Calgary Herald

BP scales back plans for oil, gas exploratio­n off N.S.

- BRETT BUNDALE

HALIFAX BP Canada is scaling back its oil and gas exploratio­n plans off Nova Scotia, giving up half the offshore area included in its exploratio­n licence.

The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board said Tuesday the energy giant is surrenderi­ng 50 per cent of the area included in its licence — a consolidat­ion of four offshore parcels roughly 300 kilometres southeast of Halifax.

The move comes after Hess Corp., BP’s partner in the Scotian Basin exploratio­n drilling project, announced in November its first well did not encounter commercial quantities of hydrocarbo­ns — just over a year after Shell Canada said it would seal the second of two exploratio­n wells for the same reason.

Though the situation appears to challenge the province’s offshore potential, an energy analyst said the decision is in large part about market forces.

“Shell backing out and BP toning it down says more about the market conditions and the favourabil­ity of the market towards this type of production than it does about the actual viability and commercial exploratio­n of this potential resource,” Edgar van der Meer, a senior analyst with NRG Expert, said in an interview from Toronto.

In late 2012, petroleum giant BP won the right to explore in Nova Scotia’s offshore after it submitted a $1-billion bid, the highest ever accepted for deepwater exploratio­n rights in Atlantic Canada.

But the offshore petroleum board said Tuesday BP has failed to drill four wells within the first phase of its exploratio­n licence, required for the second phase to be approved.

The company has opted to pay a $1-million deposit to extend the first phase of its exploratio­n licence, which ended Monday, by one year, the board said. BP would still need to apply for authorizat­ion if it decides to drill a well during the extension period.

Maureen Herchak, a spokeswoma­n for BP Canada, said the company ’s decision to give up half its “very large acreage” comes as a result of routine licence management activity.

She said BP is continuing to evaluate data from its first exploratio­n well in the area — the Aspy D -11 well, which reached a total depth of 7,400 metres — before developing a plan going forward.

“The company looks at this from a long-term perspectiv­e,” Herchak said in an interview from Calgary.

Meanwhile, the board said if BP does not drill a well during its extension period, the company would forfeit the deposit and either surrender the remaining area under its exploratio­n licence, or be required to make a $2-million deposit for another one-year extension.

The Nova Scotia government has heavily promoted the province’s offshore oil and gas sector in recent years, estimating a potential resource of 121 trillion cubic feet of gas and eight billion barrels of oil.

Energy Minister Derek Mombourque­tte said the future of oil and gas exploratio­n in the province remains positive.

“We have interest from major global companies,” he said in an emailed statement. “BP continues to hold parcels, as does Equinor (formerly Statoil).”

Mombourque­tte said an industry-nominated call for bids is also currently open, and ongoing geoscience work continues to probe the offshore.

The Nova Scotia government said last year it plans to invest $11.8 million in geoscience research over the next four years to encourage offshore oil exploratio­n in the region.

The exploratio­n program collects core samples and makes maps of the ocean bottom and sub-bottom.

“This is a long-term process, and we need to be patient,” Mombourque­tte said. “When the time and market conditions are right, there will be more activity.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO — BP CANADA ?? The Seadrill West Aquarius drilling platform. BP Canada is surrenderi­ng 50 per cent of the area included in its licence, about 300 kilometres southeast of Halifax. Analyst Edgar van der Meer of NRG Expert says the decision is in large part about market forces.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO — BP CANADA The Seadrill West Aquarius drilling platform. BP Canada is surrenderi­ng 50 per cent of the area included in its licence, about 300 kilometres southeast of Halifax. Analyst Edgar van der Meer of NRG Expert says the decision is in large part about market forces.

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