China Oil Majors Reportedly Eyeing Gulf Keystone's Flagship Kurdistan Asset
13 December 2018 - 11:35PM
Dow Jones News
By Philip Waller
Chinese oil majors appear to be casting a fresh eye over Gulf
Keystone Petroleum Ltd.'s (GKP.LN) flagship oil asset in Kurdistan,
according to a copy of a report seen by Dow Jones Newswires
Experts from the China National Petroleum Corp. and China
National Offshore Oil Corp. (0883.HK) have carried out a technical
study of rock formations at Gulf Keystone's Shaikan field in the
semi-autonomous region of Iraq, according to a report on the
study.
Shaikan has been described as a "world-class oil field" with a
current production capacity of 40,000 barrels of oil a day, though
London-listed Gulf Keystone plans to increase this to 55,000
barrels in the next year or so and eventually to 110,000
barrels.
The report, based on a presentation made to an industry
conference in Bahrain earlier this year, cites six authors from
CNPC and CNOOC or research organizations attached to them.
The latter includes the Research Institute of Petroleum
Exploration & Development, which is the
research-and-development center of CNPC and PetroChina Co.
(601857.SH).
The report says the carbonate reservoirs in the regional land
basin housing Shaikan and about 29 other oil fields are "extremely
rich in oil-and-gas resources."
The report also appears to question a threshold used in a
previous assessment of reserves at Shaikan to determine the level
of rock porosity at which oil recovery would be viable, saying it
is too high.
A spokesman for Gulf Keystone declined to comment on the study
and the Chinese authors didn't respond to an emailed request for
comment.
The report is the latest indication of wider industry interest
in the field, which London-listed Gulf Keystone discovered in
2009.
In December 2016, a Bloomberg report said that another Chinese
oil major, Sinopec, had approached Gulf Keystone.
In July 2014, sector bankers and analysts reportedly said that
Sinopec, CNPC and U.S. majors Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and Chevron
Corp. (CVX) had "shown interest" in Gulf Keystone.
And in December 2011, interest by Sinopec was reported and Gulf
Keystone subsequently went with advisers to China in March
2012.
Meanwhile, Gulf Keystone said this week that it received a $21.2
million net monthly payment for oil from the Kurdistan Regional
Government in September.
Write to Philip Waller at philip.waller@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 13, 2018 07:20 ET (12:20 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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