Proselenes
- 15 Jun 2011 08:54
.
required field
- 26 Jun 2012 18:51
- 921 of 1086
Very large buys gone through !...
chuckles
- 26 Jun 2012 21:37
- 922 of 1086
What's the point in these wild cat outfits? Chance of success is usually exaggerated and most have less than a one in ten chance, better to put the money on a nag with nine other runners, theoretically the same odds of winning and with a bit of work, even better. Tadah
greekman
- 27 Jun 2012 08:04
- 923 of 1086
Chuckles,
When I see comments like yours, 'What's the point in these wild cat outfits? Chance of success is usually exaggerated and most have less than a one in ten chance', that to me says it all.
It is the 1 in 10 chance that we invest in, when we chance our money on these Wild Cat Outfits, as high risk hopefully equals high reward!
If we wanted more secure investing we would go for FTSE 100 type companies.
Any the actual point of these wild cat outfits, is that without them, very little oil would be found.
These outfits proceed the more secure, lower risk, profit companies.
Proselenes
- 29 Jun 2012 01:42
- 924 of 1086
Looks like an update might come out pre-AGM noting that the Stebbing results will be perhaps a couple more weeks before coming out - just a small delay, no bad news as far as I know.
Lets see. Will be time to buy some BOR if that is the update.
Proselenes
- 29 Jun 2012 15:19
- 926 of 1086
Borders and Southern AGM presentation today, link below.
http://www.bordersandsouthern.com/media/pdf/AGM2012.pdf
.
Proselenes
- 29 Jun 2012 15:42
- 927 of 1086
faldiz attended the AGM and these are his notes :
"..............AGM was very lively, with one or two people challenging the limited information coming from the company.
It's a point that has puzzled many of us, but to my mind the following points explain it:
- "how could [an oil major] make a hostile bid without knowing what we have"
- may want to bid for additional open licences
- Board hold about 60m shares between them [more than in any other FI explorer] - want to maximise value
The board is experienced, oil exploration is competitive - they want to keep competitive advantage.
I'm not going to try to reproduce all of the technical detail (there was quite a lot) - hopefully Gramacho and others will fill in, but what I will to is give some impressions:
As to what they have: Darwin (east + west) is 1.88 TCF gas minimum, 2.5 best, 2.88 max.
liquid content: board would not be drawn at this stage, but a chap who has consulted for both BOR and now FOGL was willing in conversation to put it at 50m to 150m barrels per TCF, but most likely around 80-100. which gives us around 200m barrells most likely but range 100 to 420. Commercial needs to be 'in the hundreds" (Obee).
--> my view is it will be commercial. Full analysis 10 weeks from 18th of June, but some results, eg liquids content sooner - perhaps a few weeks.
Some revealing comments
- there will be another BOR campaign, it will be 5+ wells, mixture of appraisal and exploration. (Obee, response to question)
- "they will still be drilling in FI in 40 years time" (Dobson)
- BOR prospects "have best potential i've seen in 20 years in oil industry (mostly BHP)" (Fleming)
- Looking for rigs now
- would have first call on 5th slot, but at moment not certain/available
Burgess and Bute would be order 1bn barrells, if successful.
SP will rise, just wait for fund raising time.............."
Proselenes
- 30 Jun 2012 02:02
- 928 of 1086
BOR AGM notes from "TheFlyingMule".......
......Good evening all. Here is my ‘summary’ of the AGM today. It’s a bit in depth but I hope it’s of some use. I do have a recording of it, which I will try to upload when I get more time but these are my thoughts on the morning’s events. I’ve reproduced my notes as best I can, though I can’t guarantee the accuracy and there are others that are far more qualified than me to comment on the technical aspects but, again, I hope it provides at least a flavour of the meeting.
An excellent day all told. I’d recommend going to the AGMs of these companies – the opportunity for access to the BOD of multi million pound companies doesn’t come along very often!
I imagine there were around 50 shareholders there (I think last year’s was 15 or so?) as well as various analysts, PR people and the BOD of course. The meeting started at 10:00 and went on for nearly an hour and a half, which left just half an hour for further questions on the sidelines before everyone was ushered out before the next corporate do commenced.
Harry Dobson (HD; Chairman) kicked things off with the resolutions and they were all duly passed unanimously with a show of hands, including amusing witterings from HD proposing himself (I’m not sure Mr. Kozel will get the same reception for the remuneration resolution at GKP’s AGM in a few weeks..!).
That wrapped up swiftly and Howard Obee (HO; CEO) then launched into the AGM presentation. This wasn’t the same presentation as is now on the website – more on that later – but he talked us through it with questions from the floor as we went along.
HD emphasised at the beginning that there would be no discussion about Stebbing. He initially said it was ‘tight’ – my first thought was ‘oh no, not another DESaster with their tight sands at Rachel’. Then I thought he meant time was tight, as in there have been delays and, finally, with a request for clarification from the floor later on, he confirmed that ‘tight’ meant there was essentially a communications blackout regarding Stebbing! Drilling continues…
Anyway, on with the show.
Darwin:
- The numbers given were for Darwin East and West. Shallow marine environment in the lower cretaceous.
- Condensate samples were shipped back to the UK. It isn’t permissible to fly the samples on commercial flights so they could either spend several hundred thousand dollars chartering an aircraft or they could sent it by ship, which they obviously have done and it took four weeks to arrive.
- The geological results were extremely close to prognosis with the top of the reservoir predicted to within one metre – not bad for rank wildcat drilling eh?! [Over the 4,800 metres, that’s an error of 0.02%!!]
- Condensate value depends on its content. They BOD would not be drawn on ‘possibilities’ but their overall enthusiasm would suggest they are confident.
- Gas Initially In Place figures were given (Min 1.88TCF, Most Likely 2.44, Max 2.88). Liquids content is subject to on-going analysis. 10 weeks from 18th June.
- The TD of the drill ended up in water bearing sands. They felt there is a possibility of more sands beneath the water but seeing as they already had a valuable condensate find, they were content to leave that for another day. [I suspect they were wary of any more cost overruns and opted for prudence]
- Delays were caused by problems with the rig itself and also due to taking a long time to drill through some of the rock formations. Extra casing needed to be set to stabilise the hole. Rank wildcatting will always be a laborious process so not unexpected imo.
- Part of the extra time to drill through the rock was due to using water based drilling mud rather than oil based mud. It’s more environmentally friendly to use water but doesn’t perform as well it seems!
- Two thirds of the $40 million cost overruns were related to the other supply costs of hiring a rig.
- We were treated to the logs of Darwin; this information, along with the seismic slides, is not in the presentation on the website. I would love to pore over them in more detail rather than craning my neck at the slides from a distance but I’m sure Gramacho (delighted to put a face to the name at last but disappointed about the lack of elbow pads!) will be able to provide some colour. Without giving too much away, HO seemed quietly confident when discussing the gas readings.
- MDT gave the Gas-condensate gradient information, which told them of the condensate.
- The source rock wasn’t penetrated. HO believes that is still below where they drilled Darwin. Geochemistry testing of the cuttings to come in the next few weeks which may help answer whether the condensate was a result of the quality of the original source rock or whether it was a function of the thermal and migration history of the hydrocarbons that were generated. That will then aid prediction of distribution of oil, gas and condensate in the region.
Rig:
- Excellent team on board the LE. Having a high spec rig is all good and well but if there aren’t the appropriate operators, it’s potential won’t be realised. Fortunately there are excellent crews on the rig!
- The rig itself is performing very well. A few days ago there were 18/19m waves and it carried on drilling.
- Environmental conditions are less harsh than expected. Originally, it was thought they would be similar to those west of the Shetlands. It seems conditions are more benign than there. This is in part due to the southern tip of South America essentially acting as a windbreak to the large weather systems that come in from the west from the Pacific and protects the Islands from the worst conditions as the fetch distance is greatly reduced. [nice to know Argentina still helping out, even if they don’t want to ]
- BOR own the rig contract. When it was asked whether there would be a fifth well in this current campaign, HO said it was a possibility but it would depend on timings as it is due to go to Scandinavia after finishing in the Falklands. [my impression was they weren’t particularly keen on drilling another well; they have enough on their plate and they don’t want to be rushed into something just for the sake of it.]
Future Campaigns:
- Appraisal of Darwin should be relatively straightforward.
- The next campaign will have “a lot more wells.” Exploration will take place alongside the
appraisals and would be at least 5 wells. Rig availability the key issue.
- Open acreage will be of interest to them eventually – hence the relatively hush-hush nature of
their communications strategy.
- 3D; both new and re-processing existing. They were absolutely delighted with the ‘superb’ data and that was what put Darwin on the map, so to speak.
- Currently tendering for 3D seismic with the aim of shooting it in the southern hemisphere summer. Currently seems to be a good availability of seismic boats.
Prospects:
- Next 3D to be shot to the north of Darwin.
- Covington is a tilted fault block to the north of Darwin but only on 2D. This is a priority. It looks uncannily similar to how Darwin did on 2D. They then got the 3D and the rest is history! HO optimistic Covington will look similar to Darwin with the 3D.
- Deeper targets of Stokes and Sullivan.
- All prospects are a similar age and, with the positive result of Darwin, reduces their risk profiles compared with six months ago.
- Burgess and Bute fan systems ‘down the slope’ in the deeper marine environment. As a rough indication, Bute could be 1 billion barrels for that sized fan.
- Prospect inventory with resource estimates to come when they re-evaluate, including other new leads.
- Darwin smallest prospect in terms of area (with 2.5TCF of gas).
Funding:
- Lots of options, especially thanks to having 100% of their acreage.
- HD was extremely confident of getting any $$$ that may be required. He was fairly tight lipped but felt with the masses of top quality data they have, they wouldn’t have any trouble getting funds when needed.
Communication Strategy:
- It was inferred the BOD weren’t working in the best interest of shareholders by being so averse to publishing detailed information. HD was reasonably unimpressed with this suggestion I think. Commercially sensitive information is the key; it’s an excellent bargaining chip and should stop a hostile takeover.
- Bulletin boards were discussed. iii called HO and said the site had had 23,000 hits leading up to Darwin results.
- HD didn’t like bulletin boards as he felt they encouraged rumours with ramping/de-ramping etc. [Though, of course, if they were to release more information, there would probably be less speculation...]
- Concerning relations with the Falklands Government, HO said they had excellent relations with them and found them to be extremely helpful as and when they required. When asked if he thought FIG may improve royalty terms to encourage development of Darwin if the condensate results weren’t so promising, he thought it unlikely seeing as the terms are already extremely favourable. He was more concerned they may shift the royalty rates up now they’ve found something!
My 2p Worth:
BOD very much in this for the long term with HD stating this will see him out until the end of his days. They do have incentives, in the form of 60-70 million shares between them.
Technically, I think they’ve done a fantastic job. Their prospect inventory looks very interesting and they are keen to tick all the boxes in a timely and appropriate fashion. They will not be coerced into publishing data just for the sake of it. [this largely related to a question regarding the condensate yield. Gramacho very kindly offered his prediction, which I’m sure he’ll come to later]
HD believes the market doesn’t understand the significance of Darwin.
On a personal note, I like to see a strong technical side to the company and I have to say I was very impressed with the technical story at BOR. They seem to be going about things in the right way, which, given time, will reward patient investors.
I would say they could work on marketing the company better. Yes, they have a long term view but a higher share price doesn’t do anyone any harm!
That’s all for now; a long but very worthwhile day.
GLA,
TFM............
cynic
- 30 Jun 2012 21:23
- 929 of 1086
the market says that good news is increasingly unlikely
Proselenes
- 01 Jul 2012 02:33
- 930 of 1086
GKP has fallen from 450p to 160p in the past couple of months - therefore the market is saying GKP is a bad stock and bad news is coming ?
Is this the way it all works cynic ? LOL
They are still 7 to 14 days from news IMO - which means there will not be spikes in the share price until quite a few days later, when results near.
Proselenes
- 01 Jul 2012 06:19
- 931 of 1086
Gramacho's BOR AGM notes below :
.........A lively AGM and a very good presentation from BOR on Friday.
Summary/Key Points
• If Darwin alone contains insufficient liquids on which to base a development several other prospects are within subsea tieback distance offering IMO the opportunity to aggregate further gas condensate discoveries into one development.
• Reservoir continuity on seismic and good trap definition suggests Darwin will require few appraisal wells. IMO rock properties suggest well deliverability will be extremely high and gas condensate well spacing is typically much larger than that of oil fields this will also assist commerciality.
• BOR has the MDT pressure gradient across the main Darwin sand and will have a sense as to whether Darwin is a relatively lean gas condensate with modest liquids yield or a relatively rich gas condensate with a high liquids yield. However it will not be drawn into estimating the likely range because there is significant uncertainty in any such estimate and prefers to wait until definitive numbers are obtained from the lab tests.
• Further work is required to understand the source rock and migration story. Based on the information obtained from the well to date BOR retains the belief that the source rock immediately underneath Darwin is in the oil window despite gas condensate having been found. It believes the acreage in the vicinity of Darwin may yet contain oil fields.
• The well did not encounter a gas water contact and therefore we still don’t know for sure that Darwin doesn’t contain an oil leg. Apparently there is room between the flat spot depth and the highest known water in a lower sand to house an oil column. However would there be sufficient contrast between a gas condensate and oil leg to generate the observed flat spot?
• Stebbing is being drilled as a tight hole and it was extremely difficult to get a read on what the well has found to date. I could speculate but it would be without much technical justification so I am not comfortable doing so.
• Management is extremely confident they will be able to conduct a significant appraisal and exploration program once further 3D seismic has been obtained and the existing 3D seismic has been reprocessed to incorporate the well results.
DISCUSSION
1. BORs Communication Strategy and “that” Condensate Yield
BOR’s communication strategy remains unchanged. fadilz’s note of 16:14 on Friday 29th sums it up well. Hence once again you had to be present to see the seismic and well logs and several slides have been omitted from the web version of the presentation. It was nevertheless very pleasing to see Howard and his team open up with more information about the high potential of this acreage.
Clearly BOR are guarding their interpretation of this fairway to secure a competitive advantage in any future application for open acreage nearby. The company demonstrating the best understanding of the play and how it works in the open acreage will be the front runner to obtain the licence. One would also hope that the F.I. government would recognise BOR for having opened up the play (and its shareholders for taking the investment risk) and reward it with some or all of the remaining acreage into which the play extends.
The concern for PIs is, given that Darwin is a gas condensate discovery, BOR may not have done enough by way of release of information to retain the market’s interest and thereby support the sp, particularly in these difficult times. Hence will funds be raised for additional drilling at the optimal sp? Certainly Friday’s presentation goes some way towards revealing some of the potential but until the Darwin condensate yield and Stebbing results are released we don’t know how critical selling the potential will be.
BOR pointed out that having 100% W.I gives them other options such as bringing in a partner. Harry Dobson pointed out he and his team have a long track record over many years of securing funding for businesses and certainly the track record to date with BOR is impeccable. He pointed out that the IIs have seen more information via confidentiality agreements and the IIs have backed the company to date. Perhaps the private investors just feel the pressure more as it is our own money on the table. Harry mentioned the board’s substantial holding and he believed they had as much if not more of an interest in making this work than most of the shareholders in attendance.
There was an impassioned plea by one shareholder, an ex CEO or Chairman of a public company, for BOR to indicate the likely range of condensate yields at Darwin to go along with the range GIP estimates. This received a lot of support in the room and the temperature rose a few degrees!
The GIIP estimate is 2.44 TCF +18% or -23% which is a rather tight range considering only one well has been drilled. (Definitely a function of the great trap definition afforded by the seismic and the flat spot.) The possible range in condensate yield is multiple times that of the GIIP range so it is not surprising that BOR is unwilling to quote a probable range at present.
Without any well specific information the range of condensate yields varies by a factor of 10+, i.e. 20 to 200+ bbl/MMCF (equal to 20 to 200+MMbbl/TCF, could even be as high as 300+) as has been discussed here previously.
As mentioned in the summary of key points I believe it is possible to get a sense of how rich or lean the condensate is from the MDT pressure gradient but it would not be definitive and would leave room for significant error. It wasn’t clear that BOR had asked specialists to estimate the range using the pressure gradient information. What they did say was that the possibility of a gas condensate reservoir had not been on their minds before drilling (gas or oil being the more obvious outcomes they had focused on).
fadilz commented “a chap who has consulted for both BOR and now FOGL was willing in conversation to put it at 50m to 150m barrels per TCF, but most likely around 80-100...” Whilst the 50 bbl/MM is easy to rationalise the case for 80-100 ML and 150 High is not clear. It would have been interesting to share in that conversation. Certainly other elements of FOGLs understanding of what BOR had encountered have proven incorrect so IMO we just have to wait for the lab results.
It is worth noting that BOR consider they will struggle to commercialise Darwin if the yield is 50 bbl/MM but may have a commercial project “if it is in the hundreds”. Whether this meant 100+ or 200+ was not clear. In any event BOR has not yet done the necessary work yet to show the value range for a specific CGR.
The complete work scope to analyse the condensate samples is 10 weeks but Howard did promise to release yield information prior to then if it becomes available. BOR took a comprehensive set of samples from four depths so they have good coverage and will be able to detect any variation of yield with depth.
2. Darwin Results
Slide 9 shows the reservoir properties which are very favourable (see later comments on well spacing and deliverability). It was particularly interesting to learn that the well did not encounter reservoir at the depth of the flat spot. BOR did not select a drilling location where it was present. There is a thick shale section separating the main reservoir package from an underlying water bearing sand interval. As I understand it the flat spot is located elsewhere on the structure within the depth interval encompassed by this shale section.
Hence whilst the flat spot is probably a gas condensate-water level, that is not yet proven and there is room between the highest known water in the lower sand and the flat spot depth to house an oil column down dip of the well. BOR will have MDT pressure points in the main gas sand and in the underlying sand and can determine whether the intersection of the two gradients agrees with the flat spot depth. If it does then this would suggest there is a gas condensate – water contact down dip of the discovery well. However that technique is only valid if the lower sand is in pressure communication with the main gas bearing sand and BOR did not confirm that the two sands are in pressure communication. (In fact in the post presentation chat they pointed out the limitations of the technique if they are not. Bit of a tease there lol!). We have seen examples in the Sea Lion wells of sands on different pressure profiles and this may be another example.
The continued potential for an oil leg is not an outcome that BOR pushed at the AGM although of course this was considered to be very possible prior to the drill. A gas condensate contains a broader spectrum of components found in oil than would a gas cap. Would there still be sufficient contrast to generate a flat spot at the contact between gas condensate and oil? It is still in the gas phase in the reservoir so perhaps it would.
The presence of an additional Lwr Cretaceous sand will be of interest to BOR because it may be present elsewhere in conjunction with a valid trap. It wasn’t clear whether this is a sand that is being targeted in the other prospects such as Sulivan and Stokes. The well TD’d in sand and BOR believe there are additional sands deeper in Darwin. BOR did not offer an explanation why this sand is not charged. Is there sand to sand contact across the fault at this level or is it not on the migration path? As usual at this stage lots of questions yet to be answered.
Apart from the condensate yield one of the more interesting outcomes of the lab work will be the reservoir fluid viscosity. Hopefully Howard will publish it because it would, along with the excellent permeability and apparent reservoir continuity from seismic, support the case for very high well deliverabilities. We could be looking at a well spacing of 2.5km2 and only 8-10 producers with say 4 gas recycle wells which would assist in lowering development drilling costs.
Drilling costs were a concern going into the meeting given how long Darwin took to drill. Darwin cost about $95MM. The rig equipment problems were responsible for about 1/3 of the $40MM overrun which puts the well cost at $82MM without this one off event. (The rig was on zero rate whilst the problem continued so the $13MM represents the remainder of the spread costs.) The majority of the overrun appears to be due to drilling issues including hole instability due to tectonic stress. An extra string of casing was run at one stage to stabilise the hole. BOR appear very confident this can be overcome by change of mud type. In addition a multi well campaign would see fixed costs shared over more wells so, together with the benefit of the usual learning curve, drilling costs should reduce as more wells are drilled. Apart from the equipment problems the rig has performed extremely well with only about 2 days lost due to weather.
3. The Lower Cretaceous Play Fairway
Prospects
This acreage is target rich. BOR showed us 4 further prospects (Covington, Chaffers, Burgess and Bute) plus what appeared to be an unnamed lead/prospect and 2 deeper prospects Sulivan and Stokes. BOR showed a blob map of the prospect outlines to scale. IMO you could draw a 15km radius from a central point that would encompass most of the prospective resources shown. Hence, IF this turns out to be a gas condensate play, any further successes have the potential to be aggregated into one development as they are all within subsea tieback distance.
This is important because it is not yet clear whether Darwin alone contains sufficient liquids on which to base a development. If it doesn’t a single central processing facility could handle condensate from multiple discoveries.
Slide 18 of the web presentation is striking in that all the prospects are much larger than Darwin emphasising again how BOR stuck to their principle of drilling the highest COS prospect first even though that could and indeed has lead to questions about commerciality. The key to this strategy will be how Darwin success and the ability to reprocess the 3D and calibrate the AVO response will affect the COS of the rest of the portfolio.
Covington is an amplitude supported prospect which is particularly interesting as it appears to be up dip from Darwin and could have received oil displaced from Darwin by a later gas condensate charge. It has an area almost 50% larger than Darwin so there is potential for a larger accumulation. However it is currently defined on the 2D and needs maturing with new 3D before BOR will drill it. I expect this to have a very high pre drill COS. Chaffers has some data quality issues and requires 3D reprocessing.
Source Rock Maturity
Howard said that the thermal gradient is very close to what was predicted. IMO this is good news because had temperatures been much higher than predicted this would have invalidated the source rock maturity map in the CPR. This was drawn based on the Aptian (Lwr Cretaceous) source rock top oil window being at 3000m below the seabed and the top gas window at 4150m below seabed. A higher temp gradient would have placed much more of the source rock in the gas window than predicted.
61/17-1 TD was 4876m which would be about 2838m below mudline. Hence any potential source rocks encountered in the well are expected to be immature or in the early oil window and therefore not responsible for the gas condensate. Howard said they don’t believe a source rock was encountered but final confirmation will come from geochemical analysis of the cuttings.
BOR thinks it knows where the Aptian source rock is deeper in the section below Darwin. We did not ask if BOR are planning to verify the pick by finding the source rock. It seems fairly fundamental to know the source rock depth to confirm another part of the source rock story. The question of drilling deeper came up in the context of there being more sands deeper in the Lower Cretaceous that could be hydrocarbon bearing. Howard indicated they may well drill deeper in a later well such as Covington.
The Aptian is one of the youngest age periods of the Lower Cretaceous so it is not necessary to drill through the entire LC to find the source and hence it would seem there would not be too much of a cost penalty to drill the source. The Stebbing lower target is in the Upper Cretaceous so it doesn’t offer the opportunity to confirm the pick.
There are three other areas of uncertainty regarding the source rock:
a) The type of source rock i.e. whether it is oil prone, gas prone or mixed. The source rock is believed to be oil prone based on DSDP wells but these are hundreds of miles from Darwin.
b) The thermal history i.e. in the past has the source rock been subject to higher temperatures than associated with the present day burial?
c) Is there a migration path that links Darwin with a deeper part of the basin where the source is in the gas window?
If these areas of uncertainty can be addressed then BOR will have a good handle on the source rock and the distribution of oil versus gas condensate. Drilling the source rock would answer a) and b) although I suspect b) can be answered by analysing samples from the well. c) may be something that BOR looks at in the post well review.
4. Stebbing and the Tertiary Fold Belt Play
It was so hard to get a read on Stebbing due to the tight hole status. BOR advised in the spud RNS that the drilling time estimate was subject to “geological challenges” that might cause variation from the estimate. I suspect this was a recognition that the hole problems encountered in Darwin could again be present in Stebbing. The wells are less than 50 km apart and Stebbing will encounter most of the formations encountered by Darwin. In addition Stebbing will encounter rocks that have been subject to tectonic stresses associated with folding. It is unlikely BOR would have been in a position to switch to a different mud system (e.g. an oil based mud system) if the cuttings handling equipment was not on board. Hence IMO the delays seen on Stebbing are to be expected.
Although Howard would not take questions about the status of Stebbing he did confirm the content of an OGJ article from 2009 which suggested there is a chain of five anticlines with gas hydrates located above the crests sounded correct. In other words there is a lot of upside should Stebbing be a discovery.
5. Forward Program
BOR are planning on running a new 3D survey in the FI summer at the end of the year. This should firm up Covington and provide other exploration targets. My sense is that a rig can be contracted on the basis of the results from reprocessing of the existing 3D survey provided there is sufficient encouragement from the Darwin liquids yield and Stebbing.
BOR were indicating that a firm program of five wells is one possibility and IMO the area covered by the existing 3D should support this length of program. The new survey might enable any optional slots to be filled if the results are available in time.
CONCLUSIONS AND OTHER OBSERVATIONS
• BOR has just scratched the surface in terms of revealing the potential of this acreage. There is a healthy prospect portfolio that should expand when the 3D has been reprocessed and additional 3D is run and interpreted.
• The Stebbing results will have a bearing on the importance placed on the Darwin liquids yield. If Stebbing were to find oil then the focus would be on Stebbing and less so on Darwin. If Stebbing were to find a gas condensate then the focus will be on sample results from both wells.
• The key to the share price will be demonstrating it can find enough liquids to underpin a commercial project. RKH was able to prove commerciality over the course of several wells in one drilling campaign which helped underpin the share price. BOR has only two wells in which to achieve the comfort of commerciality to underpin the share price. That is asking a lot. Should BOR not achieve that then sp performance will be influenced by how the longer term potential of the acreage is viewed versus a sub commercial discovery or one that can only be commercialised in the longer term.
• It was evident from Harry Dobson’s comments that this has been an extremely stressful campaign as a result of the rig problems. It was good to hear him pay tribute to the efforts of the team who have overcome the problems and delivered a discovery despite all the issues.
Finished at last!
Regards and GLA including the BOR management team,
Gramacho
PS: Apologies if I had to cut short one or two conversations at the AGM in order to get some time with the BOR folk in the post presentation conversations. Since BOR don’t do the PI presentation circuit we only get this opportunity once a year!........
Proselenes
- 02 Jul 2012 08:17
- 932 of 1086
Its the build up time now - results of Stebbing could be next week, so its build up time - watch the volume - any big volume days of 4m to 5m shares could be a sign of impending news.
Proselenes
- 02 Jul 2012 13:30
- 934 of 1086
Going up well today, but not a surprise - Stebbing results very soon.
Proselenes
- 02 Jul 2012 15:07
- 935 of 1086
Pretty much what we know, big gas kick, results next week. Was it a gap cap on top of oil...... or more condensate/gas ? Find out soon........
http://www.pandjenergy.co.uk/
............“A strategically important exploration well being drilled to the south of the Falkland Islands is expected to complete within the next 10 days or so.
Rumours are circulating stock market boards that the rig Leiv Eiriksson has encountered hydrocarbons while drilling Stebbing for Borders & Southern. They include that a large gas kick occurred, leading to a pause in drilling operations.”.........
cynic
- 02 Jul 2012 15:53
- 936 of 1086
the market clearly sets little store with that rumour
Proselenes
- 02 Jul 2012 16:09
- 937 of 1086
Complete and utter communications lock down at the moment. All we know is that for sure they got a gas kick - but you get them with oil and also with gas.
Since then nobody knows any more - so its all to play for.
Watch for a big volume day......... 5 millions shares or more in a day and something has leaked imo.
required field
- 02 Jul 2012 16:18
- 938 of 1086
Things starting to hot up then.......
cynic
- 02 Jul 2012 16:50
- 939 of 1086
bullshit ...... volume today was <3m against a running daily 3 month average of just under 5m ...... you've played that tune too often of late
HARRYCAT
- 02 Jul 2012 17:11
- 940 of 1086
Oh boy, rf, you are in trouble now!!!! ;o)