Statoil Makes Gas Find Offshore Norway

Statoil discovered gas with exploration well 34/11-6 S on the Valemon Field in PL 193 D off Norway. The well was drilled from the Valemon facility, 160 km (99 miles) northwest of Bergen.

The objective of the well was to prove petroleum in the Middle Jurassic (the Brent group), the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD) said.

Preliminary estimates place the size of the discovery between 3 MMcm and 8 MMcm (105.9 MMcf and 282.4 MMcf) of recoverable oil equivalents, the NPD noted. The well will be completed and will start production from the Valemon facility. Data acquisition was carried out. The water depth at the site is 133 m (436 ft).

Well 34/11-6 S was drilled by the West Elara unit, which is permanently stationed at the Valemon facility.

Sri Lanka Launches Tender To Develop Natural Gas Site In Mannar

Sri Lanka launched a tender to develop a gas block in the Mannar Basin off its northwest coast, vacated when Cairn India pulled out of an exploration project in 2015 as oil prices plunged.

Sri Lanka produces no oil and is dependent on imports, but Cairn India Ltd. discovered gas in the area in 2011. The government claims seismic data show the potential for more than 1 Bbbl of oil under the sea in a 30,000-sq-km (11,583-sq-mile) area of the Mannar Basin.

The country invited companies to undertake appraisal and development of gas discoveries and prospects in a 2,924-sq-km (1,129-sq-mile) offshore block in the basin, Petroleum Resource Development Secretariat (PRDS) said on its website on Feb. 13.

“The block will be offered for licensing this year, including the Barracuda and Dorado gas condensate discoveries. A data package will be available containing well data and some 2,600 sq km [1,004 sq miles] of 3-D seismic coverage,” it said.

It also said the remaining blocks off Sri Lankan shores will be released via a bidding round in fourth-quarter 2017.

London-based WesternGeco plans 2-D and 3-D spec surveys ahead of the bids off the east coast and in the Mannar Basin, while the government has planned some airborne surveying, PRDS said.

Cairn India, which is being taken over by Vedanta Ltd., said in 2011 that it struck a 25-m (82-ft) hydrocarbon column showing primarily gas with “other liquid hydrocarbon potential” in the CLPL-Dorado-91H/1z wildcat well, drilled at a water depth of 1,354 m (4,442 ft).

It exited the project in 2015 after a nearly 50% drop in crude oil prices.

Since the end of a 25-year civil war with Tamil separatists over seven years ago, Sri Lanka has tried to reinvigorate oil and gas exploration. Importing oil cost the island $2.7 billion in 2015.

From the mid-1960s to 1984, American and Russian companies explored the Cauvery Basin off the northern shore, but only traces of oil were found and no commercial oil was produced.

—Steve Hamlen & Reuters