markymar
- 03 Dec 2003 11:36
halifax
- 04 Feb 2010 17:55
- 3483 of 6492
Nothing has changed,either the oil is there or not. Which flag is the Ocean Guardian flying?
hlyeo98
- 04 Feb 2010 17:57
- 3484 of 6492
I'm just saying we have to be cautious and not to be totally carried away by some rampers. Why did Falklands War happened in the first place???
Can we be 100% sure there will be no war?
I wish I live in Utopia like you guys.
hlyeo98
- 04 Feb 2010 18:24
- 3485 of 6492
Am I talking crap or somebody loving his share too much?
FT says, after 'furious reaction' from Argentina,
Malvinas conflict 'may have reawakened tensions'.
Great Britain strongly rejected Argentina's protest regarding plans for drilling for oil and gas around the Malvinas islands, and now fears a new row over their sovereignty "may have reawakened the tensions that erupted into war in 1982," the Financial Times said.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown "is adamant that exploratory drilling should be allowed to take place," the article says, but "is anxious to ensure that the dispute with Buenos Aires does not escalate into military confrontation."
A British diplomat told the morning paper that it is "legitimate business in the Falkland (Malvinas) Islands waters. It should be allowed to carry on and it will carry on."
The imminent start of drilling sparked "a furious reaction in Argentina".
Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana sent Britain's chargd'affaires Simon Thomas a note saying what they were doing was "illegitimate" and labeled it a "violation of our sovereignty," while vowing they would do "everything possible to defend and preserve our rights."
Taiana explained that the argentine government "strongly rejected the United Kingdom's plans to authorize the development of the hydrocarbon industry in the Falkland Islands," as it considered it "unilateral."
He also insisted on the sovereignty right over the islands that created a stand-off between both countries in 1982, and recalled that Argentina ended in 2007 all hydrocarbon cooperation accords signed by London and Buenos Aires in 1995.
According to the Financial Times, an Argentine government source said "Buenos Aires had notified companies involved in the sector based in Argentina that any involvement in exploration in waters around the islands would be an illegal activity'."
In response, a British diplomat expressed that the British government's position "is to support the development of the hydrocarbon industry in the Falkland Islands."
The article says that the diplomat also refused to discuss whether Britain was making contingency plans to send military forces to the area "to ensure that Argentina did not interfere with the planned oil exploration."
"One of the UK companies exploring for oil and gas in the area, Desire Petroleum, has contracted a rig, the Ocean Guardian, to begin drilling. The rig is expected to arrive in the area in mid-February to begin drilling prospects in the North Falkland basin," says the paper, while explaining that "British diplomats say there is little expectation of direct military action by Argentina."
However, that article warns that diplomats remain "alert to a possible alternative course of action: Argentina attempting to disrupt the passage of the rig using civilian vessels."
The Financial Times ends the article by saying that "unlike the situation at the time of the Argentine invasion in 1982, the Falklands are well defended with four eurofighter jets, at least two warships and an infantry company posted at all times."
cynic
- 04 Feb 2010 18:32
- 3486 of 6492
same response as my posts 107 and 109 on XEL
putting your money with your mouth would lend at least some credibility to your apparent belief in your own rattlings
Balerboy
- 04 Feb 2010 19:03
- 3487 of 6492
getting touchy cynic....
cynic
- 04 Feb 2010 19:13
- 3488 of 6492
hi emu-lator ..... not really; just get fed up with some nonsenses, just as others get fed up with mine from time to time ...... actually have very strong doubts that hyleo shorted anything, for he would prob have been rather moe forthoming earlier had he done so
markymar
- 05 Feb 2010 07:51
- 3489 of 6492
http://en.mercopress.com/2010/02/05/more-companies-line-up-to-join-the-falklands-oil-rush
Friday, February 5th 2010 - 04:39 am UTC
More companies line up to join the Falklands oil rush
While there have been strong protests from the Argentine Government about the drilling program due to start in Falkland Islands waters this month, it has not deterred other companies wanting to join Desire Petroleum, Rockhopper Exploration and Falklands Oil and Gas in the search for oil.
At an extraordinary meeting of the Falklands government Executive Council on Wednesday, new applications for seismic and geophysical surveys were considered and Governor Alan Huckle was advised to seek approval for both.
Director of Mineral Resources, Phyl Rendell said an application had been received from a company considering seismic survey work for an oil company with production licences in the Islands.
To allow a vessel to survey here, the company requires an exploration licence and the Governor was advised to seek approval for the award of a licence.
A further application from a geophysical survey company to carry out a speculative seismic survey in unlicensed acreage was also considered.
Mrs Rendell said this application was encouraging and demonstrated the willingness of companies to invest in additional data acquisition.
Details are yet to be agreed on the scale of the survey, but meanwhile Governor Huckle was advised to seek consent to award an exploration licence and thus allow the survey to proceed.
.
In both cases the proposed surveying is outside the fisheries area that is potentially active in coming months, said Mrs Rendell. (Penguin News)
markymar
- 05 Feb 2010 07:54
- 3490 of 6492
http://www.upstreamonline.com/live/article205662.ece
Seismic player sounds out Falklands
A seismic contractor has applied to shoot a speculative survey on unlicensed acreage off the Falkland Islands, demonstrating more interest in the oil potential of the South Atlantic islands.
Rob Watts Friday, 05 February, 2010, 06:22 GMT
markymar
- 05 Feb 2010 13:38
- 3492 of 6492
http://agmetalminer.com/2010/02/05/britain-goes-prospecting-for-oil/
Britain Goes Prospecting for Oil
February 5th, 2010
Britain could be about to strike oil, again. Not in the North Sea this time but around the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic. Desire Petroleum, Rockhopper Exploration, Falklands Oil & Gas (in partnership with BHP Billiton) and Borders & Southern have between them raised 170m (US$272m) to begin drilling later this month according to the Financial Times. Desire has leased the drill ship Ocean Guardian to build on work done in 1998 in which six wells were drilled in the North Falklands Basin and five of them yielded oil and gas, but at prevailing oil prices were not considered economically viable. Analysts say any discoveries now could be commercially viable at about $40 a barrel.
Needless to say Argentina is hopping mad about the news, Reuters reported that Argentina protested to Britains embassy in Buenos Aires this week over the plans to begin offshore oil exploration in the disputed Falkland Islands, which the two countries went to war over in 1982. Nearly 1000 people were killed in the Falklands war and Argentina still lays claim to the energy rich islands even though they have been under British control since 1833.
According to an article last year, drilling costs could be US$10m per hole so these small junior exploration companies are going to need big partners (like BHP) or deep pockets to fully explore the region. The prospects look positive though; testing a well drilled by Shell ten years earlier, British firm Rockhopper Exploration discovered a massive natural gas deposit one that could be as big as 7.9 trillion cubic feet. But the problem is with no nearby market and the cost of laying a pipeline or building an LNG plant being immense the natural gas is of limited immediate value.
There are two areas being explored at the moment the North and South Basins. Rockhopper made its gas discovery in the North, where the water is shallow at 100m-600m (300-2000ft) and the drilling conditions relatively benign. The South Basin, where fellow explorers Falkland Oil & Gas and Borders & Southern are active, is another matter. The water is up to 1,200m (4000ft) deep and the drilling conditions far trickier according to a report in Money Week. With Britains experience in the North Sea such depths would not be a major hindrance to developing any finds but they do raise the cost of exploration and development even before overcoming the logistical challenge of operating in the South Atlantic so far from major support services. Suppliers to the offshore oil industry will be watching developments closely; development would bring rich rewards for those with the expertise to meet the challenge
hlyeo98
- 05 Feb 2010 17:55
- 3493 of 6492
DES finishing today at 106.5p with more sells than buys.
I guess people are getting cautious with the dispute between Argentina and UK still not resolved and oil price down to $70 and Dow Jones cracking below 10000 level now.
cynic
- 05 Feb 2010 22:32
- 3494 of 6492
i suspect the concern was with Dow more than anything else, forcing some sales and others just locking in profits .....as it happens Dow finished +10 having been -170 at one point
Balerboy
- 05 Feb 2010 22:58
- 3495 of 6492
Argentina warns oil firms of Falklands legal action
Published: Feb. 5, 2010 at 5:47 PM
BUENOS AIRES, Feb. 5 (UPI) -- Argentina has warned oil companies operating in the Falklands Islands they will face legal action unless they stop prospecting in sovereign Argentine territory.
The Argentine threat of legal action against the oil companies was anticipated in both London and Stanley, seat of the British overseas territory's government in the Falklands, and signaled further heightening of tension between Britain, the Falklands and Argentina.
Argentina has toughened its stance on the Falklands since the oil-prospecting agreements between the Falklands and British-based oil companies began taking shape last year.
Argentina and Britain went to war over the Falklands after an Argentine invasion of the islands. Britain beat back the assault and retained control, but Argentina has never relinquished its claim on the islands and has repeated its sovereignty claims amid energetic U.K.-led prospecting for hydrocarbons.
The Falklands dispute has coincided with a political crisis in Argentina over a bitter row between President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner and the Central Bank and a related scandal over her husband's alleged use of insider information for a $2 million deal. Nestor Kirchner, the president's spouse and former president and ruling party leader, has denied wrongdoing.
The developing tense standoff between Britain and Argentina has fed into a fraught domestic situation over the Central Bank crisis, which led to the sacking of its governor, Martin Redrado, and his replacement by Mercedes Marco del Pont.
Analysts said the evolving confrontation over the islands had all the makings of a crisis that, if allowed to escalate, could help strengthen the domestic position of Fernandez.
Britain has been beefing up security on the islands and has been training military personnel on its bases on the territory, ostensibly for eventual redeployment in Afghanistan or Iraq.
The latest Argentine statements on the hydrocarbons exploration called on Britain to consider carefully the consequences of the full-scale oil exploration operations. Argentine Foreign Ministry sources quoted in the local media said the government was prepared to seek recourse to the highest tribunals -- a reference to the International Court of Justice at The Hague.
The sources told the media, "It's not accidental that the oil companies involved are British, that is to say, the only ones that can really believe the chimera that the U.K. is peddling about the alleged legality of these commercial operations," MercoPress reported.
Britain reiterated this week it "has no doubt over sovereignty over the Falkland Islands and surrounding maritime areas." The British Foreign Office says the Falklands government is entitled to develop a hydrocarbons industry within its waters and the U.K. supports the development.
Analysts said the situation could come to a head as a leased exploratory oil rig, Ocean Guardian, is scheduled to enter Falkland waters by Feb. 14. The rig was leased by Desire Petroleum but is likely to be shared with other prospecting companies.
Several more oil companies are likely to join the "oil rush" in the Falklands after the government received new applications for seismic and geophysical surveys.
hlyeo98
- 05 Feb 2010 23:38
- 3496 of 6492
This is getting more confrontational by the day.
Balerboy
- 06 Feb 2010 00:08
- 3497 of 6492
thats a 15 letter word......go steady h98, your competing with cynic now..
..
~
cynic
- 06 Feb 2010 08:58
- 3498 of 6492
it's like the paper bag threatening the powder puff
hlyeo98
- 07 Feb 2010 00:11
- 3499 of 6492
Sorry, I will use shorter words next time.
Argentina warns UK about Falkland Islands oil
Sat, 06 Feb 2010
Argentina and the United Kingdom are about to lock horns over UK companies' oil and gas explorations plans around the Falkland Islands, or Islas Malvinas.
Buenos Aires has reiterated its rejection of oil and gas exploration programs by Britain around the south Atlantic islands and warned of the 'consequences' of such an action.
"Argentina again warns the UK about the illegality and consequences of this new unilateral action, extensive to all private actors involved, that they will be liable of future legal demands in the maximum tribunals, for the potential exploration and exploitation of Argentine resources," the South Atlantic news agency, MercoPress, quoted unnamed sources with the country's ministry of foreign affairs as saying on Friday.
Argentina's objection to the scheme comes after the UK-sponsored Falklands' government announced 'imminent' drilling around the islands by British energy contractors.
"The Falkland Islands Government is encouraged by the investment being made to establish whether there are commercial quantities of hydrocarbons in the Falklands. However, any potential revenues from exploitation will not feature in the Islands' economic planning unless and until commercially viable reserves are discovered," the announcement revealed.
Argentine authorities reacted strongly to the declaration, with Foreign Minister Jorge Taiana saying that oil exploration in 'Argentine waters' poses a direct threat to the interests of his country.
Taiana has presented a formal complaint to the British Embassy in Buenos Aires.
In his New Year address to the residents of the islands, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said, "The British Government will continue to support the development of your hydrocarbons sector, the British Government will continue to work with you on this agenda."
He also said that there are "no doubts about United Kingdom's sovereignty over the Falkland Islands."
Britain seized the Malvinas Islands from Argentina in 1833, which triggered a 73-day war in 1982 during which nearly 650 Argentines and 260 Britons were killed.
Argentina disputes UK's control of the islands and views them as part of its own territory.
cynic
- 07 Feb 2010 13:06
- 3500 of 6492
so hyleo, do you actually think argentina will dust down its weaponry and send in the gunboats? ..... well i sure i don't
hlyeo98
- 07 Feb 2010 13:29
- 3501 of 6492
I am not saying the Argentinians will definitely attack but there is always a possibility. They have done it once before, so why would they not as there is a potential of oil discovery now.
This conflict will escalate within the next few weeks.
cynic
- 07 Feb 2010 14:30
- 3502 of 6492
now go and take a cold shower and then read the long article in Sunday Times