The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Cairn Energy has stake in two North Sea assets

Deal: Activityin­sectorpick­ingup

- BY MARK LAMMEY

Scottish oil firm Cairn Energy said yesterday that it had struck a deal with Azinor Catalyst to farm into North Sea assets.

Edinburgh-based Cairn will take a 50% stake in the Agar-Plantain well and 25% of the wider p1763 licence.

Apache Corporatio­n is the other licence partner.

With farm-in activity subdued in recent years, the deal is another sign that the North Sea is becoming a more attractive place to invest.

The companies did not say how much Cairn had paid.

London-based Azinor, which is backed by Seacrest Capital Group, has now booked the Transocean Leader semisubmer­sible rig to drill Agar-Plantain in the third quarter of 2018.

Azinor will re tain operatorsh­ip of the proposed appraisal well, though Cairn has an option to take over that role at a later date.

The Agar discovery and Plantain prospect are thought to hold about 60 million barrels oil equivalent, with a potential upside of 98 million.

They sit east of Apache’s Beryl field, about 210 miles north-east of Aberdeen.

Azinor made the Agar discovery in 2014 with well 9/14a-15A.

Azinor exploratio­n director Henry Morris said: “We are delighted to welcome Cairn on to the licence as we move towards drilling. As a company with a strong and successful North Sea pedigree, we regard Cairn’s farm-in as further validation of the exciting potential of the Agar-Plantain opportunit­y.

“Our technical teams have been working to refine the final elements of the well plan and we are enthusiast­ic about the potential we are seeing. We are also pleased to have signed a contract with Transocean to secure the services of the Transocean Leader semisubmer­sible to drill Agar-Plantain.

“Subject to receipt of final regulatory approvals we expect to spud in Q3 2018.”

Azinor’s Partridge well came up dry last year.

A spokeswoma­n for Cairn said the farm-in was an “attractive near-term drilling opportunit­y” in an area with good prospects.

“The deal fits with our wider plans for drilling a material campaign across the wider region in the next year or so,” she added.

Separately, Cairn will start work on Ekland, its first operated exploratio­n well in the UK North Sea, in the third quarter. The company’s existing North Sea production comes from non-operated stakes in the Kraken and Catcher fields.

 ??  ?? DEAL: Cairn Energy has taken a 25% stake in the P1763 licence
DEAL: Cairn Energy has taken a 25% stake in the P1763 licence

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom