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Egdon Resources PLC (EDR)     

Andy - 02 May 2005 00:08

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I have been watching Egdon Resources for a while, and think they may prove to be worth an investment.

I like the idea of a British company finding oil and gas on UK soil, and as Egdon have a site at Waddock X, fairly close to where I live, I have decided to follow their progress.


Egdon has interests in 19 licences in the hydrocarbon producing basins of the UK and France, containing two oil discoveries and a further 48 prospects.

The Company's shares are traded on the Alternative Investment Market of the London Stock Exchange.

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OIL AND GAS ASSETS

Egdon holds 19 licences, all of which lie within proven oil and gas producing basins and contain a mix of oil and gas prospectivity. The assets and technical management of the Company are divided into four geographically defined business areas; Southern England, Northern England (and adjacent offshore areas), East Midlands and France.

egdonlicences.jpglicenceinterests.jpgbig.chart?symb=uk%3Aedr&compidx=aaaaa%3A



Company website : http://www.egdon-resources.com

queen1 - 07 Nov 2005 14:22 - 60 of 132

I wonder if the market is waking up to the potential of EDR...Let's hope so!

queen1 - 07 Nov 2005 22:15 - 61 of 132

What a really rather splendid day! 1 reached. Where to now I wonder?

queen1 - 01 Dec 2005 11:58 - 62 of 132

Not sure why the retreat today. The clamour for gas, resources etc seems to get louder by the day, plus there was a small positive note in Shares today.

porky - 01 Dec 2005 12:18 - 63 of 132

More selling than buying maybe.
Cheers

queen1 - 01 Dec 2005 22:11 - 64 of 132

How very insightful porky. Pure genius.

queen1 - 11 Jan 2006 09:09 - 65 of 132

This seems broadly positive:

Egdon Resources Plc ('Egdon' or 'the Company') is pleased to provide an update
on drilling and testing operations on its UK operated licences.

The BDF28 drilling rig has completed drilling and logging operations at
Kirkleatham-4 on licence PEDL068. The Kirkleatham-4 well reached a TD of 936m
within rocks of Carboniferous age on the 7th January 2006. During drilling gas
shows were encountered within the target Permian age Zechstein carbonates.
Logging operations have now been completed and confirmed the presence of a c.
19m gas column within the Cadeby Formation. The top of the Cadeby Formation was
penetrated at 804.3m where a drilling break and high gas readings were observed.
Evaluation of wireline log data indicates high gas saturations and good
porosity development within the gas bearing interval. The Kirkleatham-4 well
will be completed with 7' casing and the BDF28 rig released. Testing operations
will be undertaken using a work-over rig. Further activity at Kirkleatham will
be assessed once test results have been evaluated.

On completion of operations at Kirkleatham-4 the drilling rig will mobilise to
the Westerdale-1 well site in North Yorkshire where drilling operations are
expected to commence during the week of 16th January 2006. Westerdale-1 is
designed to test an accumulation 50.5 m up-dip and 3.7 km to the north of the
Ralph Cross-1 gas discovery made by Home Oil Limited in 1966. Ralph Cross-1
tested gas at flow rates of up to 6 million cubic feet of gas per day from a
20.5 m gas column in fractured Zechstein carbonates. Additional reservoir
objectives are present in the Westerdale-1 well both within the Zechstein and in
the underlying Carboniferous sequences. Westerdale-1 will be directionally
drilled to a total depth of around 1250 m and will take around 21 days to drill.

On completion of operations at Westerdale-1 the rig will move to Dorset to drill
the Portland-1 well which is designed to test the thickness and suitability of a
salt sequence for the creation of caverns for gas storage. Site construction
has commenced at the Portland-1 well site.

The Company can also report that at Waddock Cross-3, testing operations are
ongoing in the horizontal section drilled in the Cycle 3 of the Bridport
Sandstone. Initial results indicate pump constrained flow rates of 270 to 400
barrels of fluid per day with an average 12% oil cut. This equates to 32 to 48
barrels of oil per day. The produced oil has not experienced the emulsion
problems encountered with the Waddock Cross-2 well test. Downhole pressure
gauges will be recovered during the next week and the data analysed to determine
options for the future testing and development of the Waddock Cross
accumulation.

Andy - 14 Jan 2006 20:13 - 66 of 132

13.01.2006

Egdon Finds Gas In Yorkshire And Oil In Dorset But Further Testing Is Required
Egdon Resources, which has seen its share price increase four-fold on Londons Alternative Investment Market over the past year, has announced initial results from its multi-well onshore UK drilling campaign.

Testing operations on the Waddock Cross-3 horizontal well in the Wessex Basin of southern England have pumped between 32 and 48 barrels of per day of oil from the Cycle 3 sandstones. The overall flow rate was between 270 and 400 barrels per day (there was a 12 per cent oil water cut). The well was designed to probe an elevated part of the Waddock Cross oil accumulation and is a follow-up to the 2004 Waddock Cross-2 well, which flowed around 30 bpd and confirmed a 20 million barrel oil discovery.

The oil flow numbers from Waddock Cross-3 appear to be a disappointment: reservoir modelling by RPS Troy Ikoda had predicted that a horizontal well through the Cycle 2 and 3 sandstones could produce at an average rate of in excess of 200 barrels per day. However, the produced oil has not experienced the emulsion problems encountered at Waddock Cross-2 and the rate was constrained by the pumping equipment. Testing operations are still ongoing and further analysis work is planned to determine the economic options for a possible development at Waddock Cross.

There was also news from Egdons exploration campaign in the gas-prone Cleveland Basin of North Yorkshire. The Kirkleatham prospect was tested in the 1940s by two wells which at the time produced sub-commercial gas-flows. The onshore specialist, which has also branched out into gas storage, reckons modern drilling and completion techniques deployed updip will tap into a workable gas reservoir.

Early results would appear to confirm that prediction. Drilling and logging operations on the Kirkleatham-4 well have been completed, having encountered gas shows in the Zechstein carbonates. The well has confirmed the presence of a 19 metre gas column in the Cadeby formation, where wireline logs indicated high gas saturations and good porosity. The well was not tested, however: this procedure, which will be key to determining the commercial future of the deposit, will be undertaken using a workover rig.

The drilling rig is now set to move to the Westerdale-1 well site, also in North Yorkshire. This well is due to spud next week and will test an accumulation 3.7 km north of the Ralph Cross-1 gas discovery which flowed at rates of up to 6 million cubic feet per day fo gas from a 20.5 metre gas column in the fractured Zechstein carbonates. Egdon plans to test this reservoir in Westerdale-1 as well as targeting the underlying Carboniferous formation. This should take about 21 days to drill.

After this operation, the rig - the much traveled BDF 28 - will move down south to drill the Portland-1 well. This hole is not prospecting for oil and gas but checking on the suitability of the salt sequence here for a below-ground gas storage business. Egdon entered the gas storage market in April and hopes to have this, its first operation, up and running by 2008.

This is a timely move and given recent events in Russia - which has flexed its muscle as a regional energy power, causing jitters across the European gas supply chain - could prove very astute in the longer term. Imported gas is expected to meet half of UK demand by 2010 and storage capacity is expected to play a key role in the countrys ability to ensure supply security and swing capability to meet winter peaks in energy demand. At present, the UKs gas storage capacity is currently about 4 per cent of annual consumption, compared with 25 per cent in France and 21 per cent in Germany.

With supplies increasingly coming from further afield, gas storage facilities look set to become a vital resource in the gas supply marketplace, said joint MD Andrew Hindle at the launch of Egdons new business venture. Egdon has used its extensive knowledge of the geology of the UK onshore to identify the potential site at Portland to participate in this emerging growth business within the UK oil and gas industry. It is currently anticipated that the initial working volume will be between 10 and 20 billion cubic feet and the first cavity on the site should become operational in 2008.

Oilbarrel.

queen1 - 24 Jan 2006 10:03 - 67 of 132

Bud day at the office for EDR today. Anyone have any ideas why?

Andy - 24 Jan 2006 19:24 - 68 of 132

queen1,

No, I'm surprised by the drop.

queen1 - 24 Jan 2006 22:31 - 69 of 132

Me too Andy and a little concerned. To be fair the sp has been fantastic over the last 12 months and all along the way there has been one step back followed by 2 forwards so I'm hoping this is the step back and two steps forward are on their way!

queen1 - 02 Mar 2006 19:18 - 70 of 132

A stunning break-out day for the EDR sp today. Perhaps this is the first of the two steps forward!

queen1 - 15 Mar 2006 10:22 - 71 of 132

Further test results published today look good. And we should have a clearer understanding of the potential of Portland in May. Exciting times.

vistauk - 16 Mar 2006 10:35 - 72 of 132

new to the thread, after buying into EDR, wish I got in earlier though!!!

queen1 - 16 Mar 2006 22:38 - 73 of 132

A very warm welcome to you vistauk. I hope you enjoy the EDR ride as much as I have so far.

On another point I see that Seymour Pierce put out a buy recommendation on EDR today.

queen1 - 29 Mar 2006 13:08 - 74 of 132

Positive buying news although the SP seems to be taking another little breather.

The Company was notified on 24 March 2006 that as at 22 March 2006, as a result
of acquisitions of ordinary shares in Egdon Resources ('Ordinary Shares'),
Credit Suisse Securities (Europe) Limited held an interest in 2,263,333 Ordinary
Shares representing approximately 3.96 per cent. of the issued Ordinary Share
capital of the Company.

queen1 - 03 Apr 2006 09:43 - 75 of 132

Debt free and funds almost double what they were last year. Portland however will still be the key:

Egdon Resources reported slightly narrower first half losses, but said its exploration business is looking forward to an exciting second half drilling.

The onshore UK oil and gas exploration and production business reported first half to Jan pretax loss of 238,000 against a year earlier loss of 296,000.

Following December's 4.8m institutional placing, the company is debt-free, with net funds at end-January of 6.3m, against 3.7m a year ago.

Chairman Philip Stephens said Egdon 'is experiencing operational success in all areas of its business, and we are particularly pleased with the confirmation of gas in two of our wells. The Portland Gas Storage Project is progressing, with a well currently being drilled to confirm the viability of creating salt caverns for storing gas.'

queen1 - 12 Apr 2006 09:53 - 76 of 132

What on earth has spooked the market in EDR today??

hlyeo98 - 12 Apr 2006 15:39 - 77 of 132

Why has this gem drop today...anybody any ideas?

queen1 - 18 Apr 2006 11:23 - 78 of 132

Something seems to have spooked the market in EDR although there have been pullbacks recently which have been quickly reversed, followed by the achievement of new highs. Let's hope this is a similar scenario.

Andy - 18 Apr 2006 13:55 - 79 of 132

Queen1,

I visited the Waddock Cross site at the weekend.

The site has been developed since I was last there, and the Egdon sign is at the gate.

I could see where the rig had been, but sady it has already left, so not much to see, but we enjoyed a nice drive in the countryside anyway.
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