Drilling Contract
Gulfsands Petroleum PLC
04 April 2006
4 April 2006
Gulfsands Petroleum PLC
('Gulfsands' or 'the Group')
Gulfsands Signs Rig Contracts for Block 26, Syria
First Exploration Well Expected to Spud by May 2006
Gulfsands Petroleum PLC (symbol GPX), the AIM listed oil and gas exploration,
development and production company with activities in the USA, Syria and Iraq,
announced today that the Company has executed definitive agreements for the
drilling of three exploration wells with the option to drill a further two wells
within Block 26, Syria.
Gulfsands, the operator and 50% working interest owner in Block 26, has taken
assignment under an existing contract from another operator in Syria, for a
drilling rig owned and operated by Crosco, a drilling company based in Croatia.
Gulfsands will use this rig to drill and evaluate the Souedieh North well
commencing in late April or early May 2006 with the option to drill another well
within the block under this same agreement. Furthermore, the Company signed a
definitive agreement with MB Drilling Overseas Limited for the drilling of two
firm wells with a one well option. This rig will be used to drill to the deeper
Palaeozoic prospects identified in Block 26, such as the Tigris structure which
is scheduled for drilling in August 2006.
The Souedieh North well will be 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
(Gulfsands' internal estimate of potential). Gulfsands has commenced site
preparations for the well, and expects a spud date on or about 1 May 2006. The
net cost to Gulfsands for drilling and evaluating this well is approximately
$800,000.
The Tigris well will also be located in the northeast region of the Block and is
expected to spud in August 2006. The net cost to Gulfsands for drilling and
evaluating this well is approximately $3.25 million. This vertical well will be
drilled to a total depth of nearly 15,000 feet with the primary objectives being
a series of Palaeozoic (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
probable hydrocarbon accumulation. Gulfsands announced on 30 January 2006 the
results of a reserves study by Ryder Scott Company, L.P. (Ryder Scott), an
independent petroleum engineering firm, on the Tigris structure. Ryder Scott
developed two cases for this evaluation, an oil case and a gas case, as there
was not sufficient data available at the time to determine the expected
hydrocarbon fluid contained within the Tigris structure. This reserves study
as of 1 January 2006 classified recoverable Probable and Possible Reserves and
Prospective Resource as follows:
• For primarily a natural gas accumulation, Ryder Scott has classified 442
BCFG as Probable Reserves, 442 BCFG as Possible Reserves, and a further 3447
BCFG as a Prospective Resource. In summary total reserves potential among
Probable, Possible and Prospective Resource is 4330 BCFG (722 MMBOE).
• For primarily an oil accumulation, Ryder Scott has classified 104 million
barrels of oil and 64 BCFG as Possible Reserves and a further 408 MMBO and
245 BCFG as a Prospective Resource. In summary total reserves potential
among Possible and Prospective Resource is 512 MMBO and 308 BCFG (combined
563 MMBOE).
Gulfsands' CEO, John Dorrier, said:
'Gulfsands is constantly seeking ways of accelerating its schedules and
controlling the costs of exploration drilling. These drilling arrangements
represent an important achievement in the current market. The relatively
low-cost and high potential of these two drilling projects remains a very
attractive exploitation of the Company's significant inventory of drilling
opportunities.'
Enquiries:
Gulfsands Petroleum (Houston) 001-713-626-9564
David DeCort, Chief Financial Officer
College Hill (London) 020-7457-2020
Ben Brewerton / Nick Elwes
Seymour Pierce (London) 020-7107-8000
Richard Redmayne
Jonathan Wright
Note to Editors
• Gulf of Mexico, USA
The Group owns interests in 64 offshore blocks comprising approximately 216,000
gross acres which includes 39 producing oil and gas fields offshore Texas and
Louisiana with proved and probable recoverable reserves of 32.4 BCFGE,
consisting of 19.8 BCFG and 2.1 MMBO as of 1 January 2006 with a net present
value of $183 million. Additionally, there is a further 2.8 BCFGE of possible
recoverable reserves with a net present value of $15.8 million.
• Syria
In Syria, Gulfsands owns a 50% working interest in Block 26 and is the operator.
The block covers 11,000 square kilometres and surrounds areas which currently
produce over 100,000 barrels of oil per day from existing fields. In January
2006 the Group completed the acquisition of 1,155 kilometers of 2D seismic and
anticipates drilling two wells during 2006. The first well, known as Souedieh
North, is scheduled to spud in late April or early May 2006 which has the
potential to contain in excess of 100 MMBO. The second well known as Tigris is
scheduled to spud in August of 2006 and has the potential to contain in excess
of 500 MMBOE. Gulfsands has identified 31 total exploitation and exploration
prospects within Block 26 with mean resources potential exceeding 1 billion
barrels of recoverable oil.
An independent reserves report was issued in January 2006 on the Tigris
structure. The reserves were classified as either oil or gas bearing until such
time as the Company drills and tests the Tigris structure. The reserve report
concluded that there are 442 BCFG of probable recoverable reserves in the Tigris
structure. Additionally, the report classified the possible reserves as either
natural gas or oil. The gas case reflected an additional 442 BCFG in possible
recoverable reserves and an additional 3447 BCFG as prospective resource. The
oil case reflects 104 MMBO and 64 BCFG in possible recoverable reserves and a
further 408 MMBO and 245 BCFG as prospective resource. In summary, the natural
gas case equates to total recoverable reserves potential among probable
reserves, possible reserves and prospective resource as 4330 BCFG (722 MMBOE),
while the oil case equates to 512 MMBO and 308 BCFG (combined 563 MMBOE).
• Iraq
Gulfsands signed a Memorandum of Understanding in January 2005 with the Ministry
of Oil in Iraq for the Misan Gas Project in Southern Iraq and is currently
negotiating the definitive contract for the project. The project will gather,
process and transmit natural gas that is currently a waste by-product of oil
production in the region and will end the environmentally damaging practice of
gas flaring. Gulfsands has completed a feasibility study and expects to conduct
further technical work and commercial discussions with the Iraq Oil Ministry.
• Onshore USA
Gulfsands operates onshore in the USA through its 83% owned subsidiary company
Darcy Energy LLC. As of 1 January 2006, Darcy Energy owned interests in two oil
and gas fields onshore Texas, USA (Emily Hawes and Barb Mag) with proved and
probable recoverable reserves of 1.6 BCFGE, consisting of 1.2 BCFG and 58,000
barrels of oil with a net present value of $9.5 million. Additionally, there is
a further 2.2 BCFGE of possible recoverable reserves with a net present value of
$7.9 million.
This information is provided by RNS
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