grevis2
- 21 Oct 2004 12:55
LONDON (AFX) - Chaco Resources PLC said it is proposing the reverse takeover
of two Paraguayan companies -- Amerisur SA and Bohemia SA -- from Candey SA and
Daniel Sztern in exchange for 27,322,404 new ordinary shares in the company.
It also plans to raise up to 750,000 stg before expenses in a placing of
36,585,365 new ordinary shares.
The company's shares were suspended on Sept 3 and it said it expects this to
be lifted today. It has called an EGM for Nov 15 to approve the acquisition and
placing plans.
Amerisur holds two oil and gas prospecting permits in Paraguay and is the
registered applicant for exploration and exploitation concession contracts over
the same permit areas. Bohemia holds registered applications for an oil and gas
prospecting permit in Paraguay and for an exploration and exploitation
concession contract over the same area.
The exploration areas covered by these three applications comprise a total of
approximately 48,000 square kilometres of the Curypayty and Parana Basins.
Chaco said these basins extend respectively into Bolivia and Brazil, where
commercial oil and gas production has been established for many years from
similar geological sections.
stewart3250
- 04 Jan 2006 09:52
- 1185 of 2227
This is a post from another board, I would be interested in anyone's thoughts on it, Alfred are you about, how do you see this compared to Chaco's application, their market cap is nearly 100M but even so not much of an increase so far
Based on the Global Energy new licence we might expect only a 5% increase in share price if their experience is anything to go by today.
*********
GLOBAL ENERGY DEVELOPMENT PLC
NEW CONTRACT SIGNED IN COLOMBIA
CARACOLI AREA WITHIN THE PROMINENT MARACAIBO BASIN
Global Energy Development PLC ("Global" or the "Company"), the Latin America
focused petroleum exploration and production company (LSE-AIM: "GED"), is
pleased to announce that it has signed a new exclusive Exploration and
Production Concession contract for the Caracoli area (the "Caracoli Contract")
with the National Hydrocarbons Agency of the Republic of Colombia. The Caracoli
Contract brings to seven the number of contracts Global now holds in Colombia,
all of which are 100% owned by Global.
The Caracoli Contract covers approximately 90,000 acres in the Catatumbo basin
located in north-eastern Colombia, with this basin being a sub-basin of the
prominent Maracaibo basin which extends in a south-westerly direction from
Venezuela into Colombia.
The Maracaibo basin exported its first oil in 1918, from 1927 to 1970 was the
largest oil exporter in the world, and today remains the second most
petroliferous basin in the world according to the U.S. Department of Energy and
Petroleos de Venezuela S. A. ("PDVSA"), Venezuela's state oil company. PDVSA
estimates total original hydrocarbons in place are 320 billion barrels of oil
plus 90 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, with approximately 40 billion
barrels of hydrocarbons produced through to the end of 2004.
The Catatumbo sub-basin has produced over 800 million barrels of oil to date,
according to the Colombian Ministry of Mines and Energy, from a number of
different fields to the north of and adjacent to the Caracoli Contract area.
Due to the high expectations the management of Global have for the Caracoli
Contract, Global and its technical staff have already extensively studied the
area, completed preliminary geologic analysis and selected the location of
seismic acquisition. Several mapped structures in the Contract area have the
same geologic history as the prolific adjacent oil fields. As a consequence, the
management of Global consider the Caracoli area to have a favourable potential
for major oil discoveries.
Global will own 100% of the Caracoli Contract subject only to an initial 8%
royalty, with the size of the royalty to be determined by future production
le
vels.
TheFrenchConnection
- 06 Jan 2006 19:47
- 1198 of 2227
Amities / Thank you for taking my criticism of Chaco with reason and grace without reverting to personal insults as is the usual procedure when one disagrees with the general consensus of thread members opinions . ... .No. l am not shorting it . To small. As i say i was mainly expressing my concern based on dual pillars .Firstly- Lack of liquid capital ( Fiscal considerations for acreage only becomes a variable of any consequence when oil is found. At the moment giving acreage a value is a hard science/ art indeed. lts akin to asking how long is an imaginery piece of string . And secondly - political stability which is well publicized ,,,ln the interests of brevity i will juste ask ?.Are you suggesting Chaco have sufficient monies to either finance ANY let alone an aggresive programme of workovers or embarkation on virgin exploration without the need of an immediate placing ? or alternative fiscal instruments such as banking backing, or loan notes from venture capitalits How long before they are doing the rounds in the city ? a week ? a month ? , Do you think their is any option ? ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, l take your point MPH that Chaco are doing much the same as a lot of highly succesful companies like DNZ and PLR are in the North sea in so far they are salvaging the oil/gas from ex BP assets who in thier wanton haste to find the real gushers cemented in a number of the known 5,000 to 10,000 bpoe wells to finance exploration of thier own .That is Chacos business model ......But that was the North sea. This is the Latin Americas .
TheFrenchConnection
- 06 Jan 2006 20:03
- 1199 of 2227
,,,Anyway best of luck to you all ,,,,,,,,,im off out , Friday night and all that ,,@+ J