Rockhopper Exploration ehemals FALKLAND OIL & GAS +++ 270% mit Öl (Seite 91)
eröffnet am 03.12.04 12:00:47 von
neuester Beitrag 04.04.24 11:58:50 von
neuester Beitrag 04.04.24 11:58:50 von
Beiträge: 4.506
ID: 932.322
ID: 932.322
Aufrufe heute: 2
Gesamt: 538.405
Gesamt: 538.405
Aktive User: 0
ISIN: GB00B0FVQX23 · WKN: A0F6YF · Symbol: R4Y
0,1500
EUR
-4,46 %
-0,0070 EUR
Letzter Kurs 14:37:53 Tradegate
Werte aus der Branche Öl/Gas
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
1,1300 | +34,52 | |
16,070 | +12,85 | |
0,9500 | +10,47 | |
0,5280 | +10,00 | |
20,600 | +8,42 |
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
5,3000 | -10,32 | |
4,1300 | -11,56 | |
15,010 | -12,99 | |
35,17 | -18,38 | |
4,2000 | -25,66 |
Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.730 von Andrija am 23.04.12 09:30:08wer steht eigentlich als nächster drill an. Chariot, oder noch jemand dazwischen?
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.692 von Ikar am 23.04.12 09:19:16Auf dem Niveau kaufe ich lieber RKH nach. Bei uns und BOR dauert es noch. Da gehe ich mal besser von einem Farm-in-Deal bei RKH aus und verwende das Geld dann zum Nachkaufen für das Südfalklandbecken.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.691 von Loewenpower am 23.04.12 09:19:13
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.702 von senna7 am 23.04.12 09:22:37Sorry hatte ich übersehen
ok neue Seite dann hier nochmal für Dich
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.665 von Andrija am 23.04.12 09:13:50der Markt schätzt das entsprechend grad ein.
Ist aber eine Bestätigung, dass es in South auch ein System gibt, wird wohl auch für BOR nette Einstiegschancen vor dem zweiten Schuss geben. FOGL hält sich super.
Ist aber eine Bestätigung, dass es in South auch ein System gibt, wird wohl auch für BOR nette Einstiegschancen vor dem zweiten Schuss geben. FOGL hält sich super.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.073.665 von Andrija am 23.04.12 09:13:50Hat jemand eine Link für London ??? RT DANKE
Zitat von ikarusfly: es ist aber nicht die erwartete recovery news......
ja weiss ich , leider hat sich die Meldung mit meinen Kauf überschnitten , da ich ja aber nur 1 /4 aufgestockt habe bin ich immer noch gut im Plus
( hab halt nun ein paar EWuro mehr bezahlt ....)
aber ich wollte eben noch unbedingt Stücke haben , wir trefffen dann( hoffentlich ) das ÖLFELD
oil Brat aus iii:
Someone yesterday asked that the management released an rns in plain English. This isn't it.
Forget the ladybird book of geology where the reservoir is an upside down pudding bowl and there is gas then oil then water is distinct layers.
This is gas condensate. It is not oil as most people think of it and it's not water. No mention of an oil water contact which is good. The porosity is good and I'll assume the permeability is sufficient. The pressure at that depth should be plenty.
The unknown is the ratio of wet gas to dry gas. If it's dry gas 100% then it's value is limited (you need a lot and a significant processing facility). If it's where a very high percentage of wet gas / condensate then that's very different. When this is all done and it will take a while the results will state approx xxxm bbloe dry gas with an estimated xx-xxx of gas condensate. If the xx are 50m condensate then it'll be marginal, if it's 200m then it's great the marker for commerciality is probably somewhere in between. For the purpose of avoiding doubt, this is not 100% condensate, that is very important to understand.
The dry gas has a value but it's limited by access to market. If this was the north sea then it's straight in the pipeline to sales. However it's not pipeable to the nearest Market especially as that nearest Market is hostile.
It all hangs on the ratio between dry gas and wet gas / condensate. Unfortunately they will have to do a bit more work and more drilling before they can understand the boundaries of commerciality. Shame they weren't set for a flow test it probably would flow well from that depth and make pretty pictures.
From a uk plc point of view a good day. A hydro carbon system in the south big bonus all round.
Someone yesterday asked that the management released an rns in plain English. This isn't it.
Forget the ladybird book of geology where the reservoir is an upside down pudding bowl and there is gas then oil then water is distinct layers.
This is gas condensate. It is not oil as most people think of it and it's not water. No mention of an oil water contact which is good. The porosity is good and I'll assume the permeability is sufficient. The pressure at that depth should be plenty.
The unknown is the ratio of wet gas to dry gas. If it's dry gas 100% then it's value is limited (you need a lot and a significant processing facility). If it's where a very high percentage of wet gas / condensate then that's very different. When this is all done and it will take a while the results will state approx xxxm bbloe dry gas with an estimated xx-xxx of gas condensate. If the xx are 50m condensate then it'll be marginal, if it's 200m then it's great the marker for commerciality is probably somewhere in between. For the purpose of avoiding doubt, this is not 100% condensate, that is very important to understand.
The dry gas has a value but it's limited by access to market. If this was the north sea then it's straight in the pipeline to sales. However it's not pipeable to the nearest Market especially as that nearest Market is hostile.
It all hangs on the ratio between dry gas and wet gas / condensate. Unfortunately they will have to do a bit more work and more drilling before they can understand the boundaries of commerciality. Shame they weren't set for a flow test it probably would flow well from that depth and make pretty pictures.
From a uk plc point of view a good day. A hydro carbon system in the south big bonus all round.