15 August 2024
Orcadian Energy plc
("Orcadian" or the
"Company")
33rd Round Licence
Awards
Orcadian Energy (AIM: ORCA) is pleased to
provide an update on the status of its three licence awards in the
33rd Seaward Licensing Round. Orcadian and the NSTA have
now entered into binding licence agreements for all three of its
licence awards.
33rd Round
Licences:
· Earlham Licence P2680
- Orcadian is licence administrator and holds 100% -
containing an existing discovery, an exciting undrilled prospect
and a redevelopment opportunity
· Mid North Sea High Licence
P2650 - Orcadian is licence administrator and
holds 50% - containing shallow gas prospects and leads
· Fynn Licence P2634 -
Orcadian 50% interest - containing a very substantial viscous and
heavy oil discovery
Steve Brown
CEO of Orcadian Energy said:
"We are
really pleased to have the licence agreements in place
for these three new projects. As a result, we estimate that our
contingent resource base has grown to 228 MMboe with our un-risked
prospective resource base now 100 MMboe.
"Our strategy
has been to focus on the "post-transition" hydrocarbons -
gas and viscous oil.
"In a shallow
water mature basin, almost by definition, the big fields with great
rocks and simple fluids have all already been developed, So, we
concentrate on reservoirs with great rocks, while innovating around
how to develop complex fluids.
"Our viscous
oil projects will all benefit from our expertise in the application
of polymer flood technology. A combination of geothermal heat and
polymer could unlock the Fynn development which is a project of the
same scale as Rosebank.
"On the
Mid-North Sea High, we have identified a number of shallow gas
prospects with the same characteristics as the A & B block gas
fields that have been successfully developed in the Dutch sector.
Of course, as the reservoirs are shallow the initial reservoir
pressure is correspondingly lower, so development of these gas
fields starts with a need for gas compression.
"The Earlham
field has a high inert gas content, which has precluded development
to date, but the reservoir is proven and no further appraisal
expenditure is needed. We, with our industry partner, are confident
we have a solution to deal with the high level of inerts and beyond
that, we believe we will be able to deliver a reliable supply of
near-zero emissions power to the grid.
"Orcadian is
no longer a one-trick pony. We have multiple pathways to success
and to deliver future value to our shareholders. The Earlham
project, in particular, demonstrates that our industry is capable
of finding ways to exploit our natural endowment of hydrocarbons to
deliver real energy security and emissions
reductions."
The opportunities presented by these new
licences are summarised below:
Earlham
Licence P2680
The Earlham licence contains an existing
discovery with a high inert gas content (Earlham), an exciting
undrilled prospect (Clover) and a redevelopment opportunity
(Orwell). The licence lies 100 km East of Bacton on the median line
with the Netherlands.
Earlham
The Earlham discovery was made by well 50/26b-6
drilled in 1995 by Talisman, encountering gas in the Rotliegendes.
This was then followed in 1996 by a long horizontal combined
appraisal and development well drilled by BP, intended to be tested
at up to 80 MMscf/day of gas. Both wells established that the
Earlham field has good permeability and that the wells will flow at
commercial rates without stimulation. No further appraisal is
needed.
The test was curtailed, and the rate limited to
30 MMscf/day, when it was established that the gas contained 49%
CO2 and 9% N2. Taking that into account,
Orcadian estimate that the Earlham reservoir contains 114 bcf of
sales gas (methane) on a P50 basis. Our development concept entails
an offshore power station, to be connected to the grid (possibly
via a wind farm substation), with integrated CO2 capture
and storage. This concept would deliver a stable and reliable
supply of electricity with near-zero emissions.
This approach to off-spec gas development is
entirely consistent with the Prime Minister's national mission to
make Britain a clean energy superpower with zero carbon electricity
by 2030. Orcadian will work with an industry partner to progress
development of this resource and intend to rapidly progress the
concept select process with NSTA to enable the earliest possible
project commitment.
Orwell
The Orwell field produced 309 bcf of wet gas
from August 1993 to January 2009 when a subsurface safety valve
failed. Given the very limited field life at the host Thames
complex, it was decided to decommission the field. Orwell had
been developed with three wells and the pressure data confirmed
that the wells were connected to a Gas Initially in Place of 368
bcf. At abandonment, the reservoir pressure was about 28 bar. If,
by implementing suction compression, it was possible to reduce the
pressure to 10 bar, then up to a further 38 bcf of gas could be
produced. It is intended that a redevelopment of Orwell will
provide additional gas to be used to produce near-zero emissions
power in the offshore power station.
Clover
The licence also contains a compelling gas
prospect which the Company has named Clover. This is a four-way dip
closure reservoired in Bunter sands, analogous to the nearby
decommissioned Orwell Field, which produced over 300 bcf of gas.
Orcadian estimate that P50 recoverable prospective resources in
Clover amount to 153 bcf and the geological chance of success is
estimated to be 38%.
Orcadian is licence administrator and holds
100% of the licence. The SNS licence covers blocks 49/25b, 50/21a,
49/30b and 50/26.
Mid North Sea
High Licence P2650
The Mid-North Sea High ("MNSH") licence
contains shallow gas prospects and leads which contain up to 336
bcf of gross prospective recoverable resource on a P50
basis.
The two largest leads - Glenlough and Breckagh
- are estimated to have a prospective resource potential of 131 bcf
and 138 bcf respectively. These prospects are analogous to the
Block A and Block B shallow gas fields in the Netherlands developed
by Unocal and subsequently Chevron which came onstream in 2007.
Since then, the fields have been acquired by Petrogas who recently
brought two additional fields on stream to bring the total number
of shallow gas fields being produced up to six.
Any gas discovered could be used to power an
offshore power station or could be compressed and produced via the
CATS line which has a nearby tie-in point.
Orcadian applied in partnership with Triangle
Energy, an Australian listed energy company. Orcadian is licence
administrator and holds 50% of the licence.
The Mid-North Sea licence covers blocks 29/16,
29/17, 29/18, 29/19, 29/21, 29/22, 29/23, 29/27 and
29/28.
Fynn Licence
P2634
The licence contains a very substantial viscous
and heavy oil discovery which has a gross P50 contingent
recoverable resource of 292 MMbbl, based upon the latest operator
estimates.
The Fynn licence is situated in the Outer Moray
Firth and comprises blocks 14/15a, 14/20d and 15/11a. Orcadian (50%
interest) together with the licence operator Parkmead (50%
interest), will leverage expertise gained in developing viscous
crudes to work towards commercialisation of Fynn Beauly, which is
one of the UK's largest undeveloped discoveries. This oil
accumulation has been proven by three wells and is estimated to
contain most likely (P50) gross contingent resources of 292 MMbbl,
257 MMbbl of which is on the licence; a resource of the same scale
as Rosebank.
The partnership will now begin to progress the
approved three-year work programme to work towards a technically
and economically viable development, that can be delivered within
the context of the NSTA's Net Zero Strategy. By undertaking
geophysical, geochemical and reservoir modelling studies the work
will assess the feasibility of implementing polymer flooding with
geothermal heat uplift to improve recovery.
Why Viscous
Oil Matters
The oil within the Fynn reservoir is viscous
and made up of long chain hydrocarbons, which means that when
refined it contributes little to gasoline supplies, but is a good
feedstock for lubricants, asphalt and anode grade petroleum coke
(an essential component for fast charge EV batteries). Orcadian
believes that gas and viscous oils will be the post-transition
hydrocarbons essential to the prosperity of every
economy.
Why Domestic
Production is Best
Producing heavy oil domestically, under the
stewardship of the NSTA, is a considerably better option than
importing these oils from Venezuela or Canada. Both these countries
produce most of their heavy oil using thermal means - steam
assisted gravity drainage, cyclic steam stimulation or steam flood.
The measure of efficiency of all these techniques is the steam-oil
ratio, which is the number of barrels of cold-water equivalent of
steam required to recover a barrel of oil. An outstanding steam oil
ratio is two, but steam-oil ratios of four or five are common. The
CO2 emissions from burning gas to generate the steam are
approximately 30 kgCO2/bbl of water. So, emissions per
barrel from imports from Canada or Venezuela are typically 60 to
150 kgCO2/bbl, even before the transportation emissions
are accounted for. It is these high emission levels, and the strip
mining and chemical processing often used for extra-heavy oil
extraction that have given heavy oils such an undeserved
reputation.
With a polymer flood approach, by incorporating
heat from geothermal sources to reduce reservoir oil viscosity, and
by electrifying production systems using green energy, the
emissions per barrel in the production process can be reduced to
single figures, better than most UK light oil fields. The UK and
her allies need viscous oils both for strategic security of energy
and for the petroleum-derived products that support both the
transition and the post-transition economy.
Buying these products made from imported
petroleum rather than our own oil also damages the balance of
payments, eliminates great jobs, and increases actual greenhouse
emissions.
In summary we are delighted to have the Fynn
licence in hand and we are committed to finding a way to produce
this essential oil with the least emissions possible.
Resource
Summary
The award of these three licences has
significantly boosted Orcadian's contingent and prospective
resource base, see tables below. The company now has over 228 MMboe
of 2C contingent resources and 100 MMboe of prospective resources
in high graded leads and prospects. About 14 MMbbl of these
resources relate to the Pilot field where Orcadian is carried
through to first offload of production from the
development.
For further information on the Company please
visit the Company's website: https://orcadian.energy
Contact:
Orcadian Energy
plc
|
+ 44 20 7920 3150
|
Steve Brown, CEO
Alan Hume, CFO
|
|
Zeus (Nomad and
Joint Broker)
|
+44 20 3829 5000
|
Dan Bate / Alex Campbell-Harris (Investment
Banking)
Simon Johnson (Corporate Broking)
|
|
Novum (Joint
Broker)
|
+44 207 399 9425
|
Colin Rowbury / Jon Belliss
|
|
Tavistock
(PR)
|
+ 44 20 7920 3150
|
Nick Elwes / Simon Hudson
|
orcadian@tavistock.co.uk
|
Qualified
Person's Statement
Pursuant to the requirements of the AIM Rules
and in particular, the AIM Note for Mining and Oil and Gas
Companies, Maurice Bamford has reviewed and approved the technical
information and resource reporting contained in this
announcement.
Maurice has more than 34 years' experience in
the oil & gas industry and 3 years in academia. He holds a BSc
in Geology from Queens University Belfast and a PhD in Geology from
the National University of Ireland. Maurice is a Fellow of the
Geological Society, London, and a member of the Geoscience Energy
Society of Great Britain. He is Exploration and Geoscience Manager
at Orcadian Energy.
About Orcadian
Energy
Orcadian is a North Sea focused, low emissions,
oil and gas exploration and development company. Orcadian may be a
small operator, but it is also nimble, and the Directors believe it
has grasped opportunities that have eluded some of the much bigger
companies. As we strike a balance between Net Zero and a
sustainable energy supply, and petroleum-derived products, Orcadian
intends to play its part to minimise the cost of Net Zero and to
deliver reliable energy to the UK.
Orcadian's key asset is the Pilot oilfield,
Pilot was discovered by PetroFina in 1989 and has been well
appraised. The field has excellent quality reservoir and contains
263 MMbbl of a viscous oil ranging in gravity from 17º API in the
South of the reservoir to 12º API in the North. In planning the
Pilot development, Orcadian has selected polymer flooding and wind
power to transform the production of viscous oil into a cleaner and
greener process. Polymer significantly reduces fluid handling
requirements and hence energy consumption as well as boosting
recovery. Ithaca Energy, operator of the Captain field in the Inner
Moray Firth, has enjoyed consistent success in applying polymer
flood to the highly analogous Captain field. Following the recent
farm-down of Pilot, the project is now under the stewardship of
Ping Petroleum UK PLC ("Ping") and is intended to be amongst the
lowest carbon emitting oil production facilities in the
world.
Ping is progressing a low-emissions, phased,
field development plan for Pilot based upon a polymer flood of the
reservoir, a Floating Production Storage and Offloading vessel
(FPSO) and provision of power from a floating wind turbine or a
local wind farm.
Orcadian has an 18.75% fully carried interest
in licence P2244 (block 21/27a) and a 100% interest in licence
P2482 (blocks 28/2a and 28/3a). Ping is operator of P2244 and the
Pilot development project.
The Mid-North Sea High licence, P2650, contains
shallow gas leads. Orcadian applied in partnership with Triangle
Energy, an Australian listed energy company. Orcadian would be
licence administrator and would hold 50% of the licence. The
Mid-North Sea High licence covers blocks 29/16, 29/17, 29/18,
29/19, 29/21, 29/22, 29/23, 29/27 and 29/28.
The Fynn licence, P2634, contains a very
substantial heavy oil discovery. About 88% of the resource on a
best technical case is estimated to lie within the area of the
licence. Orcadian has a 50% working interest in the Fynn licence,
operated by the Parkmead Group. The Fynn licence covers blocks
14/15a, 14/20d and 15/11a.
The SNS licence, P2680, is held 100% by
Orcadian, contains the Earlham discovery, a low-calorie gas
discovery with 114 bcf of methane resources on a P50 basis, the
Clover prospect which has P50 prospective resources of 153 bcf, and
the decommissioned Orwell field which has redevelopment potential,
alongside a number of smaller prospects.
Contingent
Resources
Asset
|
Gross
|
Net
|
PRMS
sub-class
|
Phase
& units
|
Commercial risk factor
|
Licence
|
|
1C
|
2C
|
3C
|
1C
|
2C
|
3C
|
|
|
|
|
Pilot*
|
58.4
|
78.8
|
110.5
|
9.8
|
13.6
|
19.7
|
Development pending
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
100%
|
P2244
Source 2
|
Pilot periphery
|
5.9
|
9.8
|
17.6
|
1.1
|
1.8
|
3.3
|
Development unclarified
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
80%
|
P2244
Source 2 & 7
|
Elke Main §
|
26.0
|
45.5
|
94.9
|
25.7
|
45.0
|
94.0
|
Development on hold
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
79%
|
P2482
Source 3
|
Narwhal
|
4.3
|
9.2
|
17.6
|
4.2
|
9.1
|
17.4
|
Development on hold
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
79%
|
P2482
Source 1
|
Fynn (Beauly)
|
175.6
|
292.3
|
480.6
|
77.3
|
128.6
|
211.5
|
Development unclarified
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
25%
|
P2634
Source 5 & 7
|
Lowlander & Midlander
|
17.5
|
11.6
|
31.9
|
8.8
|
5.8
|
16.0
|
Development unclarified
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
15%
|
P2634
Source 6 & 7
|
Orwell
|
4.2
|
5.2
|
6.3
|
4.2
|
5.2
|
6.3
|
Development unclarified
|
Gas, MMboe
|
50%
|
P2680
Source 8
|
25.0
|
31.0
|
38.0
|
25.0
|
31.0
|
38.0
|
Gas, bcf
|
Earlham
|
12.5
|
19.0
|
29.0
|
12.5
|
19.0
|
29.0
|
Development unclarified
|
Gas, MMboe
|
67%
|
P2680
Source 4
|
75.0
|
114.0
|
174.0
|
75.0
|
114.0
|
174.0
|
Gas, bcf
|
Total
contingent resources
|
228.2
|
|
|
Oil & gas, MMboe
|
|
|
Total
contingent resources factored by commercial risk
|
106.2
|
|
|
Oil & gas, MMboe
|
|
|
Prospective
Resources
Asset
|
Gross
|
Net
|
PRMS
sub-class
|
Phase
& units
|
Geological risk factor
|
Licence
|
Low
|
Best
|
High
|
Low
|
Best
|
High
|
Elke Main - West
(3C outline §)
|
13.0
|
22.8
|
47.5
|
12.9
|
22.5
|
47.0
|
Prospect
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
90%
|
P2482
Source 3 & 7
|
Elke Updip
|
5.5
|
17.5
|
39.0
|
5.4
|
17.3
|
38.6
|
Prospect
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
87%
|
P2482
Source 1
|
Elke Area 2
|
4.2
|
12.3
|
25.4
|
4.2
|
12.2
|
25.1
|
Prospect
|
Oil, MMbbl
|
64%
|
P2482
Source 1
|
Clover
|
13.8
|
25.5
|
45.3
|
13.8
|
25.5
|
45.3
|
Prospect
|
Gas, MMboe
|
38%
|
P2680
Source 4
|
83.0
|
153.0
|
272.0
|
83.0
|
153.0
|
272.0
|
Gas, bcf
|
Glenlough
|
12.0
|
21.8
|
36.7
|
6.0
|
10.9
|
18.3
|
Lead
|
Gas, MMboe
|
31%
|
P2650
Source 4
|
72.0
|
131.0
|
220.0
|
36.0
|
65.5
|
110.0
|
Gas, bcf
|
Upper Breckagh
|
3.3
|
5.5
|
9.2
|
1.7
|
2.8
|
4.6
|
Lead
|
Gas, MMboe
|
55%
|
P2650
Source 4
|
20.0
|
33.0
|
55.0
|
10.0
|
16.5
|
27.5
|
Gas, bcf
|
Lower Breckagh
|
9.5
|
17.5
|
30.3
|
4.8
|
8.8
|
15.2
|
Lead
|
Gas, MMboe
|
20%
|
P2650
Source 4
|
57.0
|
105.0
|
182.0
|
28.5
|
52.5
|
91.0
|
Gas, bcf
|
Total
prospective resources
|
99.9
|
|
|
Oil & gas, MMboe
|
|
|
Total
risked prospective resources
|
59.5
|
|
|
Oil & gas, MMboe
|
|
|
Source
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
Sproule CPR 2021
|
|
2
|
Sproule CPR 2021 - equity
updated
|
|
3
|
Sproule CPR 2021 - management
modified
|
|
4
|
Orcadian management estimate -
Licence application to NSTA
|
|
5
|
Operator estimate - as presented to
NSTA
|
|
6
|
Operator - earlier Relinquishment
Report & Licence Application - both for NSTA
|
|
7
|
Orcadian management estimate of risk
factor
|
|
8
|
Orcadian management
estimate
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*
|
Pilot field net resources include a
reduced revenue interest of 10% until the carry is
repaid
|
§
|
Elke high case is limited to the 2C
outline as we have reclassified the 3C extension as the Elke Main
West prospect
|