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    Rockhopper Exploration ehemals FALKLAND OIL & GAS +++ 270% mit Öl (Seite 272)

    eröffnet am 03.12.04 12:00:47 von
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      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 23:04:36
      Beitrag Nr. 1.796 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.836.386 von Honeymoon am 03.10.07 22:50:53Wir können uns ja nochmal mit dem Thema "CSEM" befassen.

      Jedes Mal, wenn bei der Exploration CSEM angewendet wurde, wurde bei der späteren Bohrung auch Öl gefunden.

      Insofern ist das eine 100 % Trefferquote !

      ;)

      Ich bin mir aber nicht sicher, ob die gefundene Ölmenge auch wirtschaftlich wäre.

      Hat hier jemand noch nähere Infos ?

      :eek:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 22:50:53
      Beitrag Nr. 1.795 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.835.459 von al_sting am 03.10.07 21:16:50Na, Nabors 657 wird uns dann hoffentlich Glück* bringen!



      Rig Construction Details
      Classification: ABS
      Rig Design: Mitsui F-550
      Built By: Mitsui at the Tamano Japan shipyard
      Delivery Year: 1980 *
      Flag: Panama

      Honey :cool:

      *Das Delivery Datum ist schon mal mit meinem identisch, das ist ein Zeichen! :laugh:
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 22:43:38
      Beitrag Nr. 1.794 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.835.873 von al_sting am 03.10.07 21:54:39Hier der Anfang dieses Artikels:


      BHP Billiton strikes $100m Falklands drilling dealCarl Mortished, International Business Editor
      BHP Billiton is dipping its toe into disputed waters with an agreement to fund a drilling programme offshore in the Falkland Islands.

      The Anglo-Australian resources group is joining forces with Falkland Oil and Gas, an AIM-listed company with rights over exploration acreage south of the islands. BHP will fund the majority of a drilling programme of between two and four wells at a cost of $100 million (£49 million).

      Tim Bushell, chief executive of Falkland Oil and Gas, said: “The introduction of a major company as a farm-in partner has been a key strategic objective over the last 18 months.”

      Floated on AIM three years ago, Falkland Oil and Gas has conducted extensive seismic surveys over offshore acreage that it secured in a 2002 licensing round.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 22:42:07
      Beitrag Nr. 1.793 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.835.798 von al_sting am 03.10.07 21:49:32Danke, der Rest von dem Artikel ist aber auch ganz nett:


      BHP has until November 27 to exercise the option to take on 65 per cent of the licences. This is just under two months away and it would seem this short time frame has been allotted to give the Australian firm time to digest the masses of seismic and Controlled Source Electro-Magnetic (CSEM) survey data that FOGL accumulated over the licences. BHP’s decision to exercise the option is likely to be seen as a vote of confidence in the prospectivity of these undrilled waters and is likely to be the main share price driver until such time as that all-important first spud date is set.

      FOGL’s chief executive Tim Bushell said this was “a landmark deal” for the company. “The entry of BHP Billiton as operator provides us with their expertise in drilling in deepwater and sensitive environments, which combined with their access to rigs will continue the exploration programme and lead to the drilling of the first exploration wells in our licences,” he said.

      Shares in FOGL, which have more than doubled since July, added another 10.5 pence on the news to stand at 175 pence in afternoon trading. Fellow AIM firm Global Petroleum, which has seen its share price languish in the wake of a disappointing wildcat in the Kenyan deep offshore, also gained on the news of the BHP deal, adding 15.94 per cent to stand at 10 pence. Global, with a market cap of £15.7 million, has a 14 per cent stake in FOGL, with a market cap of £138 million. Investors can do their own sums.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 21:54:39
      Beitrag Nr. 1.792 ()
      Und noch ein Artikel der Times, in dem von einer ersten Bohrung in weniger als einem Jahr gesprochen wird:

      http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sect…

      Mr Bushell said that the company had identified large prospects, but added that it needed financial backing to drill in water 3,000ft deep. “It’s not cheap to drill and, with high oil prices affecting the price of rigs, it’s even more difficult,” he said.

      BHP is acquiring 40 per cent of the licences with an option to increase to 65 per cent for an initial payment of $10 million, which will reimburse initial costs incurred by Falklands Oil and Gas.

      BHP will not only provide funds but will also take over the operation of the exploration programme and has access to rigs, a key advantage in a market where equipment is in short supply. The first well is likely to be drilled in a year’s time.

      The BHP initiative is the first sign of renewed commitment to Falklands exploration since the disappointing round of investments in the late 1990s when Shell, Amerada Hess and Lasmo acquired offshore licences in territory north of the islands. Six wells were drilled, with some hydrocarbon finds, but none of the discoveries were of a scale to justify investment in production platforms in depths of 1,000ft.

      The isolation of the Falklands and the lack of any infrastructure mean that discoveries would need to be of massive scale to justify investment. Moreover, a gas discovery would pose additional problems as the nearest market would be Argentina, which still claims sovereignty over the Falklands.

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      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 21:49:32
      Beitrag Nr. 1.791 ()
      Netter Artikel:

      http://www.oilbarrel.com/news/article.html?body=1&key=oilbar…

      Shares In FOGL And Overlooked Global Petroleum Rally As BHP Billiton Signs Up To Falklands Exploration Campaign
      There has been speculation since mid-July about the identity of the major resources company that had entered farm-in talks with Falklands Oil & Gas Limited. The clue lay in the world of FOGL’s July statement, which referred to a resources, rather than oil, company. Now all has been revealed and Australian mining, metals and petroleum company BHP Billiton has been revealed as FOGL’s new partner.

      FOGL has long been seeking a farm-in partner with the deep pockets and inhouse resources to marshall a drilling campaign in the remote waters to the south and east of the Falkland Islands in the southern Atlantic. Mobilising a rig to the Falkland Islands will be a major financial undertaking - numbers of US$40 million a well are not outrageous - and there is little prospect of AIM-quoted FOGL, recently dumped by its partner Tullow Oil which inherited its share of the assets following its takeover of Hardman Resources, raising these kinds of sums on its own. It was therefore critical FOGL found a farm-in partner in order to meet its drilling commitments on the licences, which cover a vast tract of undrilled exploration acreage.

      Under the farm-in agreement, BHP will earn a 40 per cent interest and operatorship of the licences by drilling two wells over the next three years. It will pay some of FOGL’s drilling costs - BHP will pay 53.3 per cent of the well costs to earn its 40 per cent share – and pay FOGL US$10 million to cover some of its historical costs on the licences. These are not the most generous farm-in terms but they will start to look sweeter should BHP exercise an option to increase its stake to 65 per cent, at which point it must pay another US$6.5 million in historical costs and cover 87 per cent of the drilling costs. This would leave FOGL with just 13 per cent of the drilling costs (although on a US$100 million drilling programme that’s still a hefty bill), some of which would be offset by the US$16.5 million cash payment.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 21:16:50
      Beitrag Nr. 1.790 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.833.760 von Thoemme am 03.10.07 18:56:00> Ist zwar eine interessante Seite, hab dort aber leider nichts ueber
      > BHP gesehen. kannst du die Addresse genauer angeben?

      http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=50902

      Dort dem Link folgen und voila:
      http://www.rigzone.com/data/results.asp?Operator_ID=661
      Hier sind 5 die Offshore-Rigs von BHP aufgeführt, davon eines schon in Lateinamerika.
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 20:55:14
      Beitrag Nr. 1.789 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.834.965 von KNORPEL am 03.10.07 20:26:51die größte gefahr ist die ,die man nicht kennt;).

      argentinien ist militärisch ein zwerg. seit 1994 keine wehrpflicht, ca ca. 100 000 mann stark. militärausgabenanteil am BIP 1,3%, weltrang 120

      öl ist macht

      wieviel soldaten haben zb die amis nur im irak?


      gruß
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 20:42:24
      Beitrag Nr. 1.788 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.834.813 von Honeymoon am 03.10.07 20:12:51:D:)

      ja, dass es 35% sein werden glaub ich aber auch, BHP wird versuchen möglichst viel zu bekommen.

      wird hier aber auch ne längere, spannende geschichte werden.

      argentinien wird spannend , militärisch immer mehr ein zwerg aber mal schauen.

      das chance/ risiko verhältnis ist hier sehr, sehr gut

      molyharte grüße:D
      schlangenmeister
      Avatar
      schrieb am 03.10.07 20:26:51
      Beitrag Nr. 1.787 ()
      Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 31.834.466 von Honeymoon am 03.10.07 19:47:42Das einzige was FOGL jetzt noch richtig gefaehrlich werden koennte waere die argentinische Regierung:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

      Will ja hier nicht den Teufel an die Wand malen,aber wenn erst mal Oel gefunden wurde kann ich mir vorstellen,daß Argentinien die Falklands WIEDER
      besetzt.:(:(:(

      Ich will hier nicht bashen, aber das sollte man nicht außer acht lassen

      Gruß KN:cool:RPEL

      P.S.: Bin selbst DICKE investiert;)
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      Rockhopper Exploration ehemals FALKLAND OIL & GAS +++ 270% mit Öl