Skip to main content

Integrated energy giant ExxonMobil Corporation (XOM - Free Report) has made its final investment decision (FID) regarding the first phase development of the Liza field located off the coast of Guyana, among the largest oil finds of the past decade.

It is to be noted that at the beginning of this month, ExxonMobil decided to double its royalty payment out of its offshore oil production to the government of Guyana.

 

We would like to remind investors that the integrated player’s current oil and gas output is way below the production levels 10 years ago in spite of its several acquisitions. The company produced 4.2 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (BOPD) in the first quarter of 2017, 4% below the year-ago period. Hence, capital spending on the Liza project is expected to increase the company’s output significantly in the coming years.

Phase 1 of Liza Project

The FID involves completion of a floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel capable of producing up to 120,000 BOPD. Production at Liza is likely to start by 2020. The company projects the cost of this phase to be slightly above $4.4 billion including a lease capitalization cost of around $1.2 billion for the FPSO facility. The facility is expected to generate approximately 450 million barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) from the Liza field, located at a water depth of1500–1900 meters.

The development of Liza phase 1 can also produce significant benefits for the country in the form of job creation, specialized workforce training, increasing government revenues and others.

The 6.6 million acres Liza field is a part of the Stabroek Block. ExxonMobil holds 45% operating interest here while Hess Corporation (HES - Free Report) and CNOOC Limited's (CEO - Free Report) wholly-owned subsidiary Nexen own 30% and 25% interest, respectively.

https://www.zacks.com/stock/ne...ject-offshore-guyana

Hess Corp. has inked a deal to sell its stakes in some oil-producing assets in West Texas and New Mexico for $600 million, the New York oil company said Monday.

The four so-called CO2 enhanced oil recovery assets in the Permian Basin, including active oil wells, a gas processing plant in Texas and a CO2 field in New Mexico, pumped an average 8,200 barrels of oil equivalent a day last year for Hess.

 

Houston's Occidental Petroleum Corp. has agreed to buy the assets in a sale expected to close in August. The deal comes on the heels of Hess's announcement it will join Exxon in assembling a massive deep-water project off the coast of Guyana.

Analysts at Wells Fargo said the sale could fund some 60 percent of Hess's initial share of the first phase of development in the Liza field off Guyana. That share is about $955 million. The Permian Basin assets also make up only 3 percent of Hess's total output, the analysts said.

 

Meanwhile, Occidental Petroleum said it struck a handful of transactions -- including the one with Hess -- that will effectively bring its output in the region up by 3,500 barrels of oil equivalent a day. But the deals, the driller said, will balance out in terms of sales and purchases, requiring "no net cash outlay." While it's buying the assets from Hess, it's also selling off acreage in Andrews, Martin and Pecos counties. 

"These transactions support our pathway to breakeven at $50 after dividend and production growth," Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub said in a statement.

 

http://www.chron.com/business/...for-600-11229974.php

Sunil

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×