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FM
Former Member

Lau Lau-1 is Exxon’s largest discovery by depth in Guyana; almost three times the height of Marriott Hotel

https://oilnow.gy/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/4407-1a11b6f153d7ee161702b8787f28d634.jpgLau Lau was drilled by the Noble Don Taylor at the Stabroek Block offshore Guyana.

To date, there have been more than 20 major discoveries in the ExxonMobil-operated Stabroek Block offshore Guyana. The largest of them by depth is Lau Lau-1 which was announced on January 5 by the American multinational.

The Lau Lau-1 well encountered approximately 315 feet (96 meters) of high-quality hydrocarbon-bearing sandstone reservoirs. To put this into context, the discovery in height, is equivalent to three (Georgetown) Marriott Hotels (105.88 ft) stacked on top of each other. It is also more than two times the height of the St. George’s Cathedral (143 ft), one of the world’s tallest freestanding wooden buildings.

Also ranking among the top five largest discoveries in the Stabroek Block by depth are: Tilapia, Liza, Yellowtail, and Longtail.

Liza is known to be the largest by volume so far, having encountered 800 million to 1.4 billion barrels of oil equivalent resources.

The Tilapia discovery was announced in February 2019 and is ExxonMobil’s 11th oil discovery in the Stabroek Block. It was drilled in a new reservoir, encountering approximately 305 feet (93 meters) of high-quality oil-bearing sandstone reservoir and was drilled to a depth of 18,786 feet (5,726 meters) in 5,850 feet (1,783 meters) of water.

The Liza discovery was announced in May 2015. Liza-1 and was the first significant oil find offshore Guyana. It encountered more than 295 feet (90 meters) of high-quality oil-bearing sandstone reservoirs. It was safely drilled to 17,825 feet (5,433 meters) in 5,719 feet (1,743 meters) of water.

Yellowtail was announced in April 2019 and is ExxonMobil’s 13th oil discovery in the Stabroek Block. It was drilled in a new reservoir, encountering approximately 292 feet (89 meters) of high-quality oil-bearing sandstone reservoir and was drilled to a depth of 18,445 feet (5,622 meters) in 6,046 feet (1,843 meters) of water.

Longtail discovery was announced in June 2018. Longtail is ExxonMobil’s eighth oil discovery in the Stabroek Block. It was drilled in a new reservoir, encountering approximately 256 feet (78 meters) of high-quality, oil-bearing sandstone reservoir. The well was safely drilled to 18,057 feet (5,504 meters) depth in 6,365 feet (1,940 meters) of water.

At the time of announcing the Cataback-1 discovery on October 7, 2021, Exxon increased the discovered recoverable resource for the Stabroek Block to approximately 10 billion oil-equivalent barrels. The more recent discoveries will further increase these rapidly growing resources.

https://oilnow.gy/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Discoveries-well-depths-copy-2-1342x1536.jpg

Speaking with OilNOW recently, Natural Resources Minister, Vickram Bharrat said the discoveries thus far by ExxonMobil and its joint venture partners, Hess Corporation and CNOOC Petroleum Guyana Limited, continue to boost Guyana’s status as a key player in the industry. He was keen to note however that the discoveries alone will not, by itself, translate to a better life for the citizenry.

Mr. Bharrat said, “Under the stewardship of His Excellency, President Irfaan Ali and Vice President, Dr. Bharrat Jagdeo, the Guyana government is pursing the implementation of a robust legislative framework to protect the interest of our people and to guarantee the prosperity of future generations.”

He said the Ali-led government has kept its word to deliver the passage of the Local Content Law and the Natural Resource Fund Law.

“Both instruments will ensure there is transparency and accountability in the expenditure of the oil money and more benefits retained for citizens. We are clearly putting the platform in place that will see Guyana being a leader in the sustainable development of oil resources,” the natural resources minister said.

The Stabroek Block covers an area of 6.6 million acres (26,800 square kilometers). The block is equivalent in size to 1,150 Gulf of Mexico blocks and contains multiple prospects and play types representing additional multi-billion barrel unrisked exploration potential. ExxonMobil affiliate Esso Exploration & Production Guyana Ltd. is the operator and has a 45 percent working interest, while Hess Guyana Exploration Ltd. has 30 percent interest and CNOOC Petroleum Guyana Ltd. has 25 percent interest.

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Sustainability and fossil fuels is like oil and water.  Vickram Bharrat should stop talking about the sustainable development of oil and gas.  I can arrange lessons for him on sustainability. 

T
@Totaram posted:

Sustainability and fossil fuels is like oil and water.  Vickram Bharrat should stop talking about the sustainable development of oil and gas.  I can arrange lessons for him on sustainability.

Hmm…..very formidable task…..yuh should wear wan seed guard, last time you tried to find a cure for Rama chupidity, yuh end up suskaying to moderator with buss up balls…hahahaha [maniacal laughter]

sachin_05
Last edited by sachin_05
@sachin_05 posted:

Hmm…..very formidable task…..yuh should wear wan seed guard, last time you tried to find a cure for Rama chupidity, yuh end up suskaying to moderator with buss up balls…hahahaha [maniacal laughter]

Hyena, as I said before, English is not your first language.  BTW, where is Rama?  Is he in jail or at the Clarke Institute? 

T
@sachin_05 posted:

Hmm…..very formidable task…..yuh should wear wan seed guard, last time you tried to find a cure for Rama chupidity, yuh end up suskaying to moderator with buss up balls…hahahaha [maniacal laughter]

You sound like Miss Ivy leggs. Seems like meh gotta bring out de Dancing cow.

Mitwah

Norway group estimates Stabroek Block now holds more than 13.5 billion boe

https://oilnow.gy/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/2400.jpgAn oil rig worker onboard the Noble Bob Douglas drill ship at the ExxonMobil-operated Stabroek Block offshore Guyana. (Photo credits - The Guardian)

‘Hook, line and sinker’ is the phrase being used by Norway-based Rystad Energy to describe ExxonMobil’s spectacular start to the new year in Guyana where it made two more discoveries at the Stabroek Block, its most lucrative license offshore the South American country.

The Fangtooth and Lau Lau discoveries will add to volumes that have earlier been estimated at around 10 billion barrels of oil equivalent (boe). In fact, the Norway group said its current estimate now rivals the volumes previously estimated by the United States Geological Survey.

“Rystad Energy’s initial view is that these two finds [Fangtooth and Lau Lau] together could hold over half a billion boe of recoverable hydrocarbon resources, bringing the total discovered volumes in the Guyana-Suriname basin to more than 12.5 billion boe,” said Schreiner Parker, Rystad Energy’s Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Both wells were optimally placed to target multiple stacked reservoirs of Lower Campanian and Upper Santonian sandstone. The wells encountered high-quality reservoir sections with net pay of 50 meters in Fangtooth and 96 meters in Lau Lau, according to Exxon.

“With numerous untapped prospects and more than a dozen wildcats lined up for drilling this year, the basin could be poised to exceed the current 13.6 billion boe estimate by the US Geological Survey,” Parker added.

In its analysis seen by OilNOW, Rystad Energy said the unparalleled success of the Stabroek block has turned the once frontier basin into a hotbed of exploration in just five years. During this period, explorers have become pickier when choosing exploration prospects with a stronger focus on chance of success, deliverability and costs – factors that all favor the up-and-coming basin as a core area for exploration and development globally.

“Before ExxonMobil’s breakthrough in 2015, Guyana had seen numerous wells drilled with little success. Through more than two dozen wells in Stabroek the operator has now boosted its operational efficiency and understanding of the reservoir characteristics, enabling it to drill more than 5,000 meters of sediments in 30-45 days, which in turn reduces costs significantly compared with many other ultra-deepwater wells globally,” the energy research and business intelligence company said.

The success has also spurred exploration interest in neighboring Suriname, which has a similar hydrocarbon system, and discoveries in Guyana’s Orinduik block haven given positive signals for the potential of deeper reservoirs that are yet to be explored.

The competitiveness of the Stabroek finds has enabled ExxonMobil to fast-track development and the partners are currently producing around 120,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day from Stabroek. Output is set to ramp up with Liza phase 2 during the first half of 2022, followed by Payara and Pacora, for which a floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel is currently being constructed by SBM Offshore in Singapore. The Dutch floater specialist is also performing front-end engineering and design work for an FPSO for the Yellowtail project, which is expected to be approved this year and start producing by 2025-26.

FM

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