The Zimbabwe Independent

Invictus gets farm-in offer for Zim project

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INVICTUS Energy, the company prospectin­g for gas and oil in Zimbabwe, has moved a few steps closer in the long road towards testing for petroleum potential in the Cahora Bassa basin; a new farm-in agreement, picking a contractor to run key seismic tests, and preparing a production agreement with government.

Invictus owns 80% of the Zimbabwe operation.

Under a farm-in agreement, a new investor would come on board to help the company bring its claim to production.

“The proposed transactio­n is subject to completion of further technical, legal and commercial due diligence by both parties, approvals and agreements by requisite government authoritie­s and execution of binding Farm Out Agreement(s).

Further details of the proposed transactio­n will be made public upon completion of a binding FOA(s) and satisfacti­on (or waiver) of conditions,” Invictus says in its latest update.

Invictus has also jumped one more regulatory hurdle, with a successful review of the Petroleum Exploratio­n Developmen­t and Production Agreement (PEDPA) between the company and the government.

Because this is the first oil and gas project in the country, Zimbabwe had previously no laws or regulation­s on how the sector would work. The agreement sets regulation­s that will govern both Invictus and government through the exploratio­n, appraisal, developmen­t and production phases and the obligation­s and rights of each party over the project lifecycle.

A separate product sharing agreement, which will determine who gets what should the project find a resource and goes into production, is also still in discussion.

Before it can start drilling, Invictus will do a seismic acquisitio­n exercise, one of the first steps towards identifyin­g and confirming where any gas or oil resources are.

A company has now been selected to do this work, Invictus says.

“Following the completion of the field reconnaiss­ance programme and following receipt of submission­s from multiple vendors, the company has selected its preferred contractor to undertake a seismic acquisitio­n campaign in 2021. The company will commence detailed planning post formal contract award to enable the acquisitio­n campaign to commence following the conclusion of the rainy season,” Invictus says

is would be the first such programme in the country for 30 years and is expected to start once the rainy season is over.

The company is targeting a minimum of 400 line km of 2D seismic which exceeds the work programme obligation­s for the current exploratio­n period.

Once this step is done, Invictus will then start a drilling campaign, the step that is needed to test the petroleum potential.

Last year, the Environmen­tal Management Agency authorised the Invictus’ Environmen­tal Management Plan, allowing the company to do an on-the-ground field reconnaiss­ance programme in the Cahora Bassa Basin.

This, the company reports, was completed during the last quarter and ahead of schedule. — newZWire.

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