Proselenes
- 13 Aug 2011 04:53
.
Proselenes
- 21 Jul 2012 14:51
- 964 of 2393
FOGL's Loligo is the single biggest well to be drilled in 2012. People are mistaken that Chariots Nimrod is bigger, but its not.
Nimrod is P50 recoverable barrels potential of just 4.361 billion barrels (page 23 of the latest CHAR presentation).
Loligo is P50 recoverable barrels potential of 4.7 billion barrels.
(The 4.9 billion attributed to Nimrod is the "mean" of the P10/P50/P90 figures - when you compare P50 of Loligo to P50 of Nimrod - Loligo is the biggest drill anywhere in the world this year).
And of course its 75% owned by FOGL - the biggest drill and the biggest potential upside in the world this year.
required field
- 21 Jul 2012 18:30
- 965 of 2393
I'm in FOGL and CHAR....but hoping for a good result mainly from FOGL....fingers crossed...because 5 targets is a lot and rumours will be flying all over the place by the time we get down to 1000m or so......fantastic upside if a strike is made.....
chuckles
- 21 Jul 2012 21:04
- 966 of 2393
Proselenes - 18 Jul 2012 10:47 - 943 of 965
As I have a very large holding now its time for me to disappear for summer holidays now and come back in the autumn - so enjoy the summer I shall pop in from time to time but not very often.
Time to tme means every 48 hrs to keep the ramp going?
FoodSexMusic7
- 21 Jul 2012 21:10
- 967 of 2393
EDITED MONEYAM
Proselenes
- 22 Jul 2012 10:29
- 969 of 2393
FoodSexMusic7
- 22 Jul 2012 18:12
- 970 of 2393
Pro - For once I would like a non-biased view!
cynic
- 22 Jul 2012 18:25
- 971 of 2393
don't think that would be possible from anyone
my own uneducated guess is that, as the usual chances of hitting oil are reckoned at little better than 4:1 or perhaps 5:1, then FOGL's odds are 7:2 at best and it could easily and justifiably be argued that they are no better than 11:2
required field
- 22 Jul 2012 19:51
- 972 of 2393
The odds are reduced with the sheer number of wells.....third one up now.....and there will be a fourth......it's the seismic showing that is interesting.....might be a massive gas discovery......this is not too far away from Sealion.....I mean it's a gamble,,,, but boy !..is there upside or what if a strike is made.....?...
aldwickk
- 22 Jul 2012 20:10
- 973 of 2393
cynic
Don't the odd's become better the more holes you drill and what area you are drilling in ?
Gerponville18
- 22 Jul 2012 20:42
- 974 of 2393
From the Daily Mail........Very interesting!
INVESTMENT EXTRA: Troubled waters of the FalklandsBy Ian Lyall
PUBLISHED: 22:17, 20 July 2012 | UPDATED: 22:33, 20 July 2012
Comments (3) Share
The past two weeks have revealed the make-or-break nature of exploration in the waters off the Falkland Islands, one of the world’s most remote and treacherous oil frontiers.
Success has translated into a bumper $1billion (£639million) deal for Rockhopper Exploration, failure saw 70 per cent wiped from the value of rival Borders & Southern in one brutal day of trading.
Exploration by UK firms Shell and Lasmo in the late 1990s pointed to the existence of significant quantities of oil and gas in the area.
Final frontier: As established oil reserves continue to decline, explorers are hoping to cash in on the Falklands
However crude prices were at a very low ebb (their lowest level in a quarter of a century, in fact) making it impossible to establish a sound economic case for further exploration of the area at that time.
So it took until February 2010 for exploration to restart.
In all, five companies operate in the area.
Three of them – Rockhopper, Argos Resources and Desire Petroleum – are in the northern basin.
The other two, Borders and Falklands Oil & Gas, hold acreage in the deeper and more technically challenging waters in the south.
More...GRIFFITHS on SATURDAY: Long march to build better boardrooms
ALEX BRUMMER: After lending and infrastructure, housing next to the rescue
Robert Bready's incentive to swallow his pride over ASOS
It is interesting how the landscape (or should that be seascape) is shaping up for the current wave of independent oil companies.
There is a north-south split, with the former yielding the most tangible evidence of commercial oil. Exploration of the southern basin has been hotly anticipated, particularly as seismic surveys suggested that five of the seven biggest Falklands oil prospects were in this area – and that they were potentially world class.
But the two latest holes made in the southern basin have shaken the optimism that accompanied the arrival of the giant Leiv Eiriksson drill rig earlier this year. They point to the area being the source of gas and gas condensate, but not oil.
This is rather disappointing. Gas is a far less commercial proposition than oil in this context.
If it had been found in the North Sea then there would a ready market. But it is far more difficult and costly to commercialise these finds when they are stranded in the choppy waters of the South Atlantic.
It means investors are having to recalibrate expectations.
The Leiv Eiriksson moves on to the Falklands Oil & Gas acreage next, and the Loligo target in particular.
With prospective resource of some 4.7billion barrels of crude, it is the biggest drill target anywhere in the world this year, according to Edison Investment Research. And if it lives up to its billing then it would be ten times the size of Rockhopper’s Sea Lion field, which generated the $1billion deal mentioned earlier.
So the potential reward is huge. But also remember – the chance of success is put at just one-in-five.
Rockhopper, meanwhile, is showing how it is done by bringing in Premier Oil on Sea Lion.
The FTSE 250 group is acquiring a 60 per cent stake and operatorship of Sea Lion with an initial payment of $231million (£147million). It has also agreed to pay exploration and development costs running to $770million (£492million), with the plan of bringing the field into production by 2017.
In Premier, Rockhopper has landed a partner from the oil and gas industry’s second tier, prompting questions as to why one of the majors wasn’t willing to commit to the area.
Although tensions between the UK and Argentina over the sovereignty of the islands may have been one off-putting factor.
Indeed, Premier’s chief executive Simon Lockett admitted to thinking ‘long and hard’ before finally pressing the go button on the deal.
‘Our conclusion was that this is a risk worth taking,’ he said recently. ‘It would be foolhardy of us to dismiss the risk as nothing.’
It is interesting to note that the Falklands could generate tax and royalties of around $180billion (£115billion), according to research carried out earlier this year by Edison.
So the area’s potential is huge. Whether we see it fully realised is another matter.
Read more: http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/article-2176688/INVESTMENT-EXTRA-Troubled-waters-Falklands.html#ixzz21NksoriJ
FoodSexMusic7
- 23 Jul 2012 00:01
- 975 of 2393
When is the bloody Leiv Eiriksson rig coming??????????????????????
FoodSexMusic7
- 23 Jul 2012 00:17
- 976 of 2393
I don't get it, if there's 4.7 billion barrels guaranteed recoverable oil, then why is there odds of only 4/1 ????????????????????
Proselenes
- 23 Jul 2012 04:46
- 977 of 2393
cynic
- 23 Jul 2012 07:34
- 978 of 2393
there most assuredly is NOT " 4.7 billion barrels guaranteed recoverable oil" ...... it seems to have escaped your notice that but FOGL hasn't found $4.7-worth yet
blackdown
- 23 Jul 2012 07:40
- 979 of 2393
And if they do find anything, it will take 3-5 years before any production gets underway.
Balerboy
- 23 Jul 2012 07:46
- 980 of 2393
Somebody tell RF that.,.
cynic
- 23 Jul 2012 08:04
- 981 of 2393
BD - the production bit is relatively unimportant ..... it's FINDING commercial quantities that will trigger ..... IF commercial quantities are found by FOGL, then the whole dynamic of the FI region changes, together with that of all companies involved.
blackdown
- 23 Jul 2012 08:06
- 982 of 2393
Fair enough, but the value of the finds is related to the amount of oil and the cost/barrel of extraction.
cynic
- 23 Jul 2012 08:16
- 983 of 2393
yeeeees, but a good find will change general sentiment for the region dramatically, and specifically the perceived value of any company that actually has the stuff - e.g. FOGL and RKH, always supposing ......