of Edge commented, "We are very pleased that the drilling of our first horizontal well in a new horizon has gone so smoothly and quickly. I must credit our operations and drilling team who utilized their many years of experience and planned this operation meticulously. With continuous oil shows throughout the entire 495 meters of horizontal leg, we are very keen to start producing this well. Given that breakup is almost upon us, we are taking the extra step of building a permanent road so that the well can produce without interruption throughout break-up."

"We anticipate that successful production testing will support several additional horizontal drilling locations, specifically targeting the new horizon. We certainly have the undeveloped land-base to support a large program and are eager to get started," Nichol added.

The Company has a 100% working interest in 20 sections (12,800 acres) of land in Primate, Saskatchewan.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Friday, April 12, 2013

TAQA Reviewing Cormorant Alpha Situation after Second Leak

TAQA Reviewing Cormorant Alpha Situation after Second Leak

Technical staff at TAQA Bratani are holding a meeting Monday morning to assess the situation at the Cormorant Alpha platform in the North Sea, after another leak was reported Saturday.

The incident is connected to the hydrocarbon leak that occurred on the platform in mid-January, a TAQA Bratani spokeswoman confirmed Monday in a phone call with Rigzone. The original leak was detected in one of the platform's legs and led to the shutting down of the Brent Pipeline System for several days.

"It concerns the same leg on Cormorant Alpha… but it's a different line," the spokeswoman said.

"The Brent Pipeline System has been shut down as a precaution and… there's a technical meeting going on this morning and we hope to get an update out today."

Speaking to Rigzone after the January incident, Oil & Gas UK Economics Director Mike Tholen said that fields that use the Brent Pipeline System account for around 10 percent of UK production. These fields include Causeway and Cormorant East. 

TAQA Bratani said that the latest leak, which occurred at 9:40 a.m. (UK time) Saturday, has been contained with no further hydrocarbon release and that the hydrocarbons released in the incident have remained within the platform leg, with no hydrocarbons entering the environment. The company also reported that it removed 71 non-essential personnel from the platform and that everyone was safe and well.

The news was the second health and safety incident that Abu Dhabi national oil company TAQA, the parent of TAQA Bratani, was involved in over the weekend.

TAQA reported Saturday that in Morocco a worker at the Jorf Lasfar 5+6 construction site, 80 miles south of Casablanca, had died. The deceased was a Daewoo employee working under contract.

TAQA and its partners, Daewoo and Jorf Lasfar Energy Company, are conducting investigations into the incident and regulatory and government authorities have been informed, it said.

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.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Uganda Parliament Passes Second Oil Bill

KAMPALA, Uganda - The Ugandan parliament has passed the second oil bill, moving the East African nation closer to completing a new regulatory framework for its nascent oil sector, ahead of the planned development of oil fields along its western border.

The passing of the bill brings the country closer to reopening a new licensing round for the remaining acreage in the oil-rich Lake Albertine Rift basin.

The ruling National Resistance Movement party-dominated parliament voted late Thursday to pass the midstream bill, known as the Petroleum Refining, Conversion, Transmission and Midstream Storage Bill 2012, nearly three months after the upstream oil bill was passed, as the country continues to fast-track the enactment of new oil laws, following the discovery of around 3.5 billion barrels of crude reserves.

Parliamentary spokeswoman, Helen Kawesa, told Dow Jones Newswires Friday that the house will now consider the third and final oil revenue management bill to complete the new law chain.

"There's only one final bill pending, which will also be passed in the coming weeks," Ms. Kawesa said.

The midstream bill will regulate midstream operations, which include refining, transportation and storage of oil products, once the country starts production.

Unlike the previous upstream law, whose passing was delayed for several months as parliament bickered with the executive over the powers of the minister to license and revoke licenses, the midstream law quickly sailed through the house just after a few weeks of debate.

Ruling party lawmaker Stephen Birahwa said ruling party law makers endorsed the bill before its presentation to the plenary, speeding up its passage. Activists criticized the bill, however, saying once again it gives sweeping powers to the minister, which is a threat to good governance.

"It is going to be hard for Uganda to avoid the oil curse given the manner in which these bills have been passed," Winfred Ngabirwe, head of the pressure group Publish What You Want, told Dow Jones Newswires.

The bill grants the minister sole powers to award, suspend and initiate the development and implementation of policies concerning midstream operations among others.

Political observers say that Uganda's long-serving leader, Yoweri Museveni, is attempting to tighten his grip on the oil sector to fend off a growing challenge from an increasingly assertive parliament.

As the parliament continues to pass the laws, the government remains embroiled in a spat with Tullow Oil PLC, France's Total SA and China's Cnooc Ltd over the development plans and refining options for the country's crude.

The three companies are expected to invest up to $10 billion to develop the country's oil fields. While the companies are pushing for the building of a crude export pipeline, the government wants a larger refinery to refine the crude locally.

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

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Monday, March 11, 2013

MEO Grants Eni More Time to Decide on Second Heron Well

MEO Australia revealed Wednesday that it will allow Eni more time to make a decision on whether to drill a second Heron well or withdraw from the NT/P68 permit in the Timor Sea.

The Italian major has until Mar. 1, 2013 to make its decision.

Under the terms of the NT/P68 farm-in agreement dated May. 17, 2011, Eni originally had 60 days from the completion of the Heron South-1 well to decide on the second well or withdrawal.

Heron South-1 was spudded on Aug. 24, 2012. The well reached a total depth of 14,613 feet (4,454 meters). Two gas bearing intervals of 394 feet (120 meters) and 377 feet (115 meters) were intersected by around 427 (130 meters) of shale and silt. Both production tests flowed gas to surface at rates too low to be measured accurately due to a collapsed borehole and cyclone interruptions.

The jackup - ENSCO 109 - used in the drilling of Heron South-1, was released on Dec. 14, 2012.

Quintella has reported on the upstream and downstream oil and petrochemicals markets from 2004. Email Quintella at quintella.koh@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Sunday, March 10, 2013

MEO Grants Eni More Time to Decide on Second Heron Well

MEO Australia revealed Wednesday that it will allow Eni more time to make a decision on whether to drill a second Heron well or withdraw from the NT/P68 permit in the Timor Sea.

The Italian major has until Mar. 1, 2013 to make its decision.

Under the terms of the NT/P68 farm-in agreement dated May. 17, 2011, Eni originally had 60 days from the completion of the Heron South-1 well to decide on the second well or withdrawal.

Heron South-1 was spudded on Aug. 24, 2012. The well reached a total depth of 14,613 feet (4,454 meters). Two gas bearing intervals of 394 feet (120 meters) and 377 feet (115 meters) were intersected by around 427 (130 meters) of shale and silt. Both production tests flowed gas to surface at rates too low to be measured accurately due to a collapsed borehole and cyclone interruptions.

The jackup - ENSCO 109 - used in the drilling of Heron South-1, was released on Dec. 14, 2012.

Quintella has reported on the upstream and downstream oil and petrochemicals markets from 2004. Email Quintella at quintella.koh@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Chevron Plans to Proceed with Second Phase of Offshore Angola Project

Chevron Plans to Proceed with Second Phase of Offshore Angola Project

Chevron Corp. plans to proceed with a $5.6 billion Mafumeira Sul project off the shore of Angola, a move that will expand the oil-and-gas company's footprint in the West African nation.

The project, located in 200 feet of water, will produce its first oil in 2015 and could reach a daily peak output of 110,000 barrels of crude oil and 10,000 barrels of liquefied petroleum gas, Chevron said. Chevron, the second-largest U.S. oil-and-gas producer by market capitalization after Exxon Mobil Corp., is also nearing the expected completion in the second quarter of a major natural- gas liquefaction plant in Angola.

West Africa has become a significant focus of oil drilling in recent years as companies explore onshore and offshore production in Angola, Ghana and Nigeria and other countries in the region.

The Mafumeira Sul project is in the second stage of development and includes 50 wells, two wellhead platforms, a central processing and compression facility and about 75 miles of underwater pipelines. The initial Mafumeira Norte project, which achieved oil in 2009, currently produces more than 40,000 barrels of oil a day.

Said Chevron Vice Chairman George Kirkland: "This decision demonstrates our commitment to further developing opportunities in Angola where Chevron has a leading position and further adds to our strong queue of major capital projects under development."

Chevron's Angola unit, Cabinda Gulf Oil Co., is the operator and has a 39.2% interest in the project. Partners include Sonangol EP, with a 41% interest; Total SA, with a 10% interest; and ENI SpA, with a 9.8% interest.

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

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Friday, December 21, 2012

Second person arrested in Littleton murder

Font ResizeCops and CourtsBy Kirk Mitchell
The Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/21/2012 11:37:33 AM MSTDecember 21, 2012 8:0 PM GMTUpdated: 12/21/2012 01:00:17 PM MST

 An 18-year-old Centennial man has been arrested for investigation of murder in the October death of an 18-year-old man.

Robert Alexander Placa, 18, is being held at the Arapahoe County Detention Center in the death of Da Von Flores, 18, of Centennial.

Placa is under investigation for first-degree murder, criminal attempt first degree murder, possession of a weapon by a previous offender and possession of a defaced firearm, according to a Littleton police news release.

Flores was killed on October 19 on the 5400 block of South Fox Street at 11:11 p.m. after 911 calls were received about shots fired.

Police were only a block away and found two males lying on the street when they arrived. Flores died at the scene. The identity of the second victim has not been released because he is a juvenile. He survived.

An investigation revealed that a fight had erupted at a nearby home on Fox Street and led to the shooting.

Dion Rankin, 20, was arrested Oct. 24 and is facing charges of first degree -murder, according to a news release.

Kirk Mitchell: 303-954-1206, Facebook.com/kmitchelldp or twitter.com/kmitchelldp



View the Original article

Monday, December 17, 2012

Second pond search turns up body near where Arvada man went missing

Font ResizeLocal NewsBy Jessica Fender
The Denver Postdenverpost.comPosted: 12/17/2012 07:35:00 PM MSTDecember 18, 2012 2:35 AM GMTUpdated: 12/17/2012 07:35:01 PM MST

A second search of the pond near the Westminster hotel where a 36-year-old construction worker went missing revealed a body in the water on Monday, said Westminster police investigator Cheri Spottke.

Crews are still working to recover the body from the icy water and have not yet identified the remains.

John Lucas Edwards went missing early Dec. 9 following a Christmas party at the Westin Hotel at 10600 Westminster Blvd.

A Westminster Fire Department crew initially conducted a sonar search of City Park Pond and was satisfied that Edwards' body was not there.

"But there was some ice on the water," said Spottke, noting the weather had warmed a bit in the meantime. "With the storm coming in, if we were going to send divers in, it had to be today."

The second search uncovered a body.

Edwards rented a room for his company's Dec. 8 holiday party. He was last seen around 3 a.m. Dec. 9, and witnesses said he appeared intoxicated.

He never made it to his Arvada home, and both his truck and belongings were discovered at the Westin after a missing persons report was filed.

City Park Pond, about a quarter mile from the hotel, is 18 feet deep and reached temperatures as low as 36 degrees.

Authorities at the time of Edwards' disappearance said they had no reason to suspect foul play.

Spottke said that until the body is recovered and identified, officials won't be able to determine cause of death.

"We've been working ever since he went missing," Spottke said.

Jessica Fender: 303-954-1244 , jfender

View the Original article