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    Africa Oil Corp. - World-Class East Africa Oil Exploration (Seite 220)

    eröffnet am 23.06.11 21:04:25 von
    neuester Beitrag 28.04.24 15:36:08 von
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    ID: 1.167.139
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    ISIN: CA00829Q1019 · WKN: A0MZJC · Symbol: AFZ
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     Ja Nein
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.12.12 19:50:52
      Beitrag Nr. 1.931 ()
      Die Kehrseite der Medaille,sollte man als Investor auch wissen:

      http://www.ftd.de/politik/international/:top-oekonomen-jeffr…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.12.12 17:49:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.930 ()
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.12.12 17:39:46
      Beitrag Nr. 1.929 ()
      Hab auch schon gestöbert,kann aber nix finden.Bei Petrodorado ist es noch schlimmer.Es ist einfach ein dreckiges Spiel,denke mal,dass das Grosskapital sich so günstig als möglich eindecken wollen,wer nervös ist,wird rausgedrängt.Das ewige Spiel mit der Angst der Kleinanleger,bevor man alles verliert,verkauft man seine Shares zu einem Spottpreis.Aber nicht mit mir,ich lass mich nicht rausdrängen und geb kein Stück ab.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.12.12 14:29:44
      Beitrag Nr. 1.928 ()
      Gibt es für den Kursverfall heute Gründe/Nachrichten ?
      Avatar
      schrieb am 02.12.12 16:40:59
      Beitrag Nr. 1.927 ()
      Ein Beitrag zum Öl-Potential von East-Africa.

      ---------------------


      The Huge Risk-Reward Scenario with East Africa Oil

      by OGIB Research Team on November 25, 2012
      by Jen Alic

      Welcome to East Africa—home of a potential 28 billion barrels of recoverable oil, 440 trillion cubic feet of gas and 14 billion barrels of natural gas liquids.

      Recent success by Africa Oil (AOI-TSX; AQIFF-PINK)—the stock went from $2-$11 in just two months in the spring of 2012 on just one drill hole—has made East Africa the most exciting exploration play in the world right now.

      But that excitement is tempered with some political instability, social conflict and a lack of energy infrastructure.

      Still, this vastly untapped region is the fast-rising favorite for Canadian juniors. The obvious question is: Why?

      The potential prize is too big to ignore:

      · ~5 billion in proven reserves in the Sudans and major discoveries elsewhere, with only a fraction of the potential explored
      · Enough gas has been discovered in Mozambique to supply half of Western Europe for nearly a decade and a half—still, the country has barely been explored.

      · Recent offshore discoveries of some 33 trillion cubic feet of gas put Tanzania on the map, and the risk here is relatively low. Tanzania has a natural gas processing plant on Songo Songo Island, with a 70 million cubic feet/day capacity. It is also planning an LNG terminal.

      · Uganda discovered more than 2.5 billion barrels of oil in the last decade. This year alone, it discovered more than 1 billion barrels.



      The risks fall into three categories:

      1. A lack of infrastructure—pipelines, processing plants and refineries. You can make a big discovery, but how do you get it to market and monetize it?

      2. Government greed.

      3. Social/tribal tensions.

      Sudan is a good example. Blessed with an abundant oil supplies, authorities recently announced that the country would double production in the next 2-3 years. However, it will miss its 2012 production target of 180,000 bpd due to social conflict.

      Still, Canadian juniors like Calgary-based Emperor Oil (TSX-V: EM) and Statesman Resources Ltd (TSX-V:SRR) remain optimistic in Sudan.

      Emperor Oil was a pioneer in Sudan, and recently signed an MOU to acquire 85% of a 50% interest in the 10,000 sq km concession Block 7 in Sudan. The other 50% is owned by the state’s National Oil Company, Sudapet.

      “East Africa wants oil development,” says Emperor CEO Andrew McCarthy. “Infrastructure is an issue, though Sudan is in much better shape than most here.”

      Infrastructure in this part of East Africa should improve in the coming years, with the big project being the $24.7 billion Lamu Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia Transit corridor (LAPSSET). LAPSSET includes a massive pipeline that would carry South Sudanese oil for refining in Ethiopia and Kenya and give the entire region another oil outlet.

      Is it feasible? Yes, but capital is always difficult for this area, and McCarthy points out that the capacity of the Sudan-South Sudan pipeline could go to 1 million bopd at a fraction of the costs. The good news—competition creates lower costs for everyone.

      McCarthy added that the new wealth being created by energy companies is a strong incentive for the different ethnic groups in East Africa to work together. He points to Sudan and South Sudan breaking apart peacefully, and any skirmishes after the fact have been stopped quickly once the oil—and hence the money—stopped flowing.

      “Rather than fight over existing production they have chosen to expand their resource development so that there is a larger pie to share.”

      Infrastructure is also the issue farther south in East Africa. Major energy producers are eyeing 130 trillion cubic feet of gas in the Rovuma basin offshore Mozambique, discovered by Andarko (US) and Eni (Italy). The government estimates there may be another 150 trillion cubic feet left to discover. Shell, ExxonMobil and Chevron are eyeing this as well.

      But for now, there is no way to bring extracted gas onshore, no facilities to liquefy it and no infrastructure for export.

      We’re talking about $20 billion in investment to build the necessary infrastructure.

      And ironically, the phenomenal success of the some of the pioneering juniors causes another problem: the governments start changing terms.

      Several years ago East African countries were luring foreign oil companies onto their territory with desperately attractive deals. This trend is changing. Recent reserve discoveries have empowered these nations to ask for more.

      There is pressure on juniors to foot the bill for ambitious infrastructure projects. East African states want the juniors to speed up their plans—drill more wells; build pipelines—get the money flowing! It can put the juniors with limited resources in a difficult spot.

      But again, The Prize is big enough that several juniors have been able to attract major oil companies into their play.

      For its next licensing round in oil and gas, Kenya is planning to switch to bidding for exploration blocks, rather than its usual one-on-one negotiations. While more transparent, which is good for business, this also reflects the new impatience. Kenya is also planning to rewrite its energy policy to reflect its greater negotiating power as a result of recent discoveries.

      In Uganda, potential is vast and exploration just getting underway, but regulatory challenges are mounting.

      Uganda wanted its oil and gas investors to pitch in for a massive refinery in the western area of Hoima. For investors, it was an unnecessary project with unnecessary expenses. Foreign oil companies would rather see Uganda’s oil refined elsewhere, more cheaply.

      With new exploration technology (FTG, 3D seismic) being used on relatively virgin reservoirs, there’s a lot of potential for big new discoveries. But there are definitely challenges for energy producers looking to move into this are.

      However, the Size of The Prize trumps all—the huge capital gains enjoyed by shareholders of Africa Oil, and before them Heritage Oil (HOC-TSX), attest to that.

      http://oilandgas-investments.com/2012/investing/risk-reward-…

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      Avatar
      schrieb am 01.12.12 16:54:17
      Beitrag Nr. 1.926 ()
      Allmählich dürfte Äthiopien mit in den Fokus rücken. Immer wieder ein gutes Gefühl "ein Teil" von Tullow Oil zu sein...


      Tullow to start drilling in South Omo


      The British oil firm, Tullow Oil, is to start drilling on the first (wild cat) exploration well in Southern Omo.

      Tullow has been undertaking different geological surveys in the South Omo oil exploration concession. Hired by Tullow BGP Geo Services, BGP Geoservices, has been collecting seismic data from the concession area near Omorate town.

      Reliable sources told The Reporter that Tullow will start drilling on the first well after two weeks. Sources said Tullow has hired a drilling company, adding that the drilling rig and other required machineries have arrived at the drilling location.

      BGP was hired by Tullow Oil in 2011 to undertake a seismic survey in South Omo near the Kenyan border. BGP is a company that specialises in collecting seismic data. The company has a good reputation in various countries in similar projects, including Saudi Arabia, Oman and Venezuela.

      Reliable sources at the Ministry of Mines told The Reporter that BGP has submitted a commendable seismic data report to the ministry and its client Tullow. “The seismic data demonstrated some oil indications,” sources said. So far no exploration well was drilled in South Omo.

      Tullow bought a 50 percent stake in the South Omo Valley from Africa Oil. The Vancouver-based company, Africa Oil, acquired the South Omo Valley concession from White Nile, the British oil company. White Nile is a UK-based company in which the South Sudan government has a minority stake. White Nile, which has been prospecting for oil in South Omo Valley since 2005, farmed out the concession to Africa Oil.

      Two months ago White Nile, which is now called Agriterra Limited, sold the 20 percent stake it holds on the South Omo oil exploration block to the US-based Marathon Oil Corporation.


      http://www.thereporterethiopia.com/News/tullow-to-start-dril…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 29.11.12 18:12:35
      Beitrag Nr. 1.925 ()
      Von Stockhouse:

      -----------------

      2012-11-29 16:27

      STOCKHOLM (Reuters) Throughhis foundation signed ownership Lundin family 10 percent or 3,000,000 shares in the enlarged private placement of a total of 30 million shares of Africa Oil.

      The state oil exploration company ir-person RobertEriksson Direkt.

      An exact number of how many times oversubscribed wish he did not give but describesinterest as very large.

      The private placement of 30 millionshares will raise Africa Oil more than 230 million U.S. dollars canada before expenses.


      Henrik Svensson +46 8 5191 7924
      Direkt
      Read more at http://www.stockhouse.com/bullboards/messagedetail.aspx?p=0&…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 29.11.12 16:09:34
      Beitrag Nr. 1.924 ()
      Auf stockhouse wurde eine guter Analyseansatz der Twiga Resultate eingestellt.

      FACTS: Tullow Oil has announced (November 26th) that the Twiga South-1 well has hit 30 metres of net oil-bearing sands above the Lokhone shale. In addition, it also hit a near 800-metre section of oil-bearing tight fractured sands. Moveable oil over 30 degrees API was recovered from both sections. The well was drilled to a total depth of 3,250 metres and was located in Block 13T part of the Lokichar basin in the East African rift valley. The well will be flow-tested over the next four to eight weeks. Separately, the Paipai well (Block 10A) will be concluded before the end of the year and the Sabisa well (South Omo Block, Ethiopia) will commence in the same timeframe.

      ANALYSIS: The well was (deliberately) drilled some 4km away from the main fault compared to the 2km separation from the fault in the Ngamia-1 well. While both (Ngamia and Tiwga) are separate sand features, the results demonstrate the full potential of an escarpment edge play. This means that we can use the Ngamia result to demonstrate the top part of a typical section while the Twiga South demonstrates the bottom half of that section, giving us sight of a full interval of the Ngamai/Twiga play type. No update of the immediate volume potential was provided but the implication of the section encountered for the basin in general is that a billion barrel potential is still very much on the cards. The fractured play at the base of the hole is a new play type. It had been clipped in the first well below the Lokhone shale and the current well demonstrates how it thickens further away from the bounding fault located to the west. This type of fractured play forms prolific reservoirs in various parts of the world. A good deal of petrology is still required to understand the play properly and it does not appear to be fractured basement in a strict sense, albeit with many similarities.

      DAVY VIEW: The Twiga South well has confirmed the upper sand play in a separate trap to the Ngamia structure and has also opened up a new type of target. Apart from the positive implications of the sand package above the shale section, the 800 metres of oil-filled fractures at the base of the well demonstrates that a huge volume of oil has been generated in the basin. Provided sand and seal units to trap this oil can be found, this has to improve the outlook for other types of sand targets (axial, entry delta plays) in the basin. We think this news unwinds the risk of the immediate Twiga structure, adding 5p per share, but more importantly has to give a greater level of confidence that the overall Kenya play will deliver material upside, which we value at a total of 154p per share risked. Our group NAV per share is 1535p following the above adjustment.

      http://www.stockhouse.com/bullboards/messagedetail.aspx?p=0&…" target="_blank" rel="nofollow ugc noopener">
      http://www.stockhouse.com/bullboards/messagedetail.aspx?p=0&…
      Avatar
      schrieb am 29.11.12 06:58:04
      Beitrag Nr. 1.923 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.868.772 von niki550525 am 28.11.12 06:54:56Gestern hatten wir auch guten Umsatz (2,2 Mio) in Canada.
      Wir haben uns ein wenig von der MA 200 entfernt, die derzeit bei 7,49 CAN$ steht.
      Candlestick - Analyse:
      Gestern wurde ein High Wave gebildet. Das bedeutet ein Verlust der Orientierung und zeigt daher eine große Unentschlossenheit im Markt.
      Die letzten beiden Kerzen zeigen ein Bullish Harami Pattern, die auf ein Umkehrmuster hindeuten. Die Zuverlässigkeit ist allerdings gering und bedarf einer Bestätigung.
      Chartanalyse:
      RSI hat gestern gedreht und befindet sich nun bei 32,50%
      Slow STO befindet sich weiter auf dem Abwärtstrend und steht nun bei 10,91%

      Ergebnis:
      Meiner Einschätzung nach könnte es heute nochmal seitwärts mit einer leichten Aufwärtsbewegung geben.
      Die Nachricht, das 30 Mio Aktien plaziert wurden dürfte den Markt beruhigen.
      Die Bestätigung einer Trendumkehr steht noch aus. Wer sich also hier Positionieren will sollte noch etwas abwarten.
      Fundamental, fehlt halt immer noch die Bestätigung was so aus dem Boden heraus zubekommen ist. Das Ergebnis wird so in 4-8Wochen vorhanden sein. Bis dahin werden sich viele wieder einkaufen um bei einer guten Mekldung von Anfang mit dabei zu sein. Rückschlagspotential sehe ich eher als gering an, da der Kursrückgang weit übertrieben war.
      Leider habe ich etwas zu früh nachgekauft, aber man kann ja nicht immer am Tiefstpunkt einkaufen. ich denke drotzdem, das sich der Kauf bei 7,02€ bald als gute Einkaufsgelegenheit herausstellen wird.
      Allen noch Investierten sollte aber dieser Kursverlauf eine Lehre sein. Das Geld liegt nicht auf der Strasse und es geht nicht immer nur nach oben, auch wenn man noch so euphorisch ist / sein kann. Es gibt immer ein Risiko :cool:
      Na, dann wollen wir mal sehen, was der Markt so macht ;)
      Niki
      Avatar
      schrieb am 29.11.12 06:16:31
      Beitrag Nr. 1.922 ()
      Africa Oil Increases Private Placement to $232.5 Million

      Africa Oil Corp. AOI

      11/28/2012 6:36:52 PM



      Africa Oil Increases Private Placement to $232.5 Million



      VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - Nov. 28, 2012) -

      THIS RELEASE IS NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION TO U.S. NEWS WIRE SERVICES OR FOR DISSEMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES

      Africa Oil Corp. (TSX VENTURE:AOI)(OMX:AOI) ("Africa Oil" or the "Company") reports that due to strong demand it has agreed to increase the previously announced private placement. The Company will now sell on a non-brokered, private placement basis, an aggregate of up to 30 million common shares of the Company at a price of Cdn $7.75 per share for gross proceeds of up to Cdn $232.5 million. All shares have now been placed.

      A 4% finder's fee may be payable on all or a portion of the private placement.

      Net proceeds of the private placement will be used towards the Company's ongoing work program in East Africa as well as for general working capital purposes.

      Shares issued pursuant to the private placement will be subject to a four month hold period under applicable Canadian securities laws.

      The private placement is subject to regulatory approval.

      The securities offered have not been and will not be registered under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or applicable state securities laws, and may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from such registration requirements. This press release shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of the securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful.

      http://www.stockhouse.com/news/canadianreleasesdetail.aspx?n…
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      Africa Oil Corp. - World-Class East Africa Oil Exploration