Posts tonen met het label oil. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label oil. Alle posts tonen

maandag 12 december 2011

Bakken vol olie, ook in Australiƫ: PetroFrontier Corp.

Company Profile

PetroFrontier is an international oil and gas corporation engaged in the exploration, acquisition and development of both conventional and unconventional world-class onshore petroleum and natural gas assets in Australia’s South Georgina Basin.  PetroFrontier has a net 85.5% operated working interest in 13.6 milliongross acres (54,850 km2) of land in the region
Conventional and Unconventional Resources
Un-risked Undiscovered Original
Oil in Place Expressed in Millions
of Barrels
Un-risked Prospective (Recoverable) Oil Resources Expressed in Millions of Barrels
PFC’s Gross Lands
Low (P90)
Best (P50)
High (P10)
Low (P90)
Best (P50)
High (P10)
Thorntonia
3,548
6,278
10,700
556
1,026
1,838
Steamboat Sand
238
526
975
25
58
121
Hagen
155
273
460
16
31
58
Dolomitic Shoal
7
12
19
1
1
2
EP 103 & 104 Shale
137,229
192,190
257,899
8,879
18,883
27,799
EP 127 & 128 Shale
54,758
76,649
102,908
4,850
7,535
11,093
According to Management, PetroFrontier's lands in the Southern Georgina Basin have similar geological features to the unconventional Bakken and conventional carbonate ramp plays in North Dakota and Southeast Saskatchewan, Canada’s Williston Basin. According to an April 2008 U.S. Geological Survey report, the Bakken oil shale formation has an estimated 3.65 billion barrels of recoverable light oil reserves. Comparably, according to the independent resource-evaluation firm, Ryder Scott Company Consultants Ltd. (Ryder Scott), PetroFrontier’s gross lands contain prospective (recoverable) un-risked, undiscovered resources totalling 11.3 billion barrels of oil. Of this amount, 8.9 billion barrels of oil come from the unconventional Arthur Creek Hot Shale.
Australia Map - Click for Focus MapPetroFrontier is headquartered in Calgary, Alberta and employs a highly experienced management team and board of directors with expertise in international oil and natural gas exploration and development. Conducting all of their operations in Australia, PetroFrontier also has an office in Adelaide, Australia and utilizes local expertise by employing local management, staff and consultants to assist in the development and implementation of the Corporation’s exploration projects. PetroFrontier believes that maintaining strong community, government and industry partnerships in Australia through sound corporate citizenship will be a key element of their overall success.

vrijdag 18 november 2011

Olie in Kurdistan







November 18, 2011 10:54 am

Trip report: The future of oil in Kurdistan

I have spent the past few days touring the oil-rich semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan in northern Iraq, visiting oilfields and interviewing its officials and foreign executives. It is boom time for Kurdistan, which optimists hope could soon produce more oil than some members of Opec. As I am leaving, Kurdistan is celebrating the arrival of ExxonMobil, the first of the so-called supermajors to enter the territory to explore for oil.
But the future will not be a simple trajectory.

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Exploration success. The oil and gas map of Kurdistan five years ago was largely blank. Today, dozens of oilfields dot it as companies discover hydrocarbons in commercial quantities in eight of every ten wells they drill. But drilling is not as easy as it appeared to be a few years ago, due to the complex geology of the region, and budgets are overrunning by more than a third in some cases.
Promises, but a tough reality. The Kurdistan Regional Government expects production to reach 1m barrels a day – more than double the output of Ecuador, the smallest member of the Opec oil cartel – by 2015, up from less than 200,000 b/d at present.
Yet future production depends on a political agreement between the KRG and the federal government in Baghdad to approve the long-awaited Iraqi petroleum law, which has been delayed since 2007. While an interim agreement allows for limited exports, which could run at 175,000 b/d next year, companies will be reluctant to invest heavily to lift output towards the 1m b/d target until a political agreement allows the passage of the petroleum law. The KRG and Baghdad say that the legal text will be done by the end of 2012, but cynical oil executives in Erbil note that both sides have repeated the same message for the past five years.
The arrival of Big Oil: Five years ago only a few small companies ventured into the region, but the nametags at a recent oil and gas conference in Erbil read like a Who’s Who of the industry. The pioneers, including the Oslo-listed DNO that is privately owned by Genel Enerji of Turkey, and London-listed Gulf Keystoneare still there, but new entrants are arriving, including large groups such as Hessand Marathon of the US, Repsol YPF of Spain, and OMV of Austria. Exxon has become the first supermajor to sign a contract to explore the region. Oil executives, diplomats and regional officials say other supermajors could soon join the world’s largest oil company.
The impact of the arrival of Exxon is unclear. Optimistic oil executives say it could force Baghdad to accept the KRG’s demands to develop its own industry, but others say that could sour relationships between Kurdistan and the federal government, delaying indefinitely the approval of the petroleum law. The arrival of another supermajor – Chevron of the US, Total of France and Eni of Italy are the names frequently mentioned – could give the KRG the upper hand, however.
The time for M&A. Most of the territory open for exploration has already been snapped up, so new entrants have just two routes: a so-called farm-in agreement, whereby a company buys a stake in a field or exploratory area in exchange for financing, or buying existing companies. The KRG, which by necessity backed small companies at the very beginning, would now prefer to see a consolidation in the sector that leaves fewer and bigger players.
After the arrival of Exxon, the market is valuing the current players at much higher multiples, so expect multibillion dollar deals. Oil executives in Erbil talk in particular about two deals: Gulf Keystone, which could be bought by a supermajor seeking a quick entry; and a potential merger of DNO and Genel Enerji.
Turkey is the new friend. Five years ago, Ankara branded some of the most senior KRG officials as terrorists. Today, Turkish diplomats see Iraqi Kurdistan as a source of energy to power the country’s rapid economic growth. Ankara wants to buy natural gas from Kurdistan for power generation. Moreover, Turkey wants to consolidate Ceyhan as the oil port of the eastern Mediterranean. The port is already the end of the Iraq-Turkey Pipeline and the Baku-Tiblisi-Ceyhan pipeline. Ankara would like to see another oil pipeline – most likely to low-quality Kurdish heavy oil – reaching the port and, potentially, a natural gas pipeline from Kurdistan feeding an LNG plant. Ankara and Erbil even dream that the Iraqi Kurdistan could supply natural gas to the Nabucco pipeline.
The Kurdish boom towns. Erbil, the political capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, is entering an oil boom. The city of 1m people, which still lacks a good hospital, has seen the opening of its first luxury hotel – and another three are under construction. Oil executives fly in and out with airlines offering new routes each month. But while money is pouring in, the region has yet to develop services to benefit from it, importing everything from equipment to food. Costs are rising fast too. Housing prices are rocketing and salaries in the oil industry have doubled in the past five years. And with more than 40 companies elbowing for space in Erbil and the region, retaining competent staff is a problem. Local political commentators are already warning that the region – like others in Latin America, Africa and the Middle East – could see the blessing of oil turning into a curse.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2011. 

maandag 31 januari 2011

US Energy: olie en moly voor een prikkie

U.S. Energy Corporation: An Oil and Molybdenum Play
While covering companies that have exposure to oil in the Bakken Shale, such as Brigham (BEXP), Northern Oil and Gas (NOG), and GeoResources (GEOI), I have come across another little gem, U.S. Energy Corporation (USEG). Although I love this company's oil position in the Bakken, it has some added exposure to molybdenum. Strange bedfellows they may be, they have exciting prospects with different interests within the corporation. Formed in 1966 in Riverton, Wyoming, USEG has positions in the Bakken and Three Forks formations with areas in the Gulf Coast. It also has interests in molybdenum, geothermal and real estate.
 U.S. Energy is trying to maximize the value of its existing assets. When looking at its oil assets, one thing stood out: It has partnered with Brigham to drill 18 wells. Brigham is arguably the best shale driller in the Bakken. I know I may get some hate mail on this one, but it has done well and has been a consistant performer in this area.
U.S. Energy plans to do more in the short term. It is going to keep working with partners in its onshore Gulf Coast production; it currently is partnered with Petroquest (PQ), Yuma Exploration, and Houston Energy (HUSA). It successfully increased its Gulf production from 500 boe/d to 600 boe/d, and is currently at work with partners to drill new wells and further increase production of oil. To help fund these wells, it has opened a credit facility for funds up to $75 million. U.S. Energy is also showing interest in acquiring more JVs in the near term.
Long term plans are to work with Brigham on 90 gross wells (20-26 net). Looking to 2013 and beyond, this company has hinted it is interested in acquiring an exploration and production oil and gas company. This timeframe also includes its monetizing of geothermal and real estate projects, plus realizing the value of its molybdenum projects.
As of October of 2010, U.S. Energy has significant value to its current projects. It also has a net of approximately 800 boe/d net from its wells with Brigham. In Louisiana and the Texas Gulf Coast, its wells with Petroquest, it is averaging 450 boe/d, while its wells with Houston Energy are averaging 50 boe/d. In October of last year, U.S. Energy was averaging 1300 boe/d of daily production, with 65% of this being oil. At the end of 2009, it had 1.1 MMboe reserves, with 75% being oil.
U.S. Energy's contract with Brigham seems to be a profitable one. Not only is it positioned in a good area, it is also positioned with a good partner. It currently has a participation agreement to drill 15 wells. Brigham is to operate and drill wells, but U.S. Energy will have WI. U.S. Energy will have 19,200 gross acres and 5,500 net acres with respect to the first 15 wells. After pooled payout of initial wells, Brigham will back in for WI of initial wells only. Of the six initial well spaces, Brigham gets 35% and U.S. Energy gets 65% interest of Brigham's original working.
After combined payout, Brigham's WI will be 57.75% with U.S. Energy having 42.25% The next four spacing units will have Brigham getting 50% WI and U.S. Energy getting 50% of Brigham's original working interest. After combined payout, Brigham backs in for 35% of U.S. Energy's WI. The final five spaces have Brigham at 50% WI and U.S. Energy 50% of Brigham's original working interest. After initial well, final payout WI Brigham backs in for 27.7% of U.S. Energy's WI. Each 1,280 spacing unit may provide up to three wells in the Bakken, plus up to three in Three Forks, for drilling opportunities of up to 90 gross wells. Subsequent infill development of WI will be Brigham 64% and U.S. Energy 36%.
The Bakken does have some issues. Currently, take away capacity is difficult, with the oil mostly taken out by train and truck. This is not only expensive, but does not meet the demands that will soon be needed in this area. The Enbridge portal link project and Butt pipeline expansion should be online this quarter, and will help with getting an ever increasing supply of oil out of the Bakken.
The onshore Gulf Coast region has a partnership with Petroquest, and its two wells are currently producing a net of 450 Boe/d. The two wells with Yuma E&P are being evaluated as of October of last year. Its last partner, Houston Energy, has two wells in the Permian currently netting 50 Boe/d.
The wildcard for this company is its position with respect to molybdenum. There are a possible 800 million pounds of molybdenum in its acreages. Before U.S. Energy had this area, the previous company had put $160 million into it. U.S. Energy took over this space and is continuing where the last company left off. To give an idea of the value, from 1997 to 2003 the price of molybdenum was about $10,000 per ton. In June of 2005, the price peaked at $103,000 per ton, but settled down and was at $30,000 per ton in August of 2005. In August of 2008, a $400 million contract was signed with Thompson Creek Metals (TC) for the mining of the molybdenum. Thompson Creek will receive a 75% interest in the deal for the $400 million it spent.
U.S. Energy has seen quarterly revenue growth increase by 404% year over year. It has $40.77 in cash and currrent debt of $800,000. U.S. Energy is estimated to grow 115.8%, with 50% growth expected next year.
U.S. Energy has picked very good partners to help it drill or mine its commodities.