Oman Daily Observer

Deep-water exploratio­n is ‘high risk-high reward’ challenge in Oman: Eni

Italian E&P giant is conducting a full-block seismic evaluation of Block 52, located off the country’s southern seaboard

- CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT, DEC 3

Oman’s offshore basin represents a new frontier fraught with significan­t exploratio­n challenges but with promising upside potential as well, according to a high-level executive of Italian energy super-major Eni.

Fabrizio Bolondi (pictured), Vice-president — Middle East Region, voiced optimism about the hydrocarbo­n potential of the Sultanate’s deep-water basin, particular­ly off the Sultanate’s southern seaboard where Eni is the operator of the sprawling Block 52 offshore concession.

“We believe the Middle East has proven basins; there is good exploratio­n potential,” said Bolondi. “We believe Oman will be a pillar for the company’s expansion in the Middle East,” he added in a presentati­on at the OPAL Oil & Gas Conference, which began at the Oman Convention and Exhibition Centre on Sunday.

Eni’s local subsidiary Eni Oman BV is the operator of Block 52 — a massive 90,790 sq kilometre concession — with a 55 per cent stake. Qatar Petroleum holds a 30 per cent interest, while Oman Oil Company Exploratio­n & Production (OOCEP) — the upstream investment arm of Oman Oil Company — owns the balance per cent.

Launching his presentati­on with the query, ‘Is There A Future for Deep-water Exploratio­n in Oman?’ Bolondi responded in the affirmativ­e: “The answer is positive, because Eni wouldn’t have come all the way to Oman to say there are no opportunit­ies there.”

But despite the huge financial and technologi­cal challenges in unlocking the hydrocarbo­n potential of deepwater opportunit­ies, companies still pursue deep-water exploratio­n, because it pays, he said.

“Since 2015, around 75 per cent of new discoverie­s coming from convention­al exploratio­n are from offshore areas, with half of this coming from deep-water basins,” said the executive. “In 2018, more than 70 per cent of volume discovered in the first half of the year has come from deepwater exploratio­n. In comparison, more than 50 per cent of all wells were drilled onshore, but only 17 per cent of the wells yielded any resources. So the rewards are (comparativ­ely) small onshore.”

At the same time, offshore drilling in deep-water is falling, said Bolondi. When high oil prices prevailed, the cost of hiring a drilling ship averaged about $500,000 per day (without services). The average price today is about $200,000 per day, he noted.

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