Saudi Arabia - joining the dots

A series of blog entries exploring Saudi Arabia's role in the oil markets with a brief look at the history of the royal family and politics that dictate and influence the Kingdom's oil policy

AIM - Assets In Market

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Iran negotiations - is the end nigh?

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Yemen: The Islamic Chessboard?

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Acquisition Criteria

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Valuation Series

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Tuesday 12 September 2017

OPEC may extend yet


Saudi Arabia has been working tirelessly behind the scenes and appears to be gaining good momentum with the major actors of OPEC + 1 (i.e. Russia) for extending the OPEC output agreement beyond April 2018. Saudi Arabia and its new ally, Russia, are keenly in favour of maintaining the cuts until June 2018 and several other producers have recently signaled their support for an extension as well.

Iran: Initially one of the tougher partners at the November 2016 pact discussions given its demand to return to pre-sanction production levels, Iran has played along with the creation of the special cap arrangement. Iranian oil minister, Bijan Zanganeh, has indicated that the country “will cooperate with the majority” on any extension proposal.

Iraq: Has publicly been a vocal critic of the current arrangements arguing that it was not exempt from the cuts (like Libya and Nigeria) as it needed funding to fight the war with Islamic State. Iraqi oil minister, Jabbar al Luiebi, has also been critical of the fact that Iraq has not been allowed to use its own numbers for the calculation of the output cut). Up until now, Iraq has been sending mixed signals about whether it would actually agree to any extension. However the Saudi oil minister, Khalid al-Falih, has been working behind the scenes and made a special visit to Baghdad in May before the OPEC meeting to ensure that Iraq would agree to a 9-month timeframe. Saudi’s diplomatic efforts may have paid off as Iraq is now softening its tone and affirming its commitment to the current agreement; in August 2017, Luiebi stated during a visit to Moscow that it would go along with an extension if one is agreed.

Friday 1 September 2017

Senegal moves ahead



Cairn Energy, the operator of the SNE field in Senegal, released a resource update on 22nd August as part of its half-year announcement.

The updated 2C resource base is 563mmbbl gross (vs. 473mmbbl in May 2016) and now brings it in line with Woodside's estimate of 560mmbbl, but is still far below that of partner FAR which carries 641mmbbl (assessed by RISC). The differing resource estimates is nothing new and we constantly see the other partners playing catch-up with FAR.

Focus is now on FEED with no further drilling planned until after FID. It is envisaged that SNE will undertake a phased development with the initial phase targeting the lower 500 series sands and core area of the upper 400 series sands. The second phase will target the remainder of the 400 series and more outreach parts of the field.

Gross capex is currently estimated at USD2.3 bn, but could come down as the engineering is defined and possibility of Woodside bringing in an existing FPSO. FID for Phase 1 is planned for the end of 2018 with first oil in 2021 and an initial plateau of 75-125mbopd.

The partners are Cairn 40%, Woodside 35%, FAR 15% and Petrosen 10% (Petrosen has the option to increase its interest to 18% during the development phase).

Monday 28 August 2017

Sail-away to Catcher

The Catcher FPSO sailed away on 26th August from Singapore. It will take around 45 days to reach the UK North Sea, following which it will be connected and commissioned, a process expected to take 60-65 days with first oil targeting December.

The project is on schedule and c.30% below budget. Development drilling results have been promising with 30% more net pay and 40% better well deliverability. Expected plateau will now increase by 20% to 60mboepd with a potential for reserves upgrade from the 96mboe 2P at sanction.
The Catcher field partners are: Premier 50% operator, Cairn Energy 20%, MOL 20% and Dyas 10%.

Friday 18 August 2017

Kosmos London listing at risk as company and advisors face potential legal action

Kosmos' secondary listing is at risk as the Saharawi government had strongly condemned the company's move to list on the LSE. The Sahrawi government has threatened the company's licences in the region as well as legal action against Kosmos and its advisors.

The listing would set a precedent for legal proceedings regarding companies operating in the disputed region which could drag out for years to come. The press release by the Saharwi government is below.

--------------------------------------

Media release – Communiqué

For immediate release


Saharawi government responds to the proposed listing of Kosmos Energy Ltd. on the London Stock Exchange

Bir Lehlu, Western Sahara (August 16, 2017), The government of the Saharawi Republic (the SADR) notes with concern recently expressed plans of the United States-based petroleum company Kosmos Energy Ltd. to trade in securities in a secondary listing on the London Stock Exchange (the LSE).

“Any effort by Kosmos to raise additional capital, including securities offerings and especially on an exchange which is, for the time being, subject to European law results in clear risks for the company and others financially interested in it. Kosmos continues with seabed petroleum exploration in the coastal waters of occupied Western Sahara with an established basis for legal action against the company and its supporting enterprises”, remarked Emhamed Khadad, the SADR official responsible for natural resources following Kosmos Energy’s recent announcement.

Western Sahara, routinely referred to as Africa’s last colony, has been illegally occupied across much of its inland area and part of its coast since 1975. A commitment by the United Nations organization to deliver a self-determination referendum to the Saharawi people who had been the sole, exclusive occupants of the territory, has been stalled as a result of continuing annexation efforts including resources development purportedly done to generate economic benefits for the territory. Four senior level international and national courts have confirmed an occupying Morocco to be without right or title to the territory. “What this means”, noted Khadad, “is that the rule of international law holds that the occupying state is unable to offer exploration licenses and, even less, hold out any rights to petroleum that could be recovered from the seabed.”

In a December 2016 judgment the Court of Justice of the European Union confirmed that Western Sahara is not a part of Morocco and that the kingdom is unable to exercise treaty authority over the territory in respect of trade matters.

A June 2017 judgment of South Africa’s High Court, concerning a shipment of phosphate rock exported seized after export from Western Sahara, concluded that:

“Morocco has no claim to sovereignty over Western Sahara ... Furthermore, it acquired the territory by force [and] we conclude that howsoever Morocco's presence in Western Sahara may be described, it does not exercise sovereignty over the territory".

(A copy of the decision in Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic and Another v Owner and Charterers of the MV 'NM Cherry Blossom' and Others [2017] ZAECPEHC 31 is available online at: <www.saflii.org/za/cases/ZAECPEHC/2017/31.html>.)

The 2017 and 2016 judgments follow one of the United Kingdom High Court in 2015 which confirmed the territorial status of Western Sahara as not being part of Morocco. A securities listing on the LSE, and related activity, faces the risk of precedent in the United Kingdom and by parallel and separate proceedings, in the Court of Justice of the European Union.

“There is no longer any speculation by the SADR government in its safeguarding of the sovereign resource rights of the Saharawi people that formal legal measures will be resorted to in the face of financial activity to capitalize the taking of our resources, and as against activities as such. International law is clear about such matters and we will continue to employ it in the face of a universally derided, illegal occupation”, observed Khadad.

# # #

For additional information and media contact:

Mr. Kamal Fadel
Saharawi Republic representative for Australia and New Zealand
Senior executive of the SADR Petroleum & Mining Authority
T: + 61 2 92 65 82 58

Thursday 10 August 2017

Kurdistan's outstanding debts to Turkey

A year ago, at the height of the oil price downturn, Kurdistan turned to Turkey for financial aid. At the time, USD1.15 billion was owed to Turkey in the form of loans together with c.USD500 million in outstanding payments to TEC for services provided to the KRG.

The Kurdish Minister of Natural Resources, Dr Ashti Hawrami, proposed to the Turkish Energy Minister, Berat Albayrak, that more funding be provided by Turkey to help Kurdistan with upcoming expenses. The proposal effectively asked Turkey to quadruple its funding to USD4.7 billion (including the existing debts above).

The budgetary position of Kurdistan meant that it was in no position to repay the debts to Turkey in the near term and Dr Ashti’s preferred solution was to transfer the KRG’s equity interests in certain oil assets (Tawke, Taq Taq and Shaikan) to Turkey. Turkey responded saying that if this was the preferred route, it would need further upside given taking a stake in the PSCs would result in the recovery of debts over a longer period than originally envisaged.

As of today, the Turkish debt problem remains unresolved and is an ongoing issue for both the KRG and Turkey. In the context of the upcoming referendum, Turkey is clearly displeased that it is being held but its ability to take strong action against Kurdistan could be detrimental to the recovery of debts. At the same time, Kurdistan could be an important future source of gas for Turkey. For Kurdistan, maintaining amicable relationships with Turkey is key, being the only viable oil export route in the near term. Turkey can make token threats, such as the rumoured closure of a border point, but is unlikely to escalate to anything more serious.

Canacol on track with Sabanas pipeline


Canacol has signed an agreement for the construction, operation and ownership of the Sabanas flowline. The 82km pipeline will connect the gas processing plant at Jobo to the Promigas trunkline at Bremen.
Source: Canacol June 2017 investor presentation

The USD41 million pipeline will be funded by:

  • USD30.5 million from a group of private investors
  • USD10.5 million from Canacol

Canacol’s contribution has been almost entirely satisfied by costs incurred to date.
Construction is proceeding on schedule, with first gas transportation expected in December 2017. All rights of way have been acquired, tubulars are on order and civil works are to commence during August 2017.

The Sabanas flowline will provide an additional 40mmcf/d export capacity and will satisfy 40mmcf/d take-or-pay contracts entered into in 2016 with existing and new customers. Canacol will pay a tariff for use of the pipeline in line with other regulated tariffs which will be borne by gas offtakers. Canacol does not have a ship-or-pay commitment for use of the pipeline.

With the additional 40mmcf/d production, Canacol’s production will increase to a 2017 exit rate of 130mmcf/d. The end of 2018 will see another big step change in production with an additional 100mmcf/d coming onstream with the completion of the additional Promigas Jobo-Bremen pipeline.

Wednesday 9 August 2017

Kurdistan referendum: Barzani's legacy

With the Kurdistan referendum fast approaching on 25th September, OGInsights reviews the latest developments in this run-up period. What is important to note is that the question being put to the Kurdistan people is sufficiently vague – the meaning of an “independent” Kurdish state is intentionally not set out. Independence can mean self-rule and independent governance with varying degrees of autonomy from Federal Iraq or complete separation from Baghdad at the extreme.

The referendum should be viewed as an opinion poll, something that reminds the world and reaffirms the Kurdish aspirations for independence. It is not something that will have any immediate impact on the administration of the Kurdistan region, trade between Kurdistan and its neighbours or money flows with Baghdad. It certainly is not a declaration of independence either.

The referendum is symbolic and timing is more opportunistic than reasoned. President Massoud Barzani is coming to the end of his term and holding a referendum as being the first step to eventual independence is his chance to leave a legacy. The turnout is expected to be high and a “yes” vote is deemed inevitable which will score popularity points for President Barzani. Barzani has ensured that the voting ballots, systems and infrastructure is largely in place for a referendum at the beginning of September although the actual date will be the 25th, signalling the seriousness of this referendum for Barzani.

Leaving a legacy seems to be an important driver for this referendum, with Barzani spending much political ammunition to secure it. Turkey was not notified of the date of the referendum lest they would undermine it, Iran will fear reignition of calls by its own Kurds for independence and both the US and Baghdad will be annoyed that the referendum includes the disputed areas after being told to explicitly exclude them.

However, Kurdistan’s neighbours have not reacted to date suggesting a level of tolerance recognising that the referendum could be a tiger with no claws. Any action by neighbours is likely to take place before the referendum as any action taken post the referendum results will likely have minimal meaningful impact on Kurdistan and in some cases could have reciprocal impact on the initiator. For example, whilst Turkey could close the oil export pipeline and halt investment in Kurdistan gas, Turkey does do a lot of other trade with Kurdistan. Similarly, any retaliation by the US could see the loss of Kurdish support for the war in Syria.

The referendum will be closely watched around the world, but the results are not expected to be a surprise.

Related posts:

Kurdistan E&Ps have been paid for May shipments

Kurdistan E&Ps have been paid for May shipments.

The Tawke partners have confirmed receipt of USD39.6 million. The amounts will be shared pro-rata by DNO (55%) and Genel (25% WI) and comprises USD33.2 million towards May deliveries and USD6.4 million towards past receivables.

The Taq Taq partners have received USD12.2 million and will be shared pro-rata by Genel (44% WI) and Addax (36% WI). The payment comprises USD11.1 million towards May deliveries and USD1.2 million towards past receivables.

Tuesday 8 August 2017

SNE North is Sirius


Cairn has completed the SNE-1 North exploration well (Sirius prospect), located c.15km north of the original SNE-1 discovery. The well reach TD 2,837m and was completed ahead of schedule. A 24m gross hydrocarbon column was encountered across three intervals with 11m net condensate and gas pay in the primary objective and 4m net oil pay in the secondary objective.

A full set of oil, condensates and gas samples were recovered to surface from the 500 series sands, the same sand series that contributes the bulk of volumes in the main SNE field. The oil is slightly lighter at 35˚ API (vs. 32˚ API in SNE).

Further work will be required to establish the size and commerciality of the discovery, although FAR has assigned 294mmbbl of mean recoverable resources. The find has positive connotations for the block demonstrating further hydrocarbon potential to the north of the block. The well will now be plugged and abandoned and concludes the five well 2017 drilling campaign and the Stena DrillMAX rig will be released.

Monday 7 August 2017

Kosmos extends position in Mauritania


Kosmos noted in its Q2 results that it had farmed in to a 15% non-operated interest in Block C-18 Mauritania. The farm-in extends Kosmos' postion in this recently proflific play which contains the Tortue gas discovery to the south.

Tullow Oil holds 90% WI (State 10%) and will reduce its interest to 75% post transaction, whilst retaining operatorship. The block is deepwater (over 2,300m depth) and has recently completed a 600km2 3D seismic campaign.

Monday 31 July 2017

Mozambique LNG moves one step closer to FID



On 31st July, Anadarko finalised two agreements with the Mozambique government (the marine concessions) which pave the way for FID of the LNG project. The agreements would allow Anadarko as operator to progress with the design, building and operation of the marine facilities for the project and could see FID in 2018. The next step is to begin with resettlement plans, the completion of which would allow construction to commence.

Separately, the partners continue with efforts to secure long-term offtake contracts and the high proportion of offtake by equity holders of the licence reduces the risk surrounding the project. Asian players Mitsui (20%) and PTTEP (8.5%) have a need to source long term gas supply, as do the Indian participants ONGC (16%), Oil India (4%) and Bharat (10%). The remaining Area 1 licence holders are Anadarko (26.5%) and ENH (15%).

Area 1 is estimated to hold c.75tcf of recoverable gas and will initially have two LNG trains at the proposed onshore processing plant with 12mtpa capacity for the Golfinho/Atum field. The scale of the resources does pose a threat to upcoming global LNG developments, particularly Australian projects which also target the Asian gas markets, and could see a glut in the 2020s particularly with Qatar also looking to up its LNG exports.

Earlier this month saw Petronas cancel its large Pacific NorthWest LNG project on the west coast of Canada.

Wednesday 26 July 2017

Brasse continues to grow


Faroe has successfully completed the Brasse sidetrack appraisal well 31/7-2A. Very high quality reservoir sands were encountered and the well penetrated an 18m oil and a 4m gas column. Recoverable resource estimates have been increased to 56-92 mmboe (from 43-80 mmboe).

The sidetrack was drilled to a total depth of 2,275m. It is located 1km to the west of the appraisal well (31/7-2) and 2.4km to the south of the main discovery well (31/7-1). The appraisal well will now be plugged and abandoned as planned.

An extensive data acquisition programme was carried out in the 31/7-2A sidetrack, including the cutting of cores together with a full suite of wireline logs and fluid samples. Pressure data also indicates good communication within the reservoir. The data supported an increase in the recoverable resources estimates.

Faroe is now moving the development of the field forward with the aim of fast tracking the development given its robust economics at low commodity prices, which could see first oil in 2020/21.

Extensive feasibility studies have been carried out focussing on a sub-sea development tied-back to one of the hosts in the nearby area (either Brage or Oseberg Sør). This work is ongoing and external studies have already been undertaken for the Subsea Production System (SPS),  flow assurance and pipeline and marine work.  Technical and commercial activities related to the potential hosts were formally initiated in Q4 2016.

The preliminary development plan envisages three to six production wells and an optional water injection well for pressure support.  Initial flow rates from the prolific Brasse reservoir are expected to be higher than previously thought, with predicted delivery rates above 30mboepd. The early estimates of the cost of this development is c.USD550 million mid-case for a scenario consisting of four wells and one subsea template.

Faroe now plans to finalise the concept selection with subsequent submission of a Plan for Development and Operations (PDO) to the authorities in 2018.

Tuesday 18 July 2017

Centrica and Bayerngas combine forces

On 17th July 2017, Centrica and SWM/Bayerngas announced that they had reached agreement to combine their E&P businesses. The respective E&P businesses will be vended into a newly incorporated JV with Centrica holding 69% and SWM holding the remainder 31% in the JV. Key assets in the combined business include Kvitebjorn, Stratfjord and Ivar Assen in Norway, Cygnus in UK and Hejre in Denmark.
Source: Centrica investor presentation
The combination will create a leading pan-European E&P with Centrica’s assets providing a strong production base and Bayerngas providing a development weighted portfolio. The JV will become one of the largest players across the North Sea and will be the biggest producer in 2017.

European E&P 2017E production rankings
Source: Centrica investor presentation

European E&P reserves rankings
Source: Centrica investor presentation

There is no consideration for the transaction, but Centrica will make a series of deferred payments totalling GBP340 million (on a post-tax basis) into the JV between 2017 and 2022; these payments are in respect of upcoming decommissioning in Centrica’s E&P portfolio.

The move signals Centrica’s and SWM’s desire of moving away from E&P to focus on their core utility businesses, in line with other European utilities in recent years, some of whom have completely exited E&P. This follows on from Centrica’s efforts of streamlining its upstream portfolio with the exit of Canada and Trinidad & Tobago earlier this year and SWM’s search for a buyer of its Bayerngas business.

Centrica was known to be in discussions with ENGIE E&P on a potential combination, however following the latter’s sale to Neptune, Centrica turned its efforts to other partners which likely included other “loose” North Sea portfolios such as Dong (now sold to Ineos) and Maersk Oil as well as consolidator Ineos. Bayerngas has also spent the last couple of years searching for a public E&P merger partner, but a lack of success in finding a suitable candidate eventually led to consideration of Centrica.

The rationale for this deal centers on the positioning of the combined business for an exit. In their standalone forms, the Centrica portfolio was likely to be too large to find a private equity buyer with the two large North Sea vehicles having done their deals (i.e. Chrysaor and Neptune) and with the Bayerngas portfolio having too much development to be attractive.

The combined business is now more balanced and is of a size that one day will appeal to private equity when more money is available in this space. Alternatively, an IPO is another exit option but will have to wait until the equity markets show signs of being open again to the oil & gas sector. Nevertheless the combined portfolio in its current form, whilst sizeable and sustainable for years to come, lacks a growth story needed to entice a buyer, whether that is private equity or the public markets.

The creation of an E&P focussed business through this JV should allow it to pursue a strategy independent of its utility owners, and this includes implementing investment and the portfolio rationalisation necessary to steer the business to an exit in the mid to longer term.

Monday 17 July 2017

Turkey-Genel gas update

In 2013, Turkey established Turkish Energy Company (“TEC”) as a vehicle to enter into partnerships with IOCs for dealings in Kurdistan. TEC was a state-backed entity and an offshoot of Turkish Petroleum International Company (“TPIC”).

Earlier this year TEC was placed under BOTAS, the state-owned oil and gas pipelines and trading company, with gas coming back to one of the top items on the agenda of the Turkish government. It is now commanding attention at the highest levels of government, driven by a strong will to secure Kurdish gas to strengthen its hand against Russia.

To this end, TEC and Genel have been in continuing dialogue over the way forward for the Miran and Bina Bawi gas fields, with the talks intensifying in recent months. For Turkey, the interest in the project is strategic and necessary. For Genel, the securing of Turkey as a guaranteed long term offtaker is important in helping in reviving the company’s fortunes following a succession of problems including reserve write downs and production underperformance.This has been compounded by a series of management changes with Tony Hayward and Nat Rothschild leaving the board in June 2017 and the departure of Ben Monaghan on 30 June 2017.

Genel is now craving some stability with focus turning to delivery of the gas project which will take a few years to develop. In the meantime, managing production at Taq Taq remains a near term priority.

Related recent entries:

Saturday 8 July 2017

Kurdistan independence referendum

At the beginning of June, President Barzani announced that the KRG will hold a referendum for independence from Federal Iraq on 25th September 2017. Given the strong nationalistic sentiment, continued calls for independence for many years and bipartisan support, the referendum is highly likely to have a "yes" outcome.

The KDP, led by ‎Barzani, and is the largest party will use the renewed call to consolidate popular support as it seeks to sideline the other parties. ‎Barzani will also see this as his opportunity to get his name in the history books as he nears the end of his career.

The PUK is also pursuing a long term agenda of independence, but its ‎support for this referendum will be driven by a desire to win back votes after losing seats in September 2013.

Baghdad knows that it will be powerless to block the referendum, and in the lack of a better solution, Abadi will likely look to seek a negotiated outcome when independence talks begin, which will be to the annoyance of his government and rival parties. Iran and Turkey will also fear the resurfacing of this topic as it will ignite renewed calls for independence from its own Kurdish population - for now, this will be partly contained by Turkey having full control over the export of Kurdish crude through the Fishkabour-Ceyhan which runs through Turkey. Kurdistan is also exploring potential export of oil through Iran to diversify its export options, so Iran is an ally for Kurdistan to keep onside for now.

Monday 3 July 2017

Brasse flow test shows promising results

Brasse was discovered in June 2016 and following a side-track, recoverable resources were estimated at 43 – 80mmboe. On 3rd July, a little after a year the original discovery was made, Faroe has reported successful flow testing achieving a maximum rate of 6,187mboepd. An upcoming side-track is planned, following which the resource estimates may be updated.

An extensive data acquisition programme was undertaken including a Drill Stem Test, logging, core and fluid sampling. The well showed excellent permeability, similar crude quality to the nearby Brage field (36-37˚ API), no undesirable components and no sand or water.

The results are positive for the future of the field and should help Faroe and its partner (each with 50% WI) in considering the development of the field. Brasse lies c.15km from both the Brage and Oseberg Sør fields and will be developed as a tie-back to one of these. The results could also provide valuable data and validation to support a farm-out which could help accelerate the development.

Source: Faroe June 2016 Investor Presentation

Source: Faroe June 2016 Investor Presentation


Thursday 29 June 2017

Kurdistan: The Rosneft connection

Rosneft provided a much welcomed source of funding for Kurdistan in February 2017 when it entered into an off-take contract for crude oil. Under the contract, Rosneft will purchase Kurdish crude until 2019 – the volume commitments were not disclosed. In April 2017, Kurdistan received USD1 billion for the first cargo of 600,000 bbl.

The was an important landmark deal for the KRG, being the first time that crude was sold directly to a government-linked oil company. Up until then, all crude was sold to traders. The first cargo was landed at Italy and then transported to Rosneft’s refineries in Germany.

The Rosneft connection was deepened in June at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum with the signing of a series of agreements supporting the expansion of cooperation between Rosneft and the KRG “in exploration and production of hydrocarbons, commerce and logistics”. The agreements paved the way for the full entry of Rosneft into Kurdistan with the company signing PSCs for five blocks, which were selected from the 22 blocks that the Ministry of Natural Resources put out for licensing at the beginning of the year.

Baghdad has mostly been quiet around Kurdish crude exports and there were no signs of Federal Iraq aggressively pursuing legal cases around the sale of crude by Kurdistan which it viewed as illegal. However, in a surprise turn of events, Baghdad procured a warrant from the Canadian courts to block a Kurdish crude cargo from being offloaded in Nova Scotia on 29th June. The warrant for the arrest of c.722,000 bbl on board the M/T Neverland is a reminder that the dispute between Baghdad and Erbil remains unresolved.

Thursday 1 June 2017

Point Resources acquires ExxonMobil's Norwegian operated assets



On 29th March 2017, Point Resources announced its acquisition of ExxonMobil's operated upstream business in Norway for an undisclosed amount (estimated valuation of c.USD1bn). The deal transforms Point Resources into a top 10 producer on the Norwegian Continental shelf and increases production c.10-fold to 48mboepd while adding 128mmboe of oil-weighted reserves. The transaction adds significant technical capability with the transfer of 300 staff to Point Resources.

Point Resources was formed in 2016 by the merger of Core Energy, Spike Exploration and Pure Energy, all portfolio companies of Norwegian E&P private equity specialist HitecVision. The merger created a company with a portfolio weighted towards exploration and development positions (e.g. Brage, Brasse, Pil) and the acquisition of the ExxonMobil assets helps to reweight the portfolio into more of a full cycle one.

The key assets acquired were ExxonMobil’s operated positions: Balder, Ringhorne and Jotun; Forseti is being decommissioned. Point Resources has identified significant upside in the asset base that can be achieved through infill drilling – likely to have been overlooked by ExxonMobil with the portfolio being increasingly immaterial within ExxonMobil’s global business. For ExxonMobil, the divestment leaves it with a non-operated portfolio in Norway and therefore a much lower country cost base, but still provides a platform to access high impact Norwegian and Barents Sea exploration.

Source: Wood Mackenzie
4D seismic has identified new development locations and exploration targets around Balder and Ringhorne

Thursday 25 May 2017

Gina Krog nears first oil


The NPD has today granted Statoil, the operator, to commence production at Gina Krog in June. The field was originally a gas discovery made in 1974 and had been considered for development on a number of occasions throughout history. In 2007, oil (and gas) was discovered in a nearby prospect and Gina Krog was subsequently reviewed again with a full appraisal and delineation programme taking place between 2008-2011 which confirmed substantial amounts of oil under the entire structure.

A Plan for Development and Operation was submitted in December 2012, with approval obtained in March 2013. The field will be developed using a fixed steel platform and FSO, with oil exported via shuttle tankers. The development is planned to utilise 10 production wells and 4 gas combined injection/production wells. The field is estimated to contain 225mmboe. Most of the gas will initially be re-injected for reservoir support with minimal sales gas during this first phase. This will be followed by a gas blow-down phase, expected to commence in the mid-2020s which will see gas exported to the Sleipner facilities for processing and onward sale.
The partners in the field are:
  • Statoil 58.7%, operator
  • KUFPEC 15%
  • Total 15%
  • PGNiG 8%
  • Aker BP 3.3%

Total has been offloading its stake in Gina Krog since 2014 in an attempt to reduce exposure to relatively high cost fields and development capex.

Total is aiming to move down the cost curve by divesting higher cost assets globally. Its near-term capex is 20% weighted to Norway post Gina Krog start-up, so any sale proceeds will be a welcome contribution to ongoing spend, including the Total operated Martin Linge development which is scheduled to produce first oil in early 2018.


Kraken on track for first oil in June

EnQuest has reported that Kraken remains on track for first oil before the end of June 2017. Drilling is now complete at the first two drilling centres (DC1 and DC2), the rig is currently at DC3. Drilling performance to date has de-risked delivery of the project to and beyond first oil.  At start up, 7 producers and 6 injectors will be in place. Handover of FPSO systems from commissioning to operations continues and the wells will be brought onstream in a phased manner in June. EnQuest emphasises that the project continues to be under budget and on schedule.

Wednesday 24 May 2017

INEOS acquires DONG E&P portfolio

On 24th May, INEOS announced the acquisition of DONG's E&P business for USD1.05bn with two further contingent payments:

  • USD150 million relating to the Frederica stabilisation plant; and
  • USD100 million subject to the development of Rosebank
As part of the transaction, DONG will retain all hedges that are currently in place (worth USD285 million) and cashflows from the oil & gas business (worth c.USD310 million). Ineos will adopt all decommissioning liabilities (c.USD1.1 billion).

The deal includes a portfolio of long life assets with 100mboepd production and 570mmboe of commercial reserves and contingent resources. The portfolio's corner stone assets are Ormen Lange (Norwegian gas) and Laggan-Tormore (new gas field in West of Shetlands).

All 440 DONG personnel will transfer to INEOS on completion, which is expected towards the end of 2017. The deal with propel INEOS into the top 10 league of North Sea players and enable the company to significantly expand its trading and shipping activities.