Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

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Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Tue Jan 17, 2012 3:44 pm

with plenty of press speculation, its time to make a list - please add, as I am sure there are others

Fin Review has musings whether AGL may be "running a ruler" over Senex, and a separate article about how the French giant, Total, sees money as no object for it to buy the right gas opportunity, in Australia in today's paper they join the dots. Now they speculate that Total could also be zeroing in on Senex, and that other majors looking to build on their Gladstone based commitments could also join the hunt. Both Shell and BG got a mention.


Listed Players in Cooper Basin - Oil, gas, unconventional gas (esp. shale gas)
STO - Santos
BPT - Beach
SXY - Senex (formerly Victoria Pet.)
COE - Cooper Energy
DLS - Drillsearch
ICN - Icon Energy
STX - Strike
ACN - Acer Energy (formerly Innamincka)
AQO - Ambassador

Stuart Pet, Adelaide Energy and others have been acquired of late
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby hybridbloke » Tue Jan 17, 2012 9:57 pm

acn acer had the worlds best reason for name change.

any ex innamincka shareholder would still shudder a bit to look at the old shareprice chart.

the new acer had a presentation late last year that is well worth downloading if the cooper interests you.

lot of cash,funded near term drills,medium cap that can still run well on good results. i put a few together waiting for the drilling program. this is one of the few cooper exposures not to have moved much recently, but the blocking stake that makes it not a takeover battle chance is the big negative.
[plus,they should change the names of the flax and juniper oil fields as well]
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Thu Jan 19, 2012 11:50 am

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-1 ... l-m-a.html the article is worth full read
Beach Energy Takeover Seen With Australia Shale 2% of U.S. Value: Real M&A -By James Paton - Jan 19, 2012

Surging prices for shale gas and oil properties in the U.S. are turning owners of deposits as far away as Australia into potential takeover targets.

While shale assets in Texas sold at $25,000 an acre this year and a holding in Ohio and Pennsylvania changed hands at about $15,000 last month, shale properties owned by Australia’s Beach Energy Ltd. can be bought for $406 per acre, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and DNB Markets. Energy companies are pursuing unconventional assets such as shale after the average price for Brent oil futures reached a record in 2011 and the cost to find and develop oil jumped, the data show.

With explorers from Senex Energy Ltd. (SXY) to Drillsearch Energy Ltd. (DLS) also owning pieces of an estimated 400 trillion cubic feet of recoverable shale-gas resources, Australia is poised to commercialize its holdings on a “large scale,” according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. While the country’s explorers are trailing their U.S. counterparts in development by several years and face higher drilling costs, Asian demand for natural gas may lure energy and power producers to Australia’s shale properties, Commonwealth Bank of Australia said.

“This could be the next big thing,” Mark Carnegie, former head of Lazard Ltd.’s Australian private equity business, said from Sydney. Carnegie manages a A$170 million ($177 million) venture capital fund at M.H. Carnegie & Co., which owns about 11 percent of Perth-based shale explorer Strike Energy Ltd. (STX)

“There’s no reason the economics shouldn’t be the same in Australia as they are in the Eagle Ford,” shale region in Texas, he said. “If we get anything like that we’re going to end up with a phenomenal return.”

Advances over the past decade in the technology for hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, used to free gas and oil trapped in dense shale-rock formations, has helped spur the increase in prices for shale acreage. The process involves fracturing the formation by injecting water mixed with sand and chemicals to keep the cracks open and petroleum flowing.

Companies are also expanding into unconventional drilling areas after Brent oil futures, the London-traded benchmark for two-thirds of the world’s crude, jumped 26 percent to an average of $110.91 a barrel in 2011, the highest level on record.

Japan’s Marubeni Corp. (8002) this month agreed to pay as much as $25,000 an acre for a stake in an Eagle Ford shale oil and gas property, a 19 percent increase from the per-acre price paid for a nearby holding by Marathon Oil Corp. last year.

Beach Energy (BPT), Senex and Drillsearch each own resources in the Cooper Basin, Australia’s main source of onshore gas. The area is already connected by pipeline to Sydney and other eastern markets, according to an April EIA report, which found that Australia has “geologic and industry conditions resembling those” of the U.S. and Canada.

“The country appears poised to commercialize its gas shale resources on a large scale,” it said.

Natural gas demand on the east coast of Australia may triple by 2020, driven by exports to Asia and Australia’s move to tax carbon emissions, Commonwealth Bank said in a note last month.

BG Group Plc, ConocoPhillips and Santos Ltd. are building more than $50 billion of projects on the coast of Queensland state that will convert gas extracted from coal deposits into liquid so it can be shipped to Japan, China and South Korea. Arrow Energy Ltd., owned by Royal Dutch Shell Plc and PetroChina Co., has said it plans a fourth venture.

Those projects may need Cooper Basin shale-gas to underpin expansion plans, said Lucas Huang, a Singapore-based analyst at DNB Markets. Utilities and international oil companies may also seek Cooper Basin shale gas properties, according to Commonwealth Bank analyst Luke Smith.

Oil India Ltd. (OINL), which said this week that it plans to spend as much as $200 million on its first shale-gas investment in the U.S., has also asked banks to propose investments in Australia.

“We’ll see consolidation because the LNG plants, we think, will be under-supplied with gas,” said Tim Hannon, who manages a A$100 million hedge fund at Melbourne-based Evergreen Capital Partners Ltd. “If you’re a large LNG player in Australia you might want to get in first and make an acquisition.”

Beach Energy, Senex and Drillsearch make up about 15 percent of the Evergreen fund’s holdings, and Hannon said he plans to invest in more shares of Australian shale gas companies. New Standard Energy Ltd. (NSE), AWE Ltd. (AWE) and Buru Energy Ltd. (BRU) are among other potential investments, he said.

Beach Energy rose 1.5 percent to A$1.39 as of 11:20 a.m. in Sydney today, while Senex gained 1.3 percent and Drillsearch added half a percent.

Beach Energy, whose 61 percent gain in the past 12 months through yesterday was the biggest in the S&P/ASX 200 Energy Index, has held talks with companies that may help develop its shale assets, Managing Director Reginald Nelson said last year. The company had a market value of about A$1.52 billion as of yesterday.

“We’re a first mover in shale gas,” Adelaide, South Australia-based Beach Energy said in an e-mailed response to questions. “We’re happy to see continuing corporate momentum surrounding shale gas assets in Australia, bringing further attention to a significant new resource.”

Senex (SXY) has also held discussions with international energy producers for potential partnerships, Ian Davies, managing director at the Brisbane-based explorer, said last year.

“You’ve seen waves of consolidation with coal-seam gas in Queensland, and given the scale of the resource potential in the Cooper Basin, it’s a reasonable extension you will see farm-outs and further consolidation there,” Davies said this week.

Beach Energy in August reported an initial 2 trillion cubic feet of potential resources in its Cooper Basin shale gas acreage after the drilling results from two wells exceeded projections. The company, active in eight countries including the U.S., Egypt and Tanzania, also plans to spend A$355 million on development and exploration in the year through June, more than double spending in fiscal 2011.

The Australian oil company this month completed its acquisition of Adelaide Energy Ltd., gaining shale gas exploration stakes in the Cooper Basin that Beach Energy said in November would consolidate its “strong landholding.”

Senex, whose market value has more than doubled in the 12 months through yesterday to A$733 million, may be an acquisition target for power supplier AGL Energy Ltd. (AGK), the Australian Financial Review reported in its Street Talk column on Jan. 16, without citing any sources. Davies and AGL declined to comment.

Drillsearch, cited as a potential acquisition target by Commonwealth Bank, signed a partnership accord with BG Group in July. The U.K. gas producer agreed to invest A$130 million to search for unconventional gas in the Cooper Basin, Drillsearch said. The Sydney-based company’s shares have risen 44 percent in the last year, valuing it at A$298 million yesterday.

Brad Lingo, managing director of Drillsearch, didn’t return a telephone message left yesterday.

Conoco, Mitsubishi Corp. (8058) and Hess Corp. have also agreed to fund shale gas exploration through ventures with Australian partners. Further deals will probably follow, said Andrew Williams, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in Melbourne.

“If you have a look at what’s happening globally, these assets are cheap, and the big international companies are cashed up,” said Williams, who has an “outperform” rating on Senex. “It’s going to take big balance sheets to exploit it.”

Beach Energy, which has about 875,000 acres of Cooper Basin shale according to DNB data, excluding the assets of Adelaide Energy, would be among the explorers most in demand when global companies seek out Australian shale, Huang said. DNB values the company’s Cooper Basin shale holdings at A$342 million, or A$391 an acre.

Beach Energy’s bid for Adelaide Energy valued the target’s shale holdings at A$761 an acre, Huang estimates. Total SA (FP) on Dec. 30 acquired a 25 percent stake in 619,000 acres in the Utica shale for about $15,000 an acre, including drilling costs, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s more than four times the average price from seven transactions in the Ohio and Pennsylvania shale region from March to September 2011, according to IHS Inc. data.

The U.S. projects still deserve higher multiples than those in Australia because they are already producing or in a more advanced stage of development, according to Huang. To draw interest from global oil companies, Australian shale gas explorers need to cut drilling expenses and boost reserves, which may take at least three years, he said.

Drilling in Australia may cost $10 million to $15 million a well, compared with $4 million to $6 million in parts of the U.S., Morgan Stanley estimated in June.

“We are seeing signs that drilling service providers are looking to work with shale gas operators to slowly move the costs down,” Huang said. “They might not be takeout targets for the large majors now, but in another three, four, five years, they will look attractive.”

PetroChina and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., known as Sinopec, may also seek to purchase assets, he said. Beijing- based spokesmen for both said the companies are interested in shale and other natural gas sources.

“PetroChina is very interested in unconventional natural gas resources,” said spokesman Mao Zefeng. Sinopec “will pick the right time to acquire the right assets,” Sinopec’s Huang Wensheng said. Both declined to comment on speculation or specific projects.

While Australian shale project developers must overcome technical hurdles and demonstrate that the projects can be commercially successful, they are “on the radar screens” of international oil producers, John Young, a Melbourne-based analyst at Wilson HTM Investment Group, said.

“As they do more work, and there’s more confidence these assets will be commercial, people will be prepared to pay more for them,” he said.
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby hybridbloke » Thu Jan 19, 2012 9:58 pm

the adelaide energy takeover price wasn't nearly 800 bucks a shale gas acre,as one analyst gushed. there was a good ade thread here with values here worth a checkover.

baraka i sold out of,and have never re entered, but there is a fracturing of a stranded basin oil shale drill coming up near to medium term.

ctp central petroleum have some oil coming out of a remote basin drill.

my feeling is oil is king,and to make a profit,liquids are the thing. the cost of beaches two shale gas wells put adelaide energy in a non sustainable position,so it will be interesting to see how quickly it can get cheaper to do the same sort of thing. half a dozen shale test to be done in the cooper soonish from announcements i have read,and they can't all cost 25 million dollars each.
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby hybridbloke » Tue Jan 24, 2012 9:10 am

raw rawson [trades by appointment] has a % of the udacha wet gas discovery [awaiting production] in the cooper [and some exploration acreage,some stepping out from udacha]
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Re: Cooper Basin oil, gas (conventional, unconventional)

Postby benthonic » Mon Jan 30, 2012 11:27 am

from AQO quarterly (their first) - unconventional gas activities by Operator in Cooper are as follows:

- Beach Energy have announced that they will be drilling five vertical delineation wells and drill three horizontal wells targeting high gas yield zones. Furthermore, Beach and Strike Energy have also announced the drilling of two unconventional gas wells in the southern part of the Cooper Basin.
- Santos have announced that its first dedicated Cooper Basin shale gas well, Moomba 191, was drilled in December 2011. The well is located approx 65 Km south of PEL570 on the western flank of the Nappamerri Trough. The well, drilled to a depth of 9,035 feet, was cased and suspended. Well stimulation activities are to be undertaken in March 2012.
- Senex Energy are currently drilling three dedicated shale gas wells and have successfully completed a mini-frac of shales in the Allunga trough.

- Plus PEL 570 (AQO 100%)
A review performed by recognised Australian unconventional gas specialists MBA Petroleum Consultants determined that PEL 570 is prospective for unconventional gas with a moderate liquids content from the thick Permian aged Toolachee and Patchawarra coal seams. MBA advised that the coal seams in PEL 570 may contain some 6.5 TCF of gas in place. Furthermore, MBA advised a significant quantity of conventional tight deep basin gas in the Patchawarra trough of the Cooper Basin providing an additional as yet unquantified gas target in PEL 570.
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby hybridbloke » Mon Jan 30, 2012 1:25 pm

santos has pointed out that shale gas is an infrastructure story,and they own the infrastructure.
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Sun Feb 05, 2012 9:04 pm

Senex has just bought 19.9% in Orca Energy OGY

so adding to Cooper prospects, as Orca has a 42% equity interest in PEL115 in the Cooper Basin, South Australia. The Company entered the licence through a farm-in agreement with operator Victoria Petroleum NL in September 2009 (now SXY). Also, Orca signed a farmin agreement with Cooper Energy Ltd for a 20% stake in PEL110, situated on the northwest margin of the Cooper Basin. Monitor (code - MHL??) will earn 20% equity by paying 40% of the costs of one exploration well.

looks like more consolidation looming.

<<< HB who are Monitor ? >>>
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Mon Feb 06, 2012 7:12 am

Monitor Energy changed its name to Orca on 19/08/2011

diging around the 'sleepy' end of the oil & gas world, also mentioned was Magellan MGN which had Cooper leases but apparently no longer
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby hybridbloke » Fri Feb 10, 2012 7:36 am

thanks for that dig b.--i knew the answer,but blowed if the name would come to me,like forgetting the name of the bloke you are speaking to...a grrr moment.

the cooper story has caught fire since adelaide energy was bought out on the cheap--another grrr moment.

acer the old innamancka,beach,coe cooper big moves for companies not at the minnow end of the market. suddenly the obvious story has real money being thrown at it.

i have done okay, but didn't get all my adelaide money put back into cooper stocks cheap enough.
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Wed Feb 22, 2012 11:09 am

since starting this thread (17Jan), the sector + smaller plays in Perth and Canning Basins, are doing well

Listed Players in Cooper Basin - Oil, gas, unconventional gas - moves over the last 5 weeks:

STO - Santos .............. $13.21 to $14.15
BPT - Beach................... $1.39 to $1.72
SXY - Senex .................. $0.84 to $1.04
COE - Cooper Energy........ $0.37 to $0.47
DLS - Drillsearch............. $0.95 to $1.35
ICN - Icon Energy............ $0.19 to $0.27
STX - Strike ................. $0.13 to $0.17
ACN - Acer Energy .......... $0.12 to $0.16
AQO - Ambassador ......... $0.22 to $0.20

of course they have been 'on the up' prior to this, with DLS, SXY and BPT doubling or more in 12 months; toss in star performer BRU plus NSE in Canning and AWE in Perth Basin, and something is going on. Awaiting Corporate Actions ??
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Re: Cooper Basin Oil and Gas

Postby benthonic » Sun Feb 26, 2012 8:38 pm

can't remember where I posted it, but ................. as a memory aid, the following site has pricing out of Henry Hub for US gas prices, and , yes they are down to $2.50 a MMBtu, which is reputed to cause BHP some pain with Petrohawk purchase

http://www.oilnergy.com/1gnymex.htm

and the link between oil and gas pricing has also broken - well reported. Interestingly, the graph following shows US wellhead gas price for last 90 years; even at $2.50, as never attaining this price before 2001, not during OPEC or any other event.
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