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FALKLAND OIL & GAS (FOGL)     

smiler o - 18 Jul 2007 14:07

STRATEGY

•FOGL seeks to add shareholder value by pursuing an aggressive exploration programme in its licences to the south and east of the Falkland Islands. Exploration drilling will continue in the deep water areas of FOGL’s licences in the first half of 2012. If successful, this drilling could lead to the development of a new hydrocarbon province in the South Atlantic.

Next Phase of drilling

In the first half of 2012 FOGL is planning to drill two wells in the deep water area of its licences.
FOGL has contracted the Leiv Eiriksson rig to undertake this drilling programme. The rig is due to arrive in the Falklands in early 2012 when it will initially drill two wells for Borders and Southern Plc (B&S), before commencing the FOGL drilling programme. The B&S wells are to be drilled on the Darwin and Stebbing prospects. The results of these wells will be of interest to FOGL, because we have similar plays and prospects within the southern part of our licence area.

The first well to be drilled in the FOGL programme will be on the Loligo prospect. A number of options exist for the second well, including potentially a well on Scotia, a prospect within the Mid Cretaceous Fan Play. The final decision on which prospect will be targeted by the second well will be guided by the results from Loligo.

Funding

As at 7 September 2011 FOGL's available funds, including the BHP Billiton settlement, were $150.8 million. The Company is debt free.


2012 Drilling Programme

The Leiv Eiriksson a harsh environment rig has been drilling wells offshore Greenland for Cairn Energy. That campaign is expected to finish by the end of November 2011 after which the rig will head south to the Falkland Islands. The rig will first drill two wells (about 90 days drilling) for Borders and Southern Plc (B&S) before moving on to the FOGL programme. The transit time from Greenland is expected to be approximately 60 days.

A great deal of work has gone into the planning of the FOGL drilling campaign and over the preceding years a large amount of data has had to be collected to so that the drilling can take place.

Seismic data was acquired from 2004 to 2007 and again in 2011, CSEM in 2007, site surveys in 2009 and 2011 and metocean data, from permanent current meters, in 2009/10. Well planning essentially started in 2009 with the drilling of three, 200m deep, geotechnical boreholes. This data helped with the planning of the shallow section of the Toroa well (FI 61/05-1) and has been extensively used in the planning of the deep water programme.

The first well in the FOGL programme will be on the giant Loligo prospect. A second well will also be drilled by FOGL using the Leiv Eiriksson and site surveys have been acquired over the following prospects: The Nimrod Complex and the Vinson prospect in the Tertiary Channel Play, the Scotia or Hero prospects in the Mid Cretaceous Fan Play and the Inflexible or Endeavour prospect in the Springhill Sandstone Play. Options that are currently being considered depend upon the results of the first well on Loligo. The final play in the FOGL acreage is in the Fold Belt in the south west of the FOGL acreage. This play is being tested by B&S at their Stebbing prospect. Similar features exist within the FOGL acreage and the results of the well will be closely monitored. In addition the B&S, Darwin well is targeting a tilted fault block which again shows great similarities with several prospects in the FOGL portfolio (Inflexible, Thulla etc.). Depending on the results of Darwin FOGL may consider a well on Inflexible as the second well in the programme.

FOGL’s main focus is on the two younger plays, the Tertiary Channel and the Mid Cretaceous Fan play. FOGL has been working on the Mid Cretaceous play for some time but it was only in late 2009, when the seismic data had been fully reprocessed, that it became clear that this major new play was viable. The play is analogous to the ones being successfully targeted in West Africa (the Tullow Jubilee field in Ghana and other discoveries along that margin) and the general geology, depositional setting and even the AVO response (Class II response over Scotia and Hero) are remarkably similar. The two main prospects, Scotia and Hero, both contain prospective resources in excess of 1 billion bbls. One of the key features that makes this play so attractive is that the reservoir sands sit directly above the mature Aptian oil source rocks which were sampled in the DSDP wells to the East of the FOGL acreage.

2012 DRLLING TARGET LOLIGO

The shallowest target alone covers an area of over 600sqkm. The Loligo prospect was first mapped in 2006 and has been re-mapped and re analysed several times since then. It is a large stratigraphic trap which is supported by a very consistent Class III AVO response on the seismic data. It is an ‘easy to map’ anomaly which stands out clearly above the background seismic responses when compared to the entire basin. In addition, it sits directly above an old high which used to separate the Southern basin (Fitzroy sub-basin) from the Northern basin (Volunteer sub-basin). This old high seems to be acting as a focus for hydrocarbon migration from deeply buried source rocks in each of the sub basins.

Beneath the southern part of Loligo several other prospects within the Tertiary Channel play, overlap and may be penetrated by one carefully located well. The deeper prospects (each covering an area similar to Loligo) have been called Trigg and the Three Bears. Together these prospects are called the Loligo Complex. The prospective resources (recoverable oil) associated with the Loligo complex, are in excess of 4 billion bbls of oil or over 25tcf of gas.




FOGL is focused exclusively on offshore oil and gas exploration in the Falkland Islands.

We are pursuing an aggressive exploration programme that could lead to the development of a new petroleum province in the South Atlantic. The joint venture operations have now moved into the drilling phase.

Most prospects in 2,000 – 4,500 feet water depth (610 – 1372m)


Target horizons: 6,000 – 13,000 feet below sea bed lever (1829 – 3962m)


Falklands weather is similar to West of Shetland


Remote location but there were no major issues during 1998 drilling campaign


Anchored semi-submersible or drillship for exploration drilling


Tried and tested technology for developments



Falkland Oil and Gas Limited Licence area.




FINANCIAL SUMMARY http://www.fogl.com/fogl/en/Investors/performance

FOGL HOME http://www.fogl.com/fogl/en/home

http://www.stockopedia.co.uk/content/falkland-oil-and-gas-2012-its-time-63024/


Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=FOGL&SChart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=FOGL&S

avsec - 14 Jul 2010 09:35 - 765 of 1211

The 'bounce' continues - though I can't see why. Up 8% just now

required field - 14 Jul 2010 09:43 - 766 of 1211

There will be another possibly long wait until a rig is announced and then another wait until spudding....I cannot see them drilling before this time next year minimum...who's going to hang on to stock until then ?....very few...what with RKH and DES will have completed half a dozen wells before this lot even get going !.

cynic - 14 Jul 2010 10:03 - 767 of 1211

this one looks like a busted flush to me, or at least for many months to come

markymar - 14 Jul 2010 11:38 - 768 of 1211

http://www.oilbarrel.com/nc/news/display_news/article/fogl-crashes-as-its-maiden-well-comes-in-dry/860.html

July 14, 2010

FOGL Crashes As Its Maiden Well Comes In Dry





Shares in Falkland Oil & Gas Limited slumped 104 pence to 97.75 pence on Monday after its maiden well in the Falkland Islands came in dry. Some company watchers felt the sell off to be overdone after all, this was the first well in a virgin basin and there was some recovery on Tuesday, with the shares back up to 102.25 pence in afternoon trading.
Even so, this was a major disappointment for backers of the AIM-quoted company, which is pioneering exploration in the previously undrilled waters to the south and east of the Falkland Islands where is talk of a possible multi-billion barrel resource held in a number of massive structures. The geology here is completely different to the North Falkland Basin, where fellow AIM company Rockhopper Exploration recently struck oil with the Sea Lion-1 well, so FOGLs duster has no bearing on the prospectivity of the acreage held by Rockhopper and Desire Petroleum.

The Toroa F61/5-1 exploration well was spudded at the end of May and drilled to a total depth of 2,476 metres, short of the targeted 2,700 metres. The well, in which FOGL has a 49 per cent interest, took a little longer to drill than anticipated due to some minor operational issues and weather-related downtime. When the results did come in, logging revealed the well to be a duster.

This was disappointing: the Toroa well was targeting a prospect in the Springhill Sandstones, the proven play in the Argentine Magallanes basin to the west. The prospect carried potential unrisked mean reserves of 1.7 billion barrels and was supported by oil shows, a seismic amplitude anomaly and a positive CSEM response, demonstrating the limitations of these state-of-the-art imaging technologies: there is no substitute for the drillbit.

Despite the steep sell-off, its worth pointing out that Toroa was by no means the best pick of FOGLs prospect inventory (indeed, the company was aware of the high risk of failure with this first well, giving Toroa a 15 per cent chance of success). The selection of Toroa for the first well was driven more by the constraints of the available rig equipment and the need to drill before the first phase of the exploration licences expires in December 2010 than compelling geology.

Unlike the companys deepwater prospects to the east of the Falkland Islands, Toroa lay to the south with water depths and seabed conditions that could accommodate the Ocean Guardian rig that had been hired by Desire Petroleum to explore the shallower waters of the North Falkland Basin. This was the first rig to mobilize to these remote waters for more than a decade and FOGL was keen not to miss out on the opportunity to rig share.

House broker Oriel Securities put a brave face on the result, highlighting that exploration is at early stage in this large frontier basin with significant remaining prospectivity. Oriel analyst Richard Rose pointed out that the well had provided useful geological data which should help refine future prospects.

Even so, the disappointment will weigh heavily on the share price until FOGL and its farm-in partner BHP Billiton secure a deepwater drillship or semi-submersible capable of drilling the deepwater targets in the East Falkland Basin. As yet, there is no news on whether the search for a suitable deepwater rig is closing in on a suitable candidate the partners had planned to drill this year and there are now less than six months to go.

avsec - 14 Jul 2010 12:21 - 769 of 1211

With profit taken on 5th @231, the current bounce to 113 allowed me to squeak out at break even overall.

However I do agree Cynic, that this is on the back burner for a long time - certainly until the rig acquisition is announced.

hlyeo98 - 14 Jul 2010 12:50 - 770 of 1211

It is just a dead cat bounce... will fall back... take profit if you are in it.

cynic - 14 Jul 2010 13:15 - 771 of 1211

have shorted instead (113.25), but not easy to borrow the stock to do so

required field - 14 Jul 2010 13:21 - 772 of 1211

Not a bad idea.....just have be careful about rig availability.....

skinny - 14 Jul 2010 13:21 - 773 of 1211

You were lucky to get that price!

cynic - 14 Jul 2010 13:35 - 774 of 1211

ah well, that's the advantage of direct dealing through L2

chav - 14 Jul 2010 16:22 - 775 of 1211

FOGL still going strong!

blackdown - 14 Jul 2010 18:19 - 776 of 1211

Why?

Proselenes - 15 Jul 2010 01:23 - 777 of 1211

I would imagine a lot of people are stuck in, so tip sheets will be doing their best to say its cheap and drive the price up, so their mates can then sell out to get cash.

Give it another week or so.

required field - 15 Jul 2010 08:47 - 778 of 1211

Cynic will not be happy...this is rebounding.....

cynic - 15 Jul 2010 08:53 - 779 of 1211

it's annoying and surprising, but am more than happy to stay short .... and being CFD, there are no time constraints

required field - 15 Jul 2010 08:59 - 780 of 1211

I was about to short it as well...(a first short for me)....didn't...will wait...

markymar - 15 Jul 2010 09:15 - 781 of 1211

I think it is due to BOR knocking on doors due to the price rise but BOR have no EIS or Rig so short lived.

FOGL future is bleak untill a rig sorted.

cynic - 15 Jul 2010 09:16 - 782 of 1211

you may find it difficult to find a lender of stock .... am tempted to try to catch the rising balloon(!!), but will need to persuade *** to let me - they obviously have (almost) too many short positions running already

chav - 15 Jul 2010 10:26 - 783 of 1211

News of a Rig turning up in December will keep this sp alive.

markymar - 15 Jul 2010 10:42 - 784 of 1211

Chav unless you get a letter of intent for a drill ship or rig then I can see the share price going down as BOR and FOGL could be years away in getting a rig it took Desire 3 years and that was not a high spec rig.

Until that time I cant see there share price doing any thing but sliding especially at FOGL not hitting any oil whats so ever not even enough till fill my oil lamp.

There a better opportunities to put your money in the NFB to make some money with the likes of DES and RKH where the basin is proven to hold oil.

Any one buying shares in FOGL and BOR are chasing rainbows in a unproven basin where to drill will cost you 2 to 3 times more than in the NFB until a letter of intent or BOR getting there EIS passed I wouldnt touch them with a barge pole.

Maybe you can make a few pennies buying in and out of them thats not how I trade I get in early and waitstock I hold DES.RKHDPL and a few smaller all great geology and could be life changing shares RKH is out the starting blokes and if Ernest hits oil and 2 good flow test to follow thats me sorted.
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