Oil Search Doubles Stakes in Big Alaska Oil Find
27 Junio 2019 - 7:29PM
Noticias Dow Jones
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--Oil Search Ltd. (OSH.AU) has exercised an
option to sharply increase its stakes in prospective oil fields in
Alaska, where the energy company and partner Repsol SA (REP.MC)
plan to build an operation producing about 120,000 barrels a
day.
Oil Search said the US$450 million option will see it buy
closely held Armstrong Energy LLC's and GMT Exploration Co.'s
remaining 25.5% and 37.5% interests in the Pikka Unit and Horseshoe
area, as well as further stakes in other exploration leases. That
will double its interests across the assets in Alaska's North
Slope, which is estimated to be one of the largest conventional oil
discoveries in the U.S. in decades.
The decision to push more deeply into Alaska as part of an
effort to diversify away from dependence on liquefied natural gas
production in Papua New Guinea comes after Oil Search reviewed
drilling and other data on the Alaskan fields compiled over the
past 18 months.
Oil Search plans to sell part of its Alaskan portfolio ahead of
making a final investment decision on the first phase of
development on the North Slope's Pikka Nanushuk development, which
is scheduled for mid-2020. The company said the timing of a sale
would allow it to incorporate the latest drilling results,
maximizing the value of the assets.
Oil Search, based in the Papua New Guinea capital of Port
Moresby and listed in Australia, made a foray into Alaska in late
2017 with a US$400 million deal to buy into three exploration
blocks that included the Nanushuk oil field sandwiched between two
established fields controlled by ConocoPhillips (COP). Earlier that
year, Spain's Repsol and exploration firm Armstrong Energy
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.
On Friday, Oil Search said it had agreed with Repsol to align
ownership of their shared Alaskan assets. That would see the Papua
New Guinea company retain 51% of the Pikka unit and the Horseshoe
block, while buying a 51% stake in the leases Repsol acquired in
2017, resulting in a US$64.3 million payment from Repsol to Oil
Search.
Oil Search said it expects to soon increase its current resource
estimate for the Pikka Nanushuk and adjacent fields, which
currently stands at a gross 500 million barrels.
Repsol and Oil Search's base plan would see the pair develop
Nanushuk to initially produce 30,000 barrels a day from 2022, using
the processing facilities of its neighbor, before building out
dedicated facilities that could produce about 120,000 barrels daily
as full-field output begins in 2024.
The US$450 million to buy the additional stakes from Armstrong
Energy and GMT Exploration will be funded from existing credit
lines, and Oil Search said it expected to finalize additional
one-year bank credit lines for US$300 million to cover the period
when it aims to sell some of its Alaskan interests.
Oil Search operates all of Papua New Guinea's producing oil
fields, though these are dwarfed by output from Exxon Mobil Corp.'s
(XOM) 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 (TOT).
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 27, 2019 20:14 ET (00:14 GMT)
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