Oil Search Makes $400 Million Move Into Big Alaska Oil Find -- Update
31 Octubre 2017 - 8:22PM
Noticias Dow Jones
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--Oil Search Ltd. has struck a deal to
operate what may be one of the largest U.S. oil discoveries in
decades.
The mid-sized energy company said Wednesday that it will pay
$400 million for interests in assets in Alaska's North Slope,
including the Nanushuk oil field sandwiched between two established
fields controlled by ConocoPhillips.
Earlier this year, Spanish oil company Repsol SA and exploration
firm Armstrong Energy LLC estimated Nanushuk could hold 1.2 billion
barrels of recoverable light oil, which would be one of the biggest
onshore U.S. finds in 30 years.
"I didn't believe assets of this quality could necessarily be
found," Peter Botten, managing director of Oil Search said. "These
are unusual assets."
Oil Search, based in the Papua New Guinea capital of Port
Moresby and listed in Australia, has been on the hunt for assets
that would help balance a portfolio heavily weighted to gas
operations in a single country.
The agreement signed by Oil Search will see it purchase stakes
in three exploration blocks in the North Slope from privately-held
Armstrong and GMT Exploration Co., and assume the role of operator
from June 2018. It has an option to buy majority control of the
blocks for a further $450 million by mid-2019, while Repsol retains
a 49% interest in the central block and 25% stakes in another block
as well as exploration acreage.
The deal was struck on the assumption of a 500 million barrel
resource, which Mr. Botten said worked out to a purchase price of
$3.10 a barrel, with the potential for that to fall to $1.30 based
on Repsol's estimate of a 1.2 billion barrel discovery.
Oil Search operates all of Papua New Guinea's producing oil
fields, though these are dwarfed by output from Exxon Mobil Corp.'s
big liquefied natural gas operation in the country, in which Oil
Search has a 29% interest. It also has interests in a number of
undeveloped gas fields in Papua New Guinea, including assets
operated by France's Total SA.
The Alaskan assets, which sit near to existing infrastructure,
are set to bring oil to the market more quickly than the proposed
LNG expansion projects in Papua New Guinea and have the potential
for higher returns, Mr. Botten said. The Alaska business could in
time rival the scale of the Papua New Guinea gas-export operations,
he added.
Mr. Botten said Oil Search had the capacity to fund both its
share of LNG expansion and the development of the Nanushuk field
without a change to its dividend policy or any need to raise
additional equity, with the initial acquisition in the North Slope
paid from surplus cash. He said the company would work with
Halliburton Co. to develop its Alaska operating capabilities.
The companies are targeting a final investment decision on the
Nanushuk field in 2020 and first oil three years after that, aiming
to reach production of 80,000-120,000 barrels a day. There have
been 19 exploration and appraisal wells drilled to date in the
field, which was discovered in 2013, Oil Search said.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 31, 2017 22:07 ET (02:07 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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