Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Chinese Mandarin - Energy: CNOOC wins Australian permit

?  ?

BIZCHINA / Biz Media Digest

Energy: CNOOC wins Australian permit

(South China Morning Post)
Updated: 2007-08-02 15:57

CNOOC, the mainland's dominant offshore oil producer, has won a permit to
explore for oil and gas in an area offshore of Western Australia that may
cost A$162.1 million (US$138.4 billion) over six years.

The company was one of nine firms that won new exploration permits in 11
offshore areas, Australia's Minister for Industry, Tourism and Resources
said in a statement.

The permits require a total investment of A$800 million over the next six
years, and were awarded from 21 bids submitted before the May 21 deadline.

CNOOC won the exploration right for the W06-1 block of the Bonaparte
Basin, an area 350km to 550km west of Darwin off the northwestern coast
of Western Australia.

W06-1 is adjacent to the Bayu/Undan gas field operated and majority-owned
by United States-based ConocoPhillips.

The field, at 80 metres underwater, has geological gas reserves of 3.4
trillion cubic feet, and has been in production since 2004, according to
ConocoPhillips.

Its development cost has amounted to US$3.3 billion and it has an
estimated production life of 25 years.

W06-1, covering an area of 4,220 square km, is one of five blocks in the
Bonaparte Basin that were awarded on Tuesday.

CNOOC has committed to invest in 400 square km of three-dimensional
seismic surveys, geological studies and the drilling of five exploration
wells at a total estimated cost of A$81.3 million.

The company also proposed to spend an additional A$80.8 million in
drilling five more wells and surveying an additional 400 square km.

W06-1 and the adjacent W06-2, which was won by French oil giant Total,
are closest to the operating Bayu/Undan field. They were the most sought
after sites, with each attracting three bidders.

While W06-2 has never been drilled, nine exploration wells have already
been drilled in W06-1, of which two have shown oil and gas accumulations.

Total, which won the nearby W06-3 block, plans to invest a total of
A$224.2 million in the two areas.

India's Reliance Industries, another winner, plans to invest A$29.76
million while Australia's Goldsborough Energy aims to spend A$18.35
million on two other neighbouring areas.

CNOOC has an exploration permit over 21,000 square km of an area in the
Outer Browse block off Western Australia, which will expire in January.

It also has a 5.3 per cent stake in the North West Shelf gas project off
Western Australia that is supplying the Guangdong liquefied natural gas
import terminal.

Its other exploration rights are located in Nigeria, Indonesia, Myanmar,
Kenya and Equatorial Guinea. Around one-sixth of its total proved oil and
gas reserves were in overseas fields at the end of last year.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Learn Chinese, Chinese Mandarin

No comments: