29th Nov 2010 07:00
29 November 2010
MADAGASCAR OIL LIMITED
("Madagascar Oil" or the "Company")
Admission to AIM & First Day of Dealing
Madagascar Oil, an oil and gas exploration and development company with significant oil resources onshore Madagascar, is pleased to announce the admission today of its common shares of par value US$0.001 each ("Common Shares") to trading on the AIM market of the London Stock Exchange ("Admission") and the commencement of dealings in the Common Shares under ticker symbol MOIL.
The Company has raised £50.5 million before expenses through the placing of 53,197,000 Common Shares, representing 27.65 per cent. of the share capital of the Company upon Admission, at an issue price of 95 pence per Common Share (the "Placing"). The approximate market capitalisation of the Company following Admission is £182.7 million.
Strand Hanson Limited is acting as nominated adviser in relation to the Admission, Mirabaud Securities LLP is acting as lead manager and joint broker and GMP Securities Europe LLP is acting as joint broker.
Overview
The Madagascar Oil group was founded in 2004 and is involved in the exploration and development of its five contiguous blocks, covering 29,500 km², onshore Western Madagascar.
The two principal blocks, Tsimiroro and Bemolanga, represent an oil recovery execution play. These blocks are known to contain substantial heavy oil and bitumen accumulations, with field tests and studies undertaken to date suggesting that the Company's heavy oil assets have excellent potential for development.
Tsimiroro has been independently attributed 'Best Estimate' gross heavy oil in place of 965 MM bbls in known accumulations, with over 780 MM bbls potential in prospective, adjacent structures. Production from Tsimiroro, if commercial recovery is proven, is estimated to average 87,500 bopd for between 30 and 40 years.
Bemolanga has been independently attributed 'Best Estimate' gross discovered bitumen in place of 1,179 MM bbls, with over 1,000 MM bbls potential upside, subject to further delineation drilling. In 2008, the Company successfully completed a farm-out of a 60 per cent. interest and assignment of operatorship in the field to Total E&P Madagascar S.A.S. ("Total E&P"). The farm-out transaction terms included a US$100 million upfront payment to the Company and a carried interest over the next US$100 million in exploration and development costs to be expended by Total E&P as licence operator.
The Company intends to use the funds raised through the Placing to carry out the Company's exploration and development program on its blocks, with the intention of expanding and upgrading the resource base across the Tsimiroro and Bemolanga blocks, proving commerciality of the Tsimiroro field via a steam flood pilot plant, and further developing drillable prospects across its three exploration blocks.
The Company's near term work program includes:
·; additional drilling to further delineate the Tsimiroro field, enabling the Company to expand and upgrade the resource base at Tsimiroro, with 15 of 18 wells drilled to date in 2010 discovering oil, and 430 km of Electrical Resistance Tomography ("ERT") - first results from analysis of the current drilling and ERT program expected in early 2011;
·; executing a steam flood pilot facility at Tsimiroro - first production expected in late 2011;
·; evaluation of the mining options available at Bemolanga - next major operational decision in June 2011; and
·; development of drillable prospects on the three exploration blocks - next results from microseepage evaluation expected in early 2011
Madagascar Oil's management team has extensive experience in the oil & gas industry and, in particular, specific knowledge of the application of the steam flood process to heavy oil accumulations, having previously been involved in heavy oil steam flood projects in California and Indonesia. The team is led by Laurie Hunter (Chairman and CEO), Mark Weller (COO), Jim Lederhos (Chief Engineer), Alvaro Kempowsky (General Manager) and the Company's Non-Executive Directors, being John van der Welle, Colin Orr-Ewing, Ian Barby and Andrew Morris.
Laurie Hunter, the Company's Chairman and CEO, commented:
"We are delighted that the AIM flotation of the Company has been completed successfully and we now look forward to working with our new institutional shareholders and existing shareholders, whom we would like to thank for their ongoing support of the Company as we continue to grow. The Placing and Admission will help support our goals of proving commerciality of the Tsimiroro field area, expanding and upgrading the resource base and to further develop drillable prospects on our exploration blocks."
Further information on the Company can be found at www.madagascaroil.com
- Ends -
Contact Information:
Madagascar Oil Limited | |
Laurie Hunter, Chairman and CEO Mark Weller, Chief Operating Officer | +1 713 357 4820 |
Strand Hanson Limited | |
Angela Peace / David Altberg | +44 (0) 20 7409 3494 |
Mirabaud Securities LLP | |
Rory Scott | +44 (0) 20 7878 3360 |
GMP Securities Europe LLP | |
Nick Morgan / Chris Beltgens | +44 (0) 20 7647 2800 |
Pelham Bell Pottinger | |
James Henderson / Mark Antelme | +44 (0) 20 7861 3232 |
Note to Editors:
Website: www.madagascaroil.com
Management Team
The board of directors of the Company and the wider management team have extensive experience in the oil & gas industry and, in particular, specific knowledge of the application of the steam flood process to heavy oil accumulations.
Laurie Hunter, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, founded Hunter Capital, an investment company involved in raising finance for early stage companies. Mr Hunter recently served on the board of Trident Resources Corp, a Canadian coal bed methane exploration and development company, and is currently an independent director of Direct Petroleum Exploration Inc., an international oil & gas exploration and development company with assets in Morocco, Bulgaria and Russia. He is also active in onshore US drilling partnerships.
Mark Weller, Chief Operating Officer, has over 37 years' oil industry experience, including 15 years direct involvement in heavy oil steam flood projects in California. Mr Weller previously worked at Texaco and Getty Oil.
In addition, Chief Engineer, Jim Lederhos, and Madagascar Oil's General Manager, Alvaro Kempowsky, bring extensive experience, having both worked at Chevron and Texaco on some of the world's most successful steam flood projects, including those in California and Indonesia, and the development of new steam flood operations in California and Columbia.
Non-Executive Directors of the Company include John van der Welle (most recently Chief Financial Officer of Stratic Energy Corporation and previously Head of Oil & Gas, Sector Corporate Finance, at Royal Bank of Scotland, Chief Financial Officer of First Calgary Petroleum Limited and Finance Director of Premier Oil), Colin Orr-Ewing (a natural resources consultant for Blakeney management), Ian Barby (previously vice chairman of Mercury Asset Management plc and managing director of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers) and Andrew J. Morris (founder and managing director of Persistency Capital LLC).
Asset Portfolio Overview
The Company has a portfolio of assets located in onshore Madagascar. The Company's key assets include:
Tsimiroro
The Company owns a 100 per cent. working interest in the Tsimiroro block. The field has been extensively explored, with 108 wells drilled to date. Following an extensive geologic reappraisal, Netherland Sewell & Associates Inc. ("Netherland Sewell") revised the Best Estimate contingent oil in place ("OOIP") in known accumulations to 965 MM bbls, with over 780 MM bbls of additional prospective resources in, immediately offsetting structures), but these resources are expected to increase as further drilling and ERT results are incorporated. Following a successful drilling campaign in 2010, with 15 of the 18 wells drilled to date discovering oil, volumes will be reassessed by Netherland Sewell for potential additions.
The heavy oil accumulations at Tsimiroro occur in a stacked series of shallow deposits, at depths ranging from 40 m to 300 m, in an overall sequence that is up to 100 m thick. Porosities are known to be good, averaging 24% to 26%, and permeabilities are around 500 millidarcies. The reservoir sands are believed to be sealed by an overlaying shale.
Madagascar Oil intends to develop Tsimiroro by means of a full field multi-zone steam flood. The technique involves drilling vertical five spot well patterns: injecting steam into a center injector well and recovering the oil from the four surrounding production wells. It has proved highly successful in fields with similar reservoir properties to Tsimiroro in California and Indonesia, with a full life recovery factor of 60% to 80%. A cyclic steam field test, undertaken by the Company in 2008, suggests the Tsimiroro reservoir is well suited to steam flood development. The wells are relatively inexpensive to drill, due to the shallow depth of the reservoir sands.
Bemolanga
The Company owns a 40 per cent. working interest in the Bemolanga block, following a 60 per cent. farm-out and assignment of operatorship to Total E&P in 2008. The farm-out transaction included a US$100 million upfront payment to the Company, plus a full carry on the next US$100 million of expenditure, which is expected to fund the work programme through to mid 2012.
Bemolanga is a bitumen deposit, with a gravity between 9º and 14º API, lying close to the surface. The asset has been attributed total discovered Petroleum initially in Place ("PIIP") of 1,179 MM bbls, with over 1,000 MM bbls additional potential defined as an "undiscovered" resource requiring additional delineation drilling.
Development of the block is expected to require a conventional oil sands approach of mining, bitumen extraction and upgrading. Since farming-in, Total E&P has led the Joint Venture in undertaking an extensive work programme, including 72 wells drilled and cored in 2009 to further define and test the oil in place for potential recovery. The recently completed 2010 programme involved the drilling of a further 85 wells. The results of the work undertaken to date have met or exceeded expectations. Extraction performance of the Bemolanga ore is a key factor to successful field development and this is currently being evaluated. A decision point in mid-2011 will be required to move the project to a pilot phase for testing extraction options.
Exploration Blocks
The three exploration blocks, Manambolo, Morondava and Manandaza, cover a total of 17,400 km2 (4.3 million acres). Several wells drilled previously on these blocks had light oil or natural gas shows, confirming the presence of an active hydrocarbon system.
In 2009, the Company undertook a 200 km seismic programme, which identified eight leads across the blocks. The 2010 programme, comprising a geochemical survey over 278 km2, has been designed to further advance the Company's understanding of these structural leads and their potential to contain trapped hydrocarbons. Favourable results defining a drillable prospect may lead the Company to seek a farm-out partner.
Related Shares:
MOIL.L