Resource Update

Independent Resources plc ("IRG" or the "Company") Resource Update The Company is pleased to announce results from Fiume Bruna 2 well testing and an update on the appraisal campaign of the Company's unconventional gas acreage, at Fiume Bruna and Casoni, located near Grosseto, Italy. Highlights - Excellent gas quality and water manageability - Confirms fairway in the deeper basin - Significant Resource upgrade - Positive resource implications for Casoni - Re-classification as a Shale Gas play rather than Coal Bed Methane. Results from the FB2 well stimulation and production test The Company's wholly-owned subsidiary Independent Energy Solutions ("IES"), recently completed the FB2 coal bed methane (CBM) well in its target zone present at a depth of 340 m (1100 ft) and executed a test of the coal's productivity in this shallower part of the Ribolla basin (incorporating both the Casoni and Fiume Bruna blocks) . A hydraulic fracture operation coupled with a ceramic proppant, designed to enhance productivity, completed successfully and this was followed by a production test that began on 17 April 2010. In the Company's latest Interim Results, announced on 8 June 2010 IRG reported that initial results from FB2 were due shortly. The Company is pleased to bring these forward. Results from that operation showed that the coal is relatively easy to fracture, producing vertical fractures, and it accepts sufficient quantities of proppant. The gas, desorbed at depth, flowed to surface and was tested to be of high quality, (93-94% of methane, with 1-2% of higher hydrocarbons, 4% nitrogen and only 1% CO2), perfectly suitable for sale, and with very little associated water, minimizing a potentially costly requirement to treat waste water. The carbonaceous formation was found to have 1-2 millidarcies of permeability. Interestingly, the thermogenic gas, formed at high pressure and temperature from the natural cracking of the organic matter in the rock matrix, is found in a rock with insufficient thermal maturity to generate gas. This is significant because it indicates gas migration from deeper in the basin and implies large scale natural permeability. The organic matter in the source rock matrix has demonstrated this coal's capability to produce gas of very good quality. Further analysis suggests the Ribolla coal sequence can be classified as semi-dry. IRG has been able to measure gas desorption from cuttings from the same interval previously cored, reporting similarly high level of desorbed gas, particularly from the carbonaceous shale. IRG has concluded that the Ribolla Carbonaceous Sequence (including the coal and the overlying and underlying shale) responds more like a gas shale than a classic high permeability CBM coal. Accordingly, extra pressure differential (proportional to the vertical distance from the surface to the bottom of the well) is needed to extract the gas at commercial rates. This drives the consequent decision to focus activity in the deeper part of the basin, where much higher drive pressure is present, and where coal and gas shale are interpreted to be at an average depth of 1,000 m. These findings have consequences for the likely development plan which is the current focus of attention since it will drive the next steps. The Company is focusing on a plan that calls for wells with long horizontal sections, likely to be cased, perforated and stimulated each with a multiple stage fracturing job. Broader consequences: A new and extensive organic-rich carbonaceous shale basin The Fiume Bruna project has heretofore been described in terms of a relatively shallow Coal Bed Methane (CBM) play but recent analysis, a new depositional model, and well results indicate that this organic-rich basin is more extensive and likely more productive at depths averaging 1,000 meters (3280 ft). The extent of the deeper part of the basin is interpreted by gravity anomalies, and by available offshore seismic sections located immediately to the SW of the Casoni block. Beyond the positive results from FB2 described above, recent new sources of data have come from the construction of a regional depositional model of the Ribolla basin and beyond. This has allowed IRG to map and analyze this laterally-persistent gas-bearing carbonaceous shale sequence, consistently located immediately above and below the main coal seam. The Casoni and Fiume Bruna blocks cover more than 450 km2 (111,000 acres) and contain more than 140 km2 (35,000 acres) of potentially productive area with a coal plus gas shale sequence at an average depth of 1000 m (3280 ft). The depositional model and the measured data indicates in the entire area an interval of coal and gas shale more than 9 m thick on average, with an average gas content of 4.7 m3/t (152 scf/ton) and an average density of 1.41 g/cm3. The Company has therefore upgraded its previously-announced gross prospective estimates of in-place gas and recoverable gas to 2C Contingent Resources of 8.6 BCM (300 BCF) and 4.6 BCM (160 BCF), respectively. These figures now include both the Fiume Bruna and Casoni blocks. The following table summarizes the change of estimates and the change of resources category over time since IPO in December 2005, excluding any potential for enhanced gas recovery by CO2 injection (ECBM). FIUME BRUNA CASONI TOTAL P(mean) 2C 2C Dec 2005 GIIP (BCF) 212 --- --- 212 PR (BCF) 111 --- --- 111 Jul 2007 GIIP (BCF) 167 --- --- 167 PR (BCF) 92 --- --- 92 Jun 2010 GIIP (BCF) --- 112 188 300 CR (BCF) --- 60 100 160 GIIP = Gas Initially In Place PR = Prospective Resources CR = Contingent Resources This represents an improvement of the gross figures, not only due to the addition of the Casoni license area but also the use of a more appropriate average gas content of the rock based on extensive measurements. The upgrade from Prospective Resources, as it was previously reported, to Contingent Resources, arises from successfully flowing natural gas to surface and is pursuant to the SPE-PRMS* guidelines which the Company uses for its resource estimates. The Company expects to commission a new external Competent Person's Report in due course. Next steps Since the Company's seismic database was acquired for the shallower part of the basin using low-energy seismic acquisition techniques, a test seismic line is planned to determine the best acquisition parameters to map the subsurface carbonaceous stratum in the deeper part of the basin. This will define an appropriate seismic acquisition program that will focus on proving the extent of the basin and siting a well location in the middle of the fairway. The Company will soon commence a detailed bio-stratigraphy study focused on investigating the geological section drilled last year by the FB1 well. Depending on the results of this study and the new seismic, a re-entry of the FB1 well (presently suspended with casing at 224 m depth) is envisaged. IRG believes that an operator's specialized practical experience on a similar shale play would be a great addition to the project. IRG will be updating the market in this regard as news develops. * SPE, AAPG, WPC, SPEE. Petroleum Resources Management System, 2007 This announcement has been reviewed by Roberto Bencini, Technical Director of Independent Resources, for the purposes of the current Guidance Note for Mining, Oil and Gas Companies issued by the London Stock Exchange in June 2009. Mr. Bencini is a chartered petroleum geologist. He is a member of the Society of Petroleum Engineers, the Geological Society of London and the American Association of Petroleum Geologists. For further information contact: Grayson Nash Independent Resources +39 06 4549 0720 plc Simon Hudson Tavistock 020 7920 3150 Allan Piper Communications Jonathan Wright Seymour Pierce Limited 020 7107 8000 Stewart Dickson David Banks Richard Redmayne Background The Fiume Bruna Exploration Permit consists of an area totalling 247 km2 located in southern Tuscany, Central Italy, lying entirely onshore. The exploration permit was applied for in August 2004; the license was awarded to Independent Energy Solutions srl (a Company fully owned by IRG) on August 2008. The Permit area contains the second most important coal mining area in Italy, exploited from 1839 to the late 1950's. The Ribolla coal is a low-sulphur sub-bituminous coal of Miocene age. The Ribolla mine was notorious for the frequent methane inflow and consequent explosions. The mine closed a few years after the large methane explosion of May 1954 that caused 43 casualties, the worse mining disaster ever in Italy. The Casoni Exploration Permit consists of an area totalling 187 km2 and is located just to the south of the Fiume Bruna block, entirely onshore. The exploration permit was applied for by Independent Energy Solutions srl in March 2007, approved by the Ministry of Economic Development in October 2008, and its environmental impact assessment is pending. The prospective area covered by both licenses is characterized by plains and includes cultivated fields. IRG drilled and cored Italy's first CBM stratigraphic borehole in 2006, and measured gas content and gas adsorption characteristics in coal and carbonaceous shale. The gas was found to be thermogenic. During 2008-2009 Independent recorded a total of 66 km of 2D seismic and drilled FB 1 well in August 2009. In addition, a large number of vintage boreholes, available from the past mining activity, have been used to construct a regional depositional model of the Ribolla basin and beyond. This allowed IRG to map a thick gas-bearing carbonaceous shale sequence, consistently located immediately above and below the main coal seam. The FB 2 well (target zone present at a depth of 340 m, 1100 ft) was subsequently drilled to test the coal's productivity in the shallow part of the basin, where the coal and the gas shale were found to be saturated with gas. A hydraulic fracture job coupled with ceramic proppant, designed to enhance productivity, was followed by a seven weeks production test. Unconventional gas: Reservoir rock for unconventional gas ranges from coal beds which contain gas adsorbed into the solid matrix of coal to organic-rich sedimentary rocks, called carbonaceous shales, where the gas is adsorbed within the organic matter and it is present in the micro-porosity and in the cleat space of this low permeability rock. Unconventional gas collectively includes mainly coal bed methane (cbm) and shale gas. Natural gas production from organic-rich shale formations, known as "shale gas," is one of the most rapidly expanding trends in onshore US oil and gas exploration and production today. It refers to gas held in relatively tight reservoirs where the permeability of the reservoir rock is low enough to require stimulation to achieve sustained gas flow. The development of technology that has allowed for cost-effective use of horizontal drilling and multi-stage hydraulic fracturing allows an area to be developed with substantially fewer wells than would be needed if vertical wells were used. Glossary 2C - denotes best estimate scenario of Contingent Resources Adsorption characteristics - the measured property that relates the amount of gas (methane) adsorbed on a solid (coal or coaly shale) at constant temperature and at equilibrium to the pressure of the adsorptive in the gas phase. The principal measurement to determine if a coal or coaly shale is gas saturated or not, and to predict gas content at different depth and pressure Borehole - shallow test well Carbonaceous - rich in coal and/or coal-like material CBM coal bed methane - Methane generated by anaerobic bacterial or thermogenic activity within coal that is absorbed onto microscopic surfaces within the coal. The methane is only free to flow once the hydrostatic pressure is lowered sufficiently by pumping water out of the coal Coal seam - a stratum or bed of coal Contingent Resources - those quantities of petroleum estimated, as of a given date, to be potentially recoverable from known accumulations by application of development projects but which are not currently considered to be commercially recoverable due to one or more contingencies. Contingent Resources are a class of discovered recoverable resources Desorption - expulsion of an adsorbed gas as a result of a decrease in pressure. Measured by placing a fresh coal or coaly shale core sample in a sealed container and observing the amount of methane released as a function of time Gas or natural gas - a naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbon gases that is highly compressible and expansible. Methane (CH4) is the chief constituent of most natural gas (constituting more than 85 per cent. Hydraulic fracture - man-made fracture or fracture system created at the bottom of a well by injecting fluid at the appropriate pressure, in order to increase the production capacity of a low-permeability reservoir rock Known accumulation - an accumulation is an individual body of petroleum-in-place. The key requirement to consider an accumulation as "known," and hence containing Reserves or Contingent Resources, is that it must have been discovered, that is, penetrated by a well that has established through testing, sampling, or logging the existence of a significant quantity of recoverable hydrocarbons Matrix - the rock body between fractures Miocene - the era, or geological strata formed during the period from approximately 23.8 to 5.3 million years before present P(Mean) - is the mean of the distribution of all possible recoverable reserves figures and is the industry standard measure used in many types of calculations. It is the area of a continuous distribution divided by the range of outcomes; or, for a discrete distribution, the sum of all outcomes divided by their total number Permeability - the ability, or measurement of a rock's ability, to transmit fluids, typically measured in millidarcies (mD) Proppant - sand or sand like granules injected in the formation while creating a hydraulic fracture in order to maximize the productivity of the fracture by propping open the fracture Prospective Resources - those quantities of petroleum which are estimated, as of a given date, to be potentially recoverable from undiscovered accumulations Seismic data - a group of reflection seismic lines, usually forming a grid of intersecting sections, used to interpret the geometry and extent of rocks in the subsurface Shale gas - natural gas, composed primarily of methane, that is generated mostly by thermogenic activity within organic rich or carbonaceous shale. The gas is absorbed onto microscopic surfaces within the shale and the organic matter. The gas is only free to flow once the hydrostatic pressure is lowered sufficiently by pumping water out of the borehole Source rock - a rock rich in organic matter which, if heated sufficiently, generates oil or gas SPE-PRMS guidelines - industry standard guidelines, published by SPE, AAPG, WPC, SPEE. "Petroleum Resources Management System", 2007 Stratigraphy - classification of stratified rocks according to lithology, presence of typical fossils, chemical or mineralogical composition Thermogenic - generated by thermal alteration of source rocks, rather than bacterial action Unconventional gas - Unconventional gas exist in accumulations that are pervasive throughout a large area and that are not significantly affected by hydrodynamic influences (also called "continuous-type deposits"). Examples include coalbed methane (CBM), basin-centered gas, shale gas, and gas hydrate. Typically, such accumulations require specialized extraction technology (e.g., dewatering of CBM, massive fracturing programs for shale gas)

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