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Valeura Energy Inc T.VLE

Alternate Symbol(s):  VLERF

Valeura Energy Inc. is an upstream oil and gas company engaged in the production, development, and exploration of petroleum and natural gas in the Gulf of Thailand and the Thrace Basin of Turkiye. The Company holds an operating working interest in four shallow water offshore licenses in the Gulf of Thailand, which include G10/48 (Wassana field), B5/27 (Jasmine and Ban Yen fields), G1/48 (Manora field) and G11/48 (Nong Yao field). It holds a 100% operating interest in license B5/27 containing the producing Jasmine and Ban Yen oil fields. It holds an operated 70% working interest in license G1/48 containing the Manora oil field, which produces approximately 2,935 barrels per day (bbls/d) of medium-weight sweet crude oil. The Company holds interests ranging from 63% through 100% in various leases and licenses in the Thrace basin. The Company also operates Floating Storage and Offloading (FSO) vessel Aurora, location at Nong Yao field, offshore Gulf of Thailand.


TSX:VLE - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by Sil.Don Aug 03, 2017 10:06pm
111 Views
Post# 26545982

STO SCALES BACK

STO SCALES BACK

Statoil Scales Down Exploration Plans For 2017

 


Reuters

OSLO, July 27 (Reuters) - Norway's Statoil has reduced its exploration ambitions for 2017 and will drill around 30 wells, down from previous plans for as many as 35, its chief financial officer said on Thursday.

The company has revised its exploration spending guidance for 2017 to $1.3 billion from $1.5 billion, citing "strict prioritisation and efficient drilling operations" in a statement accompanying its second-quarter earnings.

Its exploration spending in the second quarter was down to $224 million from $423 million during the same quarter a year ago.

"We started from 30 to 35 (exploration) wells, and now we are more specific on the number of wells," Chief Financial Officer Hans Jakob Hegge told a second-quarter results call with analysts.

He declined to elaborate which wells Statoil will not drill, but said the company was still a more active explorer than its peers "in relative terms".

The oil company scaled down exploration to save money to pay dividends and debts after oil prices crashed in 2014.

Statoil completed 23 exploration wells in 2016, and so far this year it has drilled 14 wells, making nine finds, including a small oil discovery in the Barents Sea.

Another well drilled in the Barents Sea, Blaamann, showed presence of natural gas, but no oil, which the company said was a disappointing result.

Its drilling campaign off the east coast of Canada's Newfoundland and Labrador province also proved no oil.

Statoil said in January it planned to drill 5-7 wells in the Norwegian part of the Barents Sea, which is estimated to hold two-thirds of yet to be discovered hydrocarbons on the Norwegian continental shelf.

The company is currently drilling the third well in the Barents Sea, Gemini North, which it initially planned to drill in June, an has two Arctic wells, Korpfjell and Koigen Central, left to be drilled.

Statoil considers the two to be high-impact wells, meaning that each have the potential to provide a total of more than 250 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe) to Statoil and any partners, or 100 million boe net to Statoil alone.

"The plans to drill those two wells remain in place. We will move to drill Korpfjell after completing Gemini North," a Statoil spokesman said.

In July, Statoil kicked off its drilling campaing offshore UK, which includes three wells.

(Editing by Keith Weir)


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