markymar
- 03 Dec 2003 11:36
barrenwuffet
- 20 Apr 2006 16:49
- 2298 of 6492
If youve had a good day please consider giving a donation to the lads dressed as Elvis racing 350 miles to the North Pole on behalf of Great Ormond Street Hospital It makes the London Marathon seem like a stroll in the park!
To donate or view how theyre getting on visit
http://www.elvispolarchallenge.co.uk/
thanks for your time
markymar
- 21 Apr 2006 09:51
- 2299 of 6492
eddieshare
- 21 Apr 2006 21:00
- 2300 of 6492
Hi all
Hope you are all keeping well.
Markymar
The abandend baby is quite a rare combination of candles, todays trading was prety neutral. We may still see some action yet.
Well we didn't get the buy signal today, there is allways next week. DES announeces the preliminary results on Tuesday 25/04/06. The market appears to be on the side of caution at the moment.
Good Luck All
Eddie
HUSTLER
- 22 Apr 2006 01:00
- 2301 of 6492
markymar
- 25 Apr 2006 09:57
- 2302 of 6492
http://www.falklandnews.com/public/story.cfm?get=3858&source=3
Daily Hydrocarbons Record: 25/04/06
April 24, 2006
by J. Brock (FINN)
HYDROCARBONS NEWS
(New Feature)
By J. Brock (FINN)
At 1800hrs LMT on Monday, 24 April 2005 the price per barrel of Brent Crude was listed on Londons ICE Futures Exchange at $73.78. This is down $1.57 from its recorded high on Friday off $75.35 Per Barrel.
At present the trend seems to be fluctuating upwards with excuses for the rise being the on-going dispute with Iran over nuclear power, OPECs refusal to increase supply and rumours that oil reserves in the Middle East are past peak. Irans President, in a two-hour press conference today said that he did not think the UN would sanction his country because Iran only wants to use nuclear power for peaceful means.
Local Relevance: Though the data is excellent with several hundred prospects awaiting 3D seismic in the North and South Falkland Basins, there are no semi-submersible exploration rigs available to do exploration drilling at the moment. The unavailability is due to other exploration priorities as well as the cost of the rigs in an extremely tight market. There is no indication of where the Falklands are in the queue for a rig.
Comments from companies involved in the North and South Falkland Basins are welcome. Please use the contact section on SARTMA to get in touch.
markymar
- 26 Apr 2006 08:07
- 2303 of 6492
Final Results
RNS Number:9872B
Desire Petroleum PLC
26 April 2006
DESIRE PETROLEUM PLC
("the Company")
FINAL RESULTS
Chairman's statement
The results for the year ended 31 December 2005 are set out below. The profit
shown after tax was entirely due to interest received and exchange gains. The
latter resulting from your Board's decision to hold most of the Company's funds
in dollars. As in previous years, overheads, which are covered by interest
received, have been kept low despite the very considerable increase in activity
consequent upon preparations to drill in the North Falkland Basin.
The focus of the year's activities was on preparing a three-well drilling
programme in Tranches C and D in the North Falkland Basin and sourcing a
suitable drilling rig to fulfil it. There is a well-publicised, world-wide
shortage of drilling rigs which has severely affected the entire Industry, not
least Desire. Rig-rental rates are also at historically high levels.
In view of the extraordinarily tight rig market and the major increase in costs,
your Board, whilst continuing actively to secure a rig, has reviewed the
Company's strategy for renewing drilling in Tranches C and D. At the moment,
there appear to be two alternative options: to await a change in the rig market
or to seek a partner with access to a drilling rig. As the second of these
options does not preclude the first, a programme to identify and secure a
suitable partner was initiated early this year (2006).
Possible partners include oil companies with long-term rig contracts or drilling
companies themselves. In the past, drilling companies have not normally been
interested in taking equity positions in drilling programmes except when the rig
market was exceptionally weak and it was one of the few ways of utilising their
hardware. However, the current, historically-high, rig-rental rates have had the
effect of making many drilling companies cash-rich; this factor, together with
the attraction of major multiples from successful equity participation in oil
and/or gas discoveries, has caused them to take a fresh look at equity deals and
a number of drilling companies are now prepared to discuss such ventures. Even
so, most drilling companies do not, themselves, have spare rig capacity because
most of their rigs are tied-up in long-term contracts.
Nevertheless, Desire has entered into discussions with a number of companies
with rigs interested in equity in Tranches C and D. The nature of the
participations under discussion may not take the usual form of industry
farm-outs and your Board is considering innovative ways of structuring them. It
is not yet possible to say that these discussions will be successful nor, if
they are, at what date a rig will become available.
The rig market itself is likely, in due course, to return, as it has done in the
past, to more normal conditions of supply and demand. Rig supply will increase
as new rigs are built and demand can be expected to slacken, either because of a
lack of exploration success or because major new discoveries are made. Current
exploration success rates are poor world-wide and, if this continues to be the
case, more rigs will become available as companies draw their exploration horns
in. As a consequence of this lack of exploration success, the attractiveness of
the North Falkland Basin, with its world-class source rock, is likely to
increase.
Despite the lack of a rig, work has continued on preparations for the drilling
programme. Peak Well Management has been appointed to oversee the programme,
nine drilling locations have been selected, well designs are being finalised,
initial site surveys have been carried out using the 3D seismic survey, the
Environmental Impact Assessment has been submitted to the Falkland Island
Government (FIG), the well tubulars and wellheads (of which there is also a
world-wide shortage) have been ordered and a myriad other requirements and
contracts, such as for waste disposal, helicopters, crew-change facilities,
etc., are being put in place. Apart from the requirement by the UK Health and
Safety Executive, on behalf of FIG, to approve the safety management system of
the rig when contracted, all of the essential plans for the drilling programme
are well underway or in place and drilling will be able to commence as soon as
an approved rig is acquired.
One strategy option, so far rejected by your Board, is that of farming-in to the
existing exploration drilling programmes of other companies. Although several
opportunities have been considered, none were anywhere near as attractive,
either technically or in terms of potential upside, as drilling in Tranches C
and D. Accordingly, the decision has been taken to conserve the Company's funds
and to continue to concentrate all efforts in the North Falkland Basin.
I am very pleased to welcome Mr Edward Wisniewski to the Board. Eddie is a
Chartered Accountant with extensive oil-industry experience whose contributions,
both as a non-Executive Director and Chairman of the Audit Committee, have
already been substantial. All of my other Board colleagues continue to play
essential roles, in particular
Dr Ian Duncan in his capacity as Chief Executive.
Although the past year has been a frustrating one, not least for your Board, I
believe that the strategy adopted is the correct one which will, in due course,
lead to a resumption of drilling in the North Falkland Basin.
Yours sincerely,
Dr Colin B. Phipps
eddieshare
- 26 Apr 2006 21:29
- 2306 of 6492
Hi all
Thanks Markymar.
Oh well DES closed lower today with a gap down. The rising support line which DES has been following since 08/12/05 has been tested today. Todays candle is a hammer, which has bullish implications. With the rising trend line still in tact and DES at the bottom of the Bollinger bands, it looks like we should see some support tomorrow. The rising trend line is at 0.3150p therfore we are looking for DES to close above this to confirm the support. If we see a gap up and DES continues up we will have a morning star pattern. This is regarded as a good buy indicator.
Good Luck All
Eddie
hlyeo98
- 27 Apr 2006 08:30
- 2309 of 6492
MRP is a better bet at similar sp
aur
- 27 Apr 2006 13:19
- 2310 of 6492
...............but mrp isn't sitting on a potential 2.2bn barrels of recoverable oil.
luckyswimmer
- 27 Apr 2006 22:34
- 2311 of 6492
Call me a cynic but when a deal is about to be announced one day then it would benefit institutions if an initial RNS was released first discussing the possibilities without mention of a specific deal which would then shake out a few weak holders allowing a large purchase, or two, at the pre news price by the institution. Their other way in of course is with a private placing which they would jump at if they knew that would clinch the deal. I wonder if that was such an RNS that we just had? Time will tell.
Captguns
- 28 Apr 2006 10:33
- 2314 of 6492
Markymar,
137 kms. in 3 weeks, that's criminal I've known sea slugs travel faster.
They must have some problems, or some real bad weather.
markymar
- 28 Apr 2006 11:03
- 2316 of 6492
Captguns
- 28 Apr 2006 11:09
- 2317 of 6492
On long lines (24 hours shooting) around 220 - 230 kms.
It could go as high as 240 kms, but you would need a shorter record length or a longer shot point interval.
The usual shooting speed is around 4.6 - 4.8 knots. (@ 9 kms. ish. an hour)