Gulfsands Petroleum Plc Diverse Player
By Edward Roberts |
Tue, 24 Oct 2006
Gulfsands Petroleum PLC is the holding company of an oil and gas
exploration, development and production group based in Houston, Texas
with activities focused in the USA, Syria and Iraq.
Gulfsands listed on AIM on the 8th of April 2005 raising £29.8m, and
has since been positioning itself for an active drilling programme.
Upon listing GPX had a 52.6% interest in Northstar Gulfsands, which
owns interests in 39 producing oil and gas fields offshore Texas and
Louisiana and operates 8 of those fields. Northstar Gulfsands has
proved and probable reserves of 4.7 mmbbls of oil and some 29.2 bcf of
gas as of November 1, 2004. Gulfands furthermore has 20% interest in
the Syrian Block 26 with significant exploration potential, an Iraqi
gas commercialisation agreement and some small gas interests onshore
USA.
Syria
On the 10th of May 2005 GPX made their first significant acquisition.
They acquired the remaining 80% of Devon Holding's Syria Block 26. The
block covers 11,000 sq kms and surrounds areas which currently produce
over 100,000 bopd from existing fields. The Company planned an
extensive 2D seismic programme and identified 27 exploitation and
exploration prospects and leads with mean resources potential of 1
billion barrels of recoverable oil. At the same time GPX then
immediately farmed-out a 50% working interest (wi) in Block 26 to the
Russian oil and gas company, SoyuzNefteGas (SNG), GPX remained the
operator of the block. In November 2005 UK listed Emerald Energy (EEN)
acquired SNG Overseas Limited which included the 50% wi in Syria Block
26 for a total of $16.9m USD.
In the northern portion of the Block, the leads include Cretaceous
reservoir targets offsetting the large Souedieh, Rumailan, Hamzeh and
Karatchok fields as well as the deeper and highly prospective Paleozoic
reservoir targets. Data acquired in the southwest portion of Block 26
will provide additional seismic coverage over several previously
identified Paleozoic reservoir leads. Gulfsands also expects that these
data will aid in the identification of new exploration leads and
prospects. Production is primarily from Cretaceous age reservoirs, and
the estimated ultimate recovery from the fields already on Block 26 is
in excess of 3 billion barrels of oil. Although the current producing
intervals within these producing fields are not included within the
Block 26 PSC, Gulfsands does have the rights to reservoirs beneath the
existing fields and to all depths outside of existing fields within
Block 26. From the existing 2D seismic GPX had identified drill-worthy
31 prospects and hoped to drill 4 wells by August 2007.
Iraq
Gulfsands signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Ministry of Oil
in Iraq for the Misan Gas Project in Southern Iraq. The project aimed
to commercialise the flared gas, or "associated gas", produced as a
by-product of oil production. Many oil fields have a gas cap which
helps to recover the oil in place by creating a natural drive
mechanism. The commercialisation of gas requires much more
infrastructure and usually a strong local market, compared to oil that
can be trucked or piped to a local refinery and exported. Moreover,
since gas trades at a fraction of the value of oil production it's
often seen as a waste or by-product of oil recovery and flared. With
the strengthening gas price in Europe and the US more companies will
come to realise the value of this flared-off gas, some fields are
flaring-off as much as 200mmcfd, if that same amount of gas was
liquefied and shipped to the US it would fetch about $1.4m.
Americas
The first exploration success for the company came on the 13th of June
2005 in the Gulf of Mexico. Northstar Gulfsands had a 10% wi in the
well on Eugene Island block 83, the well subsequently tested 5.2mmcfd
when tested and recoverable reserves were estimated between 8-10bcf.
Workovers by Northstar also added 3.2bcf of recoverable reserves from
10 wells and the net working interest was 5,000-6,000boed. In July 2005
Northstar Gulfsands announced further drilling success with the
completion of West Delta-1 and WD-2. Estimated reserves on these gas
wells were 8-24bcf and 7-17bcf respectively.
GPX continued their run of exploration success with an onshore gas
discovery by thier 80% owned Darcy Energy, this well put GPX on an
impressive 4 out of 5 strike rate for their first year of AIM listing.
The re-working and deepening of a well in the Barb Mag oilfield was
successfully tested at 1.5mmcfd and 36bod of gas condensate.
Towards the end of 2005 the group went through a significant
restructuring and appointed Mr Bolsover as the new Chairman of the
group. Moreover, they took a direct ownership of 52.6% of the holdings
in Northstar Gulfsands, they repaid all existing debt relating to the
52.6% interest. The 52.6% of Northstar interests were placed into a new
GPX owned subsidiary called Gulfsands Petroleum PLC. That meant that
the company now had a direct ownership of the Gulf of Mexico reserves
and production and gave this new subsidiary immediate cash flow as a
result.
On the 14th of December GPX had further drilling success in the Gulf of
Mexico with the completion of the well on Eugene Island 58, they had
12.5% wi, but the well flowed at 8.2mmcfd and 134bod of gas condensate
on completion. The successful exploration well was on the side track
(13.15% wi) on the Ship Shoal Block 177, subsequent flow was tested at
a rate of 5mmcfd and 31bod of oil. The success rate for offshore
drilling was then running at 4 out of 6 successfully tested wells.
Further drilling has resulted on another exploration success on Eugene
Island 58 in January of this year, the well flowing 4.5mmcfd and 24bod
condensate (GPX 25% wi).
Significant emerging player?
In January 2006 GPX and EEN signed a letter of intent with MB Drilling
Overseas Limited. The drilling contract for two rigs, Rig 31 capable of
drilling only shallow wells for one firm well and an optional shallow
well, and Rig 3 for a one year term with 2 additional one year options.
This will allow partners to drill at least two of the prospects on
Syria Block 26.
The first prospect Souedieh North and is located in the northeast
region of Block 26. This vertical well will be drilled to an
approximate total depth of 7,216 feet with the primary objective being
Cretaceous aged reservoirs similar to those producing in the adjacent
Souedieh and Karachok oil fields. This prospect has the potential to
contain in excess of 100 million barrels of recoverable oil. The Second
prospect is known as Tigris, will also be located in the northeast
region of the Block. This vertical well will be drilled to an
approximate total depth of 14,760 feet with the primary objectives
being a series of Carboniferous and Devonian sandstone reservoirs. The
Tigris structure is directly underlying the Souedieh oil field (the
largest known oil field in Syria), where oil is produced from the
shallower Cretaceous reservoirs. Wireline log evaluation of an existing
well on the structure drilled some years ago has identified pay zones
within the objective reservoirs, and the Tigris-1 well is designed to
evaluate these reservoirs and appraise this potential hydrocarbon
accumulation. This prospect has the potential to contain in excess of
500 million barrels of recoverable oil equivalent (Ryder Scott
independent report). The well is expected to spud in mid-to-late August
2006 after the rig completes an existing long-term drilling contract in
Syria with another company.
GPX has had considerable drilling success from its initial listing on
the AIM market. They have built up a healthy base of reserves and
production in the politically stable US, and had some $78m cash on hand
at the last interims to carry forward its ambitious drilling plans in
Syria. GPX has a firm base form which to work from, but their larger
Syrian prospects have yet to be proven. If these projects come into
play on the scale of the recent Ryder Scott independent analysis of
seismic, then GPX could be transformed into a significant player in the
Middle East.