The Herald

North Sea oil firms underline scale of profits being made in the area

- By Mark Williamson

EDINBURGH-BASED Capricorn Energy has highlighte­d how much money firms are making in the North Sea as it underlined its appetite for acquisitio­ns.

The former Cairn Energy said it expects to benefit from “material” payments linked to the profitabil­ity of North Sea operations that it sold last year.

The company sold interests in two big producing fields to Waldorf Production in March last year for an initial $460 million, under a deal that put it in line for further payments based on production and oil price levels.

Prices have surged following the deal amid the recovery from the pandemic and the fallout from the war in

Ukraine.

Brent crude sold for around $106 per barrel yesterday compared with $70/ bbl in March last year.

North Sea-focused Harbour Energy provide further evidence of the scale of the boost provided to oil firms yesterday when it said it expects to generate up to $1.7 billion (£1.3bn) cash flow from its operations this year, after planned dividend payments of $200m and tax charges.

The announceme­nts by the firms could fuel calls for a windfall tax to be imposed on oil and gas firms to help fund cuts in energy bills for consumers.

Asked about the prospect, Capricorn chief executive Simon Thomson said: “What we want is fiscal stability because we’re planning to invest for the long term … The one thing you want as an investing company is certainty around the regulatory terms.”

Mr Thomson noted other countries are considerin­g imposing windfall taxes.

After telling the company’s general meeting that Capricorn is in growth mode and has the balance sheet strength to “go out and acquire”, Mr Thomson said it would be in the market for North Sea deals.

Capricorn bought stakes in five

North Sea exploratio­n licences containing gas prospects from Deltic Energy in August.

Mr Thomson highlighte­d the appeal of gas opportunit­ies in the North Sea amid the official drive to reduce the UK’S dependence on imports and to cut emissions.

“The Deltic thing is a really interestin­g opportunit­y,” he told reporters. “It’s gas; it’s a new play type. If it works you could tie it back quickly

to existing infrastruc­ture and be part of what everybody’s trying to achieve in terms of that balance between energy security, energy affordabil­ity and energy transition.”

Capricorn is evaluating new 3D seismic data across the Deltic acreage in preparatio­n for a drilling decision later this year. It plans to start drilling the Diadem exploratio­n well east of Aberdeen in the current quarter.

Mr Thomson said Cairn is eyeing potential acquisitio­ns in a range of countries. It could do more deals along the lines of the $320m acquisitio­n of producing assets in Egypt from Shell clinched in March last year. The Egyptian assets have performed well and Capricon sees potential to increase output from them.

Capricorn received $1.06bn from the Indian Government in February in

respect of a long-running tax dispute. It will pay up to $700m of the proceeds to investors.

The group made big finds in India as Cairn Energy under its founder Sir Bill Gammell. Mr Thomson succeeded Sir Bill as chief executive in 2011. Cairn changed its name to Capricorn Energy in December.

Harbour developed out of the Chrysaor Energy business, which bought big North Sea portfolios from Shell and Conocophil­lips. The business acquired Premier Oil last year.

It started production from the giant Tolmount gas field in April. Chief executive Linda Cook said: “We continue to invest in high return, infrastruc­ture-led opportunit­ies within our asset base to sustain production while at the same time generating material free cash flow.”

 ?? Picture: Harbour Energy ?? Harbour Energy operates the Judy platform in the North Sea
Picture: Harbour Energy Harbour Energy operates the Judy platform in the North Sea
 ?? ?? Capricorn Energy chief executive Simon Thomson
Capricorn Energy chief executive Simon Thomson

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