goal
- 22 Oct 2009 17:29
- 873 of 5505
Thanks skinny.
lizard
- 22 Oct 2009 20:31
- 874 of 5505
Its the Total depth report that counts. I believe the estimates are precautionary at this stage until the finals are determined. But must say looks good.
watcher
- 25 Oct 2009 03:24
- 875 of 5505
must be getting close to drill completion.....i would like to see confirmation that the s.p. holds if not creeps away from the 100p level....should be an interesting week ahead...either way......
capetown
- 25 Oct 2009 22:36
- 876 of 5505
CYNIC,hats off to you for selling some @130 ish.
Still holding here.
watcher
- 27 Oct 2009 22:32
- 877 of 5505
fought hard to stay above 100p today......so see what tomorrow brings.....is the record stuck or am i becoming the expectant dad......walking the corridor.....waiting with both fingers crossed....hoping for a healthy future...
marni
- 29 Oct 2009 16:08
- 878 of 5505
is this about to rocket again
Toya
- 29 Oct 2009 16:45
- 879 of 5505
Looks like it may!
cynic
- 29 Oct 2009 16:49
- 880 of 5505
sold out to protect in the event that US GDP disappointed - better safe than (very) sorry ..... may look again in the morning, albeit that i would be buying at a higher price
marni
- 30 Oct 2009 13:24
- 881 of 5505
will it rocket this afternoon?
Balerboy
- 30 Oct 2009 16:38
- 882 of 5505
no!!
watcher
- 30 Oct 2009 19:47
- 883 of 5505
nice one B boy.......the comforting thing is the s.p. is creeping away from the 100p mark...whilst it does move well during the day it seems to be up at the end of each day.........as for the rocket marni......we both want that.....and i am sure many more watchers
Balerboy
- 01 Nov 2009 11:47
- 884 of 5505
bought back in at .98p and waiting news, which should be very soon...unless they've got difficulties. Surprised nothing heard last week as they must be near the 3500mtr mark by now... perhaps nothing there...heaven forbid, am over wieght in these at mo for me. GL all next week.
required field
- 02 Nov 2009 08:53
- 885 of 5505
sp changing every second on this....getting closer to an rns....
marni
- 02 Nov 2009 09:15
- 886 of 5505
u r right rf......well spotted
sp going up bit by bit
watcher
- 03 Nov 2009 00:54
- 887 of 5505
good day at the finish......and of course the thought of completion of the drill programme is driving things upward......edging closer to the rns.....and then of course there are other blocks on the agenda.....very positive
niceonecyril
- 05 Nov 2009 22:41
- 888 of 5505
From a discussion regarding PTR this came about,thought it worth passing on.
4000 bopd per day means not much if you have not got the permission from the government to sell it at commercial rates. Most oilers have to choke back their flows for 6-12 months whilst waiting approval and be forced to sell what they can to the domestic market at domestic rates.
The most prominent example at the moment is GKP. plenty of oil...but a very lengthy process to commercialise it they may crush a smallcap company in the end or dilute the shareholder value whilst waiting for approval. Most shareholders in GKP are oblivious to this are in for a rude shock come January/February 2010 (situation made worse due to a probable delay in Iraqi elections).. my guess it will lose up to 50% of it market cap because of this very reason...(notwithstanding other risks its faces)
cyril
poo bear
- 06 Nov 2009 07:00
- 889 of 5505
Good post cyril.
watcher
- 06 Nov 2009 07:07
- 890 of 5505
i am still of the opinion that they are a buyout option for major's who need oil reserves.....many of those around the area so i have been informed....could rise on completion of drill and then rise again when the major's make approaches for the proven reserves.....so not all doom and gloom on the time aspect
Balerboy
- 06 Nov 2009 08:40
- 891 of 5505
By Ernesto Londo and Qais Mizher
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, November 6, 2009
BAGHDAD -- Exxon Mobil and Royal Dutch Shell signed a deal with the Iraqi Oil Ministry on Thursday to develop a major field, marking the first foray by a U.S.-led consortium into Iraq's promising but uncertain oil industry.
The agreement, the second of its kind signed this week, suggests that foreign companies that initially balked at the terms the ministry offered at a public auction in June now think the prospect of eventually tapping into Iraq's vast oil reserves outweighs the risks. Oil Minister Hussain Shahristani called the deal "another huge achievement in the pursuit of rebuilding this country."
On Monday, the ministry signed a separate deal with a consortium led by the Italian oil giant Eni that includes Los Angeles-based Occidental Petroleum. The Iraqi cabinet is widely expected to ratify both agreements.
BP and China National Petroleum Corp., the only companies that walked away from the June auction with a deal in hand, signed the final contract this week.
All the deals are for service contracts, which give the companies a per-barrel fee for boosting output at active fields encumbered by old technology and derelict equipment. But they do not give the energy giants a stake in the profits.
Industry experts say the contracts are likely to be only modestly advantageous, if at all, to Western energy giants in the short term but could position them to reap a windfall if Iraq opens unexplored oil fields to foreign companies.
The Oil Ministry is expected to hold another round of bidding in December for undeveloped fields.
Those would also be for service agreements, but oil executives hope the deals could one day lead to production-sharing arrangements -- long a goal of energy firms that have been shut out of the Middle East for years.
The deal signed Thursday gives Exxon Mobil and Shell $1.90 per barrel above the current production rate, considerably less than the $4 a barrel the consortium proposed in its June bid. The companies will refurbish the West Qurna-1 oil field, which is near Basra, in southern Iraq.
The consortiums led by BP and Eni will boost production at the Rumaila and Zubair oil fields, respectively. Both are in the south.
Iraqi officials say they hope the foreign companies will help increase output at the three fields from the current 2.5 million barrels per day to roughly 7 million per day over the next six years.
Since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, foreign oil companies have sought to penetrate the country, which has among the largest proven crude reserves in the world.
The firms continue to be wary of the violence, corruption and political instability in the country but are growing more tolerant of risk as other large markets such as Venezuela and Russia adopt increasingly nationalist policies.
Also Thursday, Iraqi lawmakers adjourned for the rest of the week having failed to pass a law needed to hold national elections in January.
The impasse has alarmed U.S. and U.N. officials because Iraq's electoral commission had said that it would be unable to hold the elections on time if the law was not enacted by the end of this week.
Lawmakers said they would resume deliberations Saturday in hopes of settling a dispute over how to hold the vote in the disputed northern city of Kirkuk.
Balerboy
- 07 Nov 2009 22:45
- 892 of 5505
Another comment on above:
RH - As far as you know, which country could take a big share in the investment opportunity? And why?
Richard Naab of course, the major developed country in the world is America, they spent a lot of blood and money to liberate Iraq, but in this part, the Kurdistan Region, they have not spent enough to help their brothers and our partners. "We have people we know and love here and we need to help more." But in general we have got some good US oil companies up here such as Hunt Oil co., Aspect oil, Gulf Keystone, Prime Natural Resources and Hillwood and they are here to explore for oil. I would say the biggest problem in what we call the seven sisters (Exxon-Mobile, Texaco, Chevron etc)all the big Companies are waiting for Baghdad, there they will bid next spring for more contracts in Baghdad. Because of their conservative nature, they will not start in the KRG because they do not want put at risk their relationship with Baghdad by doing business with the KRG. I personally wish they were here because the security, opportunity and the people here are better. The Kurds are friends of the USA.