Africa Oil Corp. - World-Class East Africa Oil Exploration (Seite 229)
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ISIN: CA00829Q1019 · WKN: A0MZJC · Symbol: AFZ
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Beitrag zu dieser Diskussion schreiben
Alzu lange kann es ja nicht mehr dauern bis endlich News veröffentlicht werden!
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 43.833.211 von gimo211 am 16.11.12 16:07:33gimo211: Absolut einverstanden, dass MBAWA eine "discovery" ist - kein wenn und aber. 2013 wird ein sehr interessantes Jahr fuer "off-shore Kenya"! Und inbezug auf PCL und andere Firmen: Auch ein aeusserst interessantes Jahr fuer "off-shore Namibia". Bring it on!
wasa
wasa
Kenya - Sudan oil pipeline.
Tullow will soon release Twiga 1 oil prospects
Friday, November 16, 2012 - 00:00 -- BY SOLOMON KIRIMI
Exploration firm Tullow oil is set to announce whether it has good prospects of finding oil in Twiga South-1 exploration well in Turkana county.
A statement posted on its website says the drilling activities will have reached the total depth 3,114 metres in a matter of weeks and pave way for testing.
Tullow announced in late October that oil had been encountered in the Twiga South-1 well but that further details would be released after a full set of sample tests have been run after achieving the target depth.
Drilling at Paipai-1 well commenced Block 10A is also ongoing with a target depth of 4,500 metres. Tullow Kenya general manager Martin Mbogo said the appraisal testing for Ngamia1 prospect where they found 100 metres of oil net pay will be conducted early next year.
http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-95864/tullow-will-soo…
Friday, November 16, 2012 - 00:00 -- BY SOLOMON KIRIMI
Exploration firm Tullow oil is set to announce whether it has good prospects of finding oil in Twiga South-1 exploration well in Turkana county.
A statement posted on its website says the drilling activities will have reached the total depth 3,114 metres in a matter of weeks and pave way for testing.
Tullow announced in late October that oil had been encountered in the Twiga South-1 well but that further details would be released after a full set of sample tests have been run after achieving the target depth.
Drilling at Paipai-1 well commenced Block 10A is also ongoing with a target depth of 4,500 metres. Tullow Kenya general manager Martin Mbogo said the appraisal testing for Ngamia1 prospect where they found 100 metres of oil net pay will be conducted early next year.
http://www.the-star.co.ke/news/article-95864/tullow-will-soo…
Mbaw-1a ist eine Discovery!
52m net pay. Darüber gibt es keinen Zweifel. Sie haben keinen Duster und auch kein frisches Wasser - sie haben dort Gas. Und damit die Existenz eines "Working" Petroleum System bewiesen.
Allerdings ist es (derzeit noch) keine "commercial discovery. Mal sehen, was hierzu das Jahr 2013 noch erbringt...
52m net pay. Darüber gibt es keinen Zweifel. Sie haben keinen Duster und auch kein frisches Wasser - sie haben dort Gas. Und damit die Existenz eines "Working" Petroleum System bewiesen.
Allerdings ist es (derzeit noch) keine "commercial discovery. Mal sehen, was hierzu das Jahr 2013 noch erbringt...
@ Drill
Die Quote ist in dieser Branche einmalig!
Es sollte dir jedoch auch aufgefallen sein, dass Mbawa-1 nicht unbedingt als discovery bezeichnet werden kann.
Trotzdem sollte Twiga-South-1 ganz klar zu den huge discoveries gehören.
Die Quote ist in dieser Branche einmalig!
Es sollte dir jedoch auch aufgefallen sein, dass Mbawa-1 nicht unbedingt als discovery bezeichnet werden kann.
Trotzdem sollte Twiga-South-1 ganz klar zu den huge discoveries gehören.
TullowOil - To date in 2012, 19 of the 24 exploration and appraisal wells drilled have discovered hydrocarbons.
Twiga ist dabei
http://www.tullowoil.com/index.asp?pageid=48
Twiga ist dabei
http://www.tullowoil.com/index.asp?pageid=48
Endlich mal ein Update auf der Horn Homepage:
NewsNews ReleasesHorn Petroleum Provides Operational Update
View News Release in PDF Format
November 15, 2012
Horn Petroleum Provides Operational Update
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - Nov. 15, 2012) - Horn Petroleum Corporation ("Horn" or the "Company") (TSX VENTURE:HRN) pleased to provide the following update on its exploration operations in Puntland (Somalia).
Horn has demobilized the drilling rig and associated equipment and has completed restoration of both drilling locations. Efforts are now focused on making preparations for a seismic acquisition campaign in the Dharoor PSA which will include a regional seismic reconnaissance grid in the previously unexplored eastern portion of the basin as well as prospect specific seismic to delineate a drilling candidate in the western portion of the basin where an active petroleum system was confirmed by the recent drilling at the Shabeel-1 and Shabeel North-1 locations. This seismic program is expected to commence in the first half of 2013. The Company continues to pursue efforts to drill an exploration well in the Nugaal PSA and is working with the Puntland government authorities to move this project forward.
Horn is in active discussions with potential joint venture partners and also is reviewing new venture opportunities in the region.
Horn President and CEO, David Grellman, commented, "We remain very encouraged by the exploration potential of these Jurassic rift basins in Puntland. We have committed to the next exploration phase in both PSAs and plan to aggressively explore both areas to confirm this potential. We are also optimistic that the political progress in Somalia will continue and allow oil and gas exploration in the region to expand."
Horn holds a 60% working interest in the Dharoor and Nugaal Valley blocks and is the operator. The other partners in the blocks are Range Resources (20%) and Red Emperor (20%). Africa Oil Corporation holds an approximate 45% equity interest in Horn.
Horn Petroleum Corporation is a Canadian oil and gas company with assets in Puntland, Somalia. The Corporation holds a 60% interest and operatorship in the Dharoor and Nugaal blocks encompassing a Jurassic Rift Basin on trend and analogous to the large oil fields in Yemen. The Corporation's shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol "HRN".
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
David Grellman, President and CEO
NewsNews ReleasesHorn Petroleum Provides Operational Update
View News Release in PDF Format
November 15, 2012
Horn Petroleum Provides Operational Update
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - Nov. 15, 2012) - Horn Petroleum Corporation ("Horn" or the "Company") (TSX VENTURE:HRN) pleased to provide the following update on its exploration operations in Puntland (Somalia).
Horn has demobilized the drilling rig and associated equipment and has completed restoration of both drilling locations. Efforts are now focused on making preparations for a seismic acquisition campaign in the Dharoor PSA which will include a regional seismic reconnaissance grid in the previously unexplored eastern portion of the basin as well as prospect specific seismic to delineate a drilling candidate in the western portion of the basin where an active petroleum system was confirmed by the recent drilling at the Shabeel-1 and Shabeel North-1 locations. This seismic program is expected to commence in the first half of 2013. The Company continues to pursue efforts to drill an exploration well in the Nugaal PSA and is working with the Puntland government authorities to move this project forward.
Horn is in active discussions with potential joint venture partners and also is reviewing new venture opportunities in the region.
Horn President and CEO, David Grellman, commented, "We remain very encouraged by the exploration potential of these Jurassic rift basins in Puntland. We have committed to the next exploration phase in both PSAs and plan to aggressively explore both areas to confirm this potential. We are also optimistic that the political progress in Somalia will continue and allow oil and gas exploration in the region to expand."
Horn holds a 60% working interest in the Dharoor and Nugaal Valley blocks and is the operator. The other partners in the blocks are Range Resources (20%) and Red Emperor (20%). Africa Oil Corporation holds an approximate 45% equity interest in Horn.
Horn Petroleum Corporation is a Canadian oil and gas company with assets in Puntland, Somalia. The Corporation holds a 60% interest and operatorship in the Dharoor and Nugaal blocks encompassing a Jurassic Rift Basin on trend and analogous to the large oil fields in Yemen. The Corporation's shares are listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol "HRN".
ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD
David Grellman, President and CEO
Eigentlich nichts Neues, aber trotzdem lesenswert und erinnert einen mal wieder daran, das wir hier in Afrika investiert sind.
AFRICA MONEY-Uganda oil a sad story of the three Gs
By Ed Stoddard
JOHANNESBURG | Thu Nov 15, 2012 6:51am EST
Nov 15 (Reuters) - Oil in Africa tends to depend on the three "Big Gs" of geology, geography and governance and investors in east Africa's much-hyped finds are discovering the hard way what happens when they are not perfectly aligned.
Six years after Uganda struck oil in its interior, all of the pieces are beginning to click into place for a boom that holds the promise of prosperity for one of the continent's poorest states.
A number of oil firms including Total and Tullow Oil plc are engaging and plans are in place for the infrastructure needed to exploit estimated reserves of around 3.5 billion barrels.
But production is still not seen before 2015 and may take longer, while the pipeline to get the oil to the coast for export will not be in place before 2018 at the earliest.
Compare that to the Atlantic coast nation of Ghana 2,000 km west, which took only 3-1/2 years to crank out its first barrel of crude after oil was discovered and is already seeing its first exports, and it looks like Uganda has missed out.
"Here's a country that discovered oil in 2006. Hasn't produced a drop. And they say they will only export crude when they have a refinery and the best estimates for operators like Total is 2017 for production," said Dr Duncan Clarke, chairman of oil/gas advisors Global Pacific & Partners.
"So this is 11 years of an interrupted exploration cycle which typically you associate with a war or civil conflict or a meltdown ... 11 years of lost impact in GDP growth."
ON-SHORE VS OFF-SHORE
Where the geology in east Africa has been favourable for oil, the geography has been less so.
Huge gas discoveries off Tanzania and Mozambique are extremely promising but the Indian Ocean waters off east Africa have yet to produce a commercially viable oil source.
Land-locked Uganda's on-shore oil reserves are certainly on a commercial scale but they lie 1,300 kms from the coast and so a costly pipeline is the only way to export the crude.
Neighboring Kenya is not land-locked but the oil encountered there at two wells by British explorer Tullow and its partner Africa Oil Corp has also been onshore.
Ghana's Jubilee field by contrast is conveniently off-shore and its location places it bang in the heart of a mature oil region where nearby countries like Nigeria have been producing the commodity for decades.
"Ghana is very familiar with everything to do with an oil economy because of its neighborhood," said Tara O'Connor, managing director of Africa Risk Consulting.
For Uganda by contrast - and east Africa in general - everything about oil is new.
"No matter where you are in the world, where there's no infrastructure and no history of the oil business, it will take at least half a dozen years to go from exploration phase to development concepts," Tim O'Hanlon, Tullow's vice president for Africa, told Reuters.
GOVERNANCE
Governance also matters - a lot.
In the case of Ghana, its development into a stable democracy with a relatively diverse economy helped to get the oil flowing.
"Ghana was in a very good position to meet the challenge of becoming an oil producer because it had already diversified its economy," said O'Connor.
Diversification also meant Ghana, a rising gold producer and the world's second-biggest cocoa grower, did not regard oil as a get-rich-quick fix for the fiscus.
"Tax stability is important for any investor, and Ghana has maintained a stable fiscal regime for existing investors," said Martin Kelly, Wood Mackenzie's lead analyst for Africa.
In Uganda, analysts say tax disputes point to a growth in "resource nationalism" as the government of long-time President Yoweri Museveni eyes oil as a panacea to its fiscal woes.
Explorer Heritage Oil and the Ugandan government are in arbitration after the Britain-based firm disputed the tax bill from the sale of its assets there to Tullow for $1.45 billion in 2010.
The oil explorer has argued its earnings were not subject to capital gains tax because the transaction in question was executed outside Uganda. Critics have said the government appears to be changing the goal posts.
"In Uganda, you have potential rent seekers emerging out of the political system who see oil as a way to compensate for the lack of fiscal discipline," said O'Connor.
Uganda has also thrown another obstacle in the way of actually extracting oil by insisting that any development plan involve the construction of a refinery - a hugely costly undertaking with an estimated $2.5 billion price tag that is fraught with risk.
The Ugandan government and operators working there disagree over how big the refinery needs to be.
Operators say its capacity should not exceed 60,000 barrels per day to be attractive to investors but the government insists a facility with a maximum output of 120,000 bpd is viable and can easily attract investors.
Ghana has also had delays. It began pumping oil from its Jubilee oil field in November 2010 and while it had hoped to hit 250,000 barrels per day by 2013, it has averaged under 80,000.
Still, the rewards of getting past the barriers to production quickly are evident: Ghana's economy expanded almost 15 percent last year and the government expects 2012 growth of just over 7 percent.
AFRICA MONEY-Uganda oil a sad story of the three Gs
By Ed Stoddard
JOHANNESBURG | Thu Nov 15, 2012 6:51am EST
Nov 15 (Reuters) - Oil in Africa tends to depend on the three "Big Gs" of geology, geography and governance and investors in east Africa's much-hyped finds are discovering the hard way what happens when they are not perfectly aligned.
Six years after Uganda struck oil in its interior, all of the pieces are beginning to click into place for a boom that holds the promise of prosperity for one of the continent's poorest states.
A number of oil firms including Total and Tullow Oil plc are engaging and plans are in place for the infrastructure needed to exploit estimated reserves of around 3.5 billion barrels.
But production is still not seen before 2015 and may take longer, while the pipeline to get the oil to the coast for export will not be in place before 2018 at the earliest.
Compare that to the Atlantic coast nation of Ghana 2,000 km west, which took only 3-1/2 years to crank out its first barrel of crude after oil was discovered and is already seeing its first exports, and it looks like Uganda has missed out.
"Here's a country that discovered oil in 2006. Hasn't produced a drop. And they say they will only export crude when they have a refinery and the best estimates for operators like Total is 2017 for production," said Dr Duncan Clarke, chairman of oil/gas advisors Global Pacific & Partners.
"So this is 11 years of an interrupted exploration cycle which typically you associate with a war or civil conflict or a meltdown ... 11 years of lost impact in GDP growth."
ON-SHORE VS OFF-SHORE
Where the geology in east Africa has been favourable for oil, the geography has been less so.
Huge gas discoveries off Tanzania and Mozambique are extremely promising but the Indian Ocean waters off east Africa have yet to produce a commercially viable oil source.
Land-locked Uganda's on-shore oil reserves are certainly on a commercial scale but they lie 1,300 kms from the coast and so a costly pipeline is the only way to export the crude.
Neighboring Kenya is not land-locked but the oil encountered there at two wells by British explorer Tullow and its partner Africa Oil Corp has also been onshore.
Ghana's Jubilee field by contrast is conveniently off-shore and its location places it bang in the heart of a mature oil region where nearby countries like Nigeria have been producing the commodity for decades.
"Ghana is very familiar with everything to do with an oil economy because of its neighborhood," said Tara O'Connor, managing director of Africa Risk Consulting.
For Uganda by contrast - and east Africa in general - everything about oil is new.
"No matter where you are in the world, where there's no infrastructure and no history of the oil business, it will take at least half a dozen years to go from exploration phase to development concepts," Tim O'Hanlon, Tullow's vice president for Africa, told Reuters.
GOVERNANCE
Governance also matters - a lot.
In the case of Ghana, its development into a stable democracy with a relatively diverse economy helped to get the oil flowing.
"Ghana was in a very good position to meet the challenge of becoming an oil producer because it had already diversified its economy," said O'Connor.
Diversification also meant Ghana, a rising gold producer and the world's second-biggest cocoa grower, did not regard oil as a get-rich-quick fix for the fiscus.
"Tax stability is important for any investor, and Ghana has maintained a stable fiscal regime for existing investors," said Martin Kelly, Wood Mackenzie's lead analyst for Africa.
In Uganda, analysts say tax disputes point to a growth in "resource nationalism" as the government of long-time President Yoweri Museveni eyes oil as a panacea to its fiscal woes.
Explorer Heritage Oil and the Ugandan government are in arbitration after the Britain-based firm disputed the tax bill from the sale of its assets there to Tullow for $1.45 billion in 2010.
The oil explorer has argued its earnings were not subject to capital gains tax because the transaction in question was executed outside Uganda. Critics have said the government appears to be changing the goal posts.
"In Uganda, you have potential rent seekers emerging out of the political system who see oil as a way to compensate for the lack of fiscal discipline," said O'Connor.
Uganda has also thrown another obstacle in the way of actually extracting oil by insisting that any development plan involve the construction of a refinery - a hugely costly undertaking with an estimated $2.5 billion price tag that is fraught with risk.
The Ugandan government and operators working there disagree over how big the refinery needs to be.
Operators say its capacity should not exceed 60,000 barrels per day to be attractive to investors but the government insists a facility with a maximum output of 120,000 bpd is viable and can easily attract investors.
Ghana has also had delays. It began pumping oil from its Jubilee oil field in November 2010 and while it had hoped to hit 250,000 barrels per day by 2013, it has averaged under 80,000.
Still, the rewards of getting past the barriers to production quickly are evident: Ghana's economy expanded almost 15 percent last year and the government expects 2012 growth of just over 7 percent.
Hallo@,
gegenüber anderen Rohstoffaktien haben wir uns heute gut gehalten.
Etwas über 500K an Stücken umgesetzt.
Charttechnisch betrachtet sieht es folgendermaßen aus:
Heute wurde ein kleines GAP gerissen 10,35 zu 10,25 CAN$
Ein offenes befindet sich noch bei 9,75 bis 9,85 CAN$ das wohl noch geschlossen werden will. Wenn die großen Börsen den Rückwärtsgang eingelegt haben, kann sich aoi trotz erwarteter Meldungen dem Trend nicht gänzlich entziehen.
Noch hat MA50 gehalten.
Slow STO ist gekippt und hat ein Verkaufssignal erzeugt.
RSI befindet sich unter 50% und ist somit rot.
Könnte also gut sein, das 9,75CAN$ GAP geschlossen wird.
Eine gute Unterstützung befindet sich bei ca. 9,25 CAN$.
Eine entäuschende Meldung würde diese aber glatt durchschlagen.
Eine positive Meldung würde alle Vorzeichen schlagartig außer Kraft setzten.
Also sozusagen eine 50/50 Chance.
Der Umsatz ist in den letzten Tagen angezogen, was auf eine Nervosität der Marktteilnehmer schließen lässt.
Dan schauen wir mal wo die Reise hingeht. Ich glaube an aoi und verkaufe derzeit keine Stücke.
Niki
gegenüber anderen Rohstoffaktien haben wir uns heute gut gehalten.
Etwas über 500K an Stücken umgesetzt.
Charttechnisch betrachtet sieht es folgendermaßen aus:
Heute wurde ein kleines GAP gerissen 10,35 zu 10,25 CAN$
Ein offenes befindet sich noch bei 9,75 bis 9,85 CAN$ das wohl noch geschlossen werden will. Wenn die großen Börsen den Rückwärtsgang eingelegt haben, kann sich aoi trotz erwarteter Meldungen dem Trend nicht gänzlich entziehen.
Noch hat MA50 gehalten.
Slow STO ist gekippt und hat ein Verkaufssignal erzeugt.
RSI befindet sich unter 50% und ist somit rot.
Könnte also gut sein, das 9,75CAN$ GAP geschlossen wird.
Eine gute Unterstützung befindet sich bei ca. 9,25 CAN$.
Eine entäuschende Meldung würde diese aber glatt durchschlagen.
Eine positive Meldung würde alle Vorzeichen schlagartig außer Kraft setzten.
Also sozusagen eine 50/50 Chance.
Der Umsatz ist in den letzten Tagen angezogen, was auf eine Nervosität der Marktteilnehmer schließen lässt.
Dan schauen wir mal wo die Reise hingeht. Ich glaube an aoi und verkaufe derzeit keine Stücke.
Niki