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Showing posts with label Bonny Light Crude Oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bonny Light Crude Oil. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 May 2014

New South America to install first ever wetland access system in Colombia

New South America, a subsidiary of New South Access &  Environmental Solutions, will install its emtek wetland access cystem on an oil and gas project site in Colombia for HOCOL, a subsidiary of Ecopetrol. The emtek system provides the safe, fast access through an environmentally sensitive wetland, protecting crews and equipment as well as natural resources.


The system protects environmentally sensitive wetlands as it floats on the vegetation, while the traditional use of stacking timber mats or Dura-base mats will crush root systems and can damage a wetland beyond repair and, require a great deal more mats. The emtek system is half the weight and twice the strength of traditional wood mats.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Friday, 2 May 2014

API celebrates 65th birthday of fracing

With birthday cards and a social media campaign, API celebrated the 65th birthday of the technology that has spurred an energy revolution in America - hydraulic fracturing or fracing.


“Americans have long been energy pioneers, from the 1800’s when the first wells were drilled to today,” said API Director of Upstream and Industry Operations Erik Milito. “As part of that history, on March 17, 1949, we developed the technology to safely unlock shale and other tight formations, and now the U.S. is the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas.”


The birthday cards featured a black and white photo of one of the world’s first commercially fractured wells located in Duncan, Oklahoma.


“Thanks to fracing, we can produce more energy, with a smaller environmental footprint—changing America’s energy trajectory from scarcity to abundance,” said Milito. “This is a birthday worth celebrating.”


In 2012, unconventional resource development utilizing hydraulic fracturing increased disposable income by an average of $1,200 per household, supported 2.1 million American jobs, and contributed $284 billion to the U.S. GDP, according to a study by IHS. By 2025, IHS reports that unconventional drilling will support 3.9 million jobs, including 515,000 positions in manufacturing.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Chevron wins U.S. ruling calling Ecuador judgment as fraudulent

Chevron has won a U.S. judge’s ruling that a multibillion-dollar pollution judgment issued in Ecuador was procured by fraud, making it less likely that plaintiffs will collect the $9.5 billion award.


U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan said today that the second-largest U.S. oil company provided enough evidence that a 2011 judgment on behalf of rain forest dwellers in the country’s Lago Agrio area was secured by bribing a judge and ghostwriting court documents. Kaplan oversaw a seven-week nonjury trial over Chevron’s allegations.


“The decision in the Lago Agrio case was obtained by corrupt means,” Kaplan said in the opinion. “The defendants here may not be allowed to benefit from that in any way.”


Chevron, based in San Ramon, California, was ordered to pay $19 billion to a group of farmers and fishermen by the Ecuadorean court. The award was reduced to $9.5 billion on Nov. 12 by the Ecuadorean National Court of Justice, the nation’s highest tribunal.


The Ecuadorean villagers, and activists working on their behalf, argued the oil producer should be held financially responsible for pollution of the Amazon rainforest by Texaco Inc. from the 1960s through the early 1990s. Chevron, which bought Texaco in 2001, claims the company already paid $40 million to clean up its share of the drilling contamination.


Cases Pending


The Ecuadoreans have sued Chevron in Brazil, Argentina and Canada, where the company has assets that can be seized. The Court of Appeal for Ontario ruled in December that the 47 villagers have the right to pursue Chevron’s Canada assets. The other cases are pending.


The ruling bars the plaintiffs from trying to enforce the ruling within the U.S. but not elsewhere, Kaplan said, noting that Chevron had dropped a request for a worldwide injunction.


“This ruling will be very helpful if the plaintiffs continue to try to seek enforcement of a corrupt verdict that was obtained in Ecuador,” John Watson, Chevron’s chairman and chief executive officer, told reporters at the IHS CERAWeek energy conference in Houston today. “Having a judgment like this from a reputable court in the United States will certainly be helpful in preventing enforcement actions elsewhere. We will continue to defend ourselves in any enforcement actions around the world.”


Bribed Judge


In its racketeering case before Kaplan, Chevron alleged that a U.S. lawyer leading the Ecuadoreans, Steven Donziger, and members of his team engaged in “repeated acts of fraud, bribery, money laundering” and obstruction of justice in pursuit of a multibillion-dollar payout.


The company said that Donziger’s team bribed a judge who issued the decision with a promise of $500,000 from the proceeds, ghostwrote the ruling and arranged to have their own damages estimate submitted as independent findings to the court.


“This trial record proved what Chevron has been saying all along -- that Donziger, who professes merely to be a lawyer representing clients, is, in reality, a liar, con man, and criminal who has headed a racketeering enterprise targeting Chevron as its deep-pocketed victim,” Chevron lawyers said in a memorandum filed Dec. 23.


‘Flawed Proceeding’


Morgan Crinklaw, a Chevron spokesman, said in a statement today that Kaplan’s ruling is “a resounding victory for Chevron and our stockholders.”


“It confirms that the Ecuadorean judgment against Chevron is a fraud and the product of a criminal enterprise,” Crinklaw said. “Any court that respects the rule of law will find the Lago Agrio judgment to be illegitimate and unenforceable.”


Chevron shares were up .85 percent to $115.69 at noon in New York.


“This is an appalling decision resulting from a deeply flawed proceeding that overturns a unanimous ruling” by Ecuador’s high court, Donziger said today in a statement. “We believe Judge Kaplan is wrong on the law and wrong on the facts and that he repeatedly let his implacable hostility toward me, my Ecuadorean clients, and their country infect his view of the case.”


Donziger said he will pursue an “immediate and expedited appeal.”


Donziger has argued that he did nothing wrong in Ecuador and that any aggressive tactics he may have used were no worse than Chevron’s actions. Han Shan, a spokesman for the plaintiffs, described them as being “out-gunned on a profound level” against the oil company.


Corrupt Means


“The court assumes there is pollution in the Oriente,” Kaplan wrote, referring to the region of Ecuador where drilling occurred. “The issue here is not what happened in the Oriente more than twenty years ago and who, if anyone, now is responsible for any wrongs then done. It instead is whether a court decision was procured by corrupt means, regardless of whether the cause was just.”


During the trial, Chevron was represented in the courtroom by 10 lawyers, including seven partners, from Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP. Donziger’s team included a group of volunteers and trial lawyers Zoe Littlepage and Richard Friedman, who told Kaplan they were working for discounted fees.


Appellate lawyer Deepak Gupta joined Donziger’s team after the trial concluded. The decision “should be extremely troubling for anybody who cares about the rule of law,” Gupta said in a statement today.


“This court has taken the extraordinary and unprecedented step of appointing itself a worldwide fact-finding commission,” issuing “what is in effect a global anti-collection injunction,” Gupta said.


Financing Firms


Chevron sought to show that its adversaries weren’t lacking in resources, eliciting testimony that they received more than $30 million from sources such as a Pennsylvania trial lawyer, an Internet gambling entrepreneur who was friends with Donziger, and specialty financing firms.


One of the investment firms, Burford Capital Ltd., backed out of a commitment to fund the litigation after learning about fraudulent activities by Donziger, Chevron alleged.


Some celebrities supported the campaign against Chevron, including Trudie Styler, who founded the Rainforest Foundation with her husband, musician Sting, and helped to start a project to make clean water available to forest inhabitants in Ecuador. Styler attended some of the New York court proceedings, bringing her husband to watch Donziger testify.


Public Support


Actress Mia Farrow and actor Danny Glover also voiced support for the campaign, and the case was featured in a documentary, “Crude,” by filmmaker Joe Berlinger. Chevron won access to hundreds of hours of outtakes from the film, which it contended showed Donziger acting inappropriately.


The company said in a Jan. 21 brief filed with the Manhattan court that it spent more than $10 million gathering evidence to build the racketeering case against Donziger.


Donziger, a Harvard Law School graduate, joined the case in a junior role in the late 1990s and gradually rose to a position as a strategist and fundraiser. He contends that Ecuador-based lawyers are now in charge of the case.


Kaplan called the case’s background “extraordinary” and said tactics used by the Ecuadorean plaintiffs “include things that normally come only out of Hollywood -- coded e-mails among Donziger and his colleagues describing their private interactions with and machinations directed at judges and a court-appointed expert.”


Secret Account


The defendants made surreptitious payments to an expert from a secret bank account, a judge who was so inexperienced he used an 18-year old typist to do legal research for his ruling on the Internet in three languages he didn’t speak and a lawyer who invited a film crew to their private strategy meetings, Kaplan said in his ruling.


Kaplan credited Donziger’s initial motives for getting involved in the case, saying he sought “to do well for himself while doing good for others.” However the tactics resulted in a “corrupted” Lago Agrio case,’’ he said.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Sunday, 27 April 2014

BP to form separate business to manage onshore assets in U.S. Lower 48

BP has announced its intention to establish a separate business to manage its onshore oil and gas assets in the U.S. Lower 48.


The U.S. Lower 48 onshore oil and gas business environment has unique characteristics. Responding to these, the new business will operate separately from the rest of BP and will be designed to adapt to the rapidly changing and hyper-competitive energy landscape in the region. This move is expected to help unlock the significant value associated with BP’s extensive resource position in the U.S. Lower 48 onshore, which BP currently oversees through its Houston-based North America Gas group.


“Over the last few years, we have fundamentally reshaped our North America Gas portfolio,” said BP Upstream Chief Executive Lamar McKay. BP has done so by divesting non-core assets and focusing development in leading U.S. unconventional plays like the Eagle Ford shale in South Texas. “Now it’s time to reshape the way we run the business—and we are very excited about this bold step forward,” he said.


BP will own the new U.S. Lower 48 onshore business. But the business will be led by a separate management team and be housed at a new location in Houston, apart from BP’s Westlake campus. It will have separate governance, processes and systems designed to address the unique competitive and operating environment in the U.S. Lower 48 onshore. BP is expected to begin disclosing separate financials for the new business in 2015.


These changes are chiefly intended to improve competitiveness of the U.S. Lower 48 onshore business through greater speed of innovation, faster decision-making and shorter cycle times from access through to production, together with more efficient cost management.


The changes to BP’s U.S. Lower 48 onshore business are consistent with the group’s strategy of delivering value over volume. BP also believes these moves will enhance efforts to develop industry-leading technology that will be a critical part of BP’s global strategy in unconventional oil and gas resources going forward.


“Participating in the U.S. Lower 48 onshore is key to our upstream strategy because we believe the region will remain at the forefront of innovation and drive global learning in unconventional resources,” McKay said.


The approach BP intends to pursue for its U.S. Lower 48 onshore business is specifically designed in response to the unique business environment in the region. Much of what BP does in other onshore regions around the world will continue to rely on the scale, capital, technology and project management capabilities that only a major international oil company can provide.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Friday, 25 April 2014

Spain expands constitutional challenge to allow fracing

Spain’s government will seek to overturn a ban on fracing in the wine-making region of La Rioja, relying in part on the European Union’s January guidelines for the drilling technique.


The cabinet voted today to file a constitutional challenge to La Rioja’s prohibition on the water-intensive method used to explore for oil and gas. The ban wrongly strips authority from the national government to regulate prospecting and runs contrary to Spanish law and preliminary EU rules that endorse fracing, the cabinet said in a statement.


The decision widens a policy to wrest control from regional governments over fracing. The cabinet this year voted to appeal a similar ban on fracing in Cantabria, a region that like La Rioja is in the north and is relatively rich in water resources.


The move today is a “logical step” given that Spain had previously acted against Cantabria, Juan Klimowitz, co-owner and general manager of exploration consulting firm Gessal in Madrid, said today in an interview. “It makes sense since the regions went outside the national law that covers hydrocarbon exploration.”


The central government began requiring environmental impact assessments on all fracing projects last year before deciding on permits for those that passed. It says allowing environmentally safe prospecting is necessary in a country dependent on oil and gas imports.


Wine has been cultivated for more than 1,000 years in La Rioja, which is home today to more than 500 vineyards including Marques de Riscal SA and Ramon Bilbao SA.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Saturday, 19 April 2014

Imperial Oil to sell western Canada assets, focus on oil sands

Imperial Oil Ltd., the Canadian energy company majority owned by Exxon Mobil Corp., agreed to sell some assets to Whitecap Resources Inc. for about C$855 million ($774 million) as it focuses on larger oil-sands projects.


The conventional oil and natural gas assets in British Columbia and Alberta produced the equivalent of about 15,000 bopd in 2013, the Calgary-based company said in a statement today. Half of the production is oil and the other half is gas.


Imperial has focused on expanding its so-called unconventional production, which includes oil sands. The company spent C$12.9 billion to bring the Kearl oil-sands project online last year and joined with Exxon, which owns 70% of its stock, to buy more oil-sands acreage for about C$751 million in August. Kearl and the Cold Lake oil-sands project provide an “incredible platform for growth,” Imperial CEO Rich Kruger said in September.


“For Imperial, I don’t think these assets really move the needle anymore, so it’s a focus on Cold Lake and Kearl, the big projects,” Justin Bouchard, an analyst at Desjardins Securities Inc. in Calgary, said in a phone interview today. “For the guys who bought it, it’s obviously meaningful.”


For Whitecap, also based in Calgary, the acquisition “greatly enhances our sustainable dividend-growth model and is accretive on all key measures both in 2014 and 2015,” the company said in a separate statement. The deal is expected to close in May.


Imperial hired Scotiabank last year to sell the assets. National Bank Financial Inc. has acted as Whitecap’s financial adviser and GMP Securities LP, and TD Securities Inc. were strategic advisers on the purchase.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Saturday, 29 March 2014

Success for China’s first four shale gas well zipper frac

China' s first four shale gas well zipper fracturing went smoothly at the Changning H2 national demonstrative shale gas mining block in Sichuan earlier this month. It is currently the most advanced shale gas factory operation around the world. And its success theoretically doubles working efficiency and highlights the performance of the Chinese equipment.


A total of 32 of the most advanced frac spread for 4 horizontal wells completed the 56-stage fracturing operation, with a total of 31.7 million gal liquid and 12.1 million lbs of sand injected, many times that required for conventional shale gas fracturing.


To guarantee stability and safety, 32 sets of equipment were used. These included 13 JEREH units (2,500hp), 6 JEREH units (2,000hp), 8 HALLIBUTON units (2,000hp) and 5 S&S units (2,000hp) with a total output power of 7,000hhp.


Due to the high requirements for the equipment, two sand blenders break down at the early stage of operation and it is noticeable that JEREH sand blenders show reliable performance to ensure the smooth completion.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Atlas Copco launches SmartROC T simulator

Atlas Copco is launching a new surface crawler simulator for operator training: the SmartROC T operator simulator. The simulator is a training tool intended to develop operator skills.


The SmartROC T simulator uses the original controls identical to those on the drilling equipment, providing students with a realistic training environment. The advanced control system is also integrated into the simulator, giving students the opportunity to use all the features of the actual drilling equipment.


The simulator has a pre-designed learning pass to give students step-by-step instructions on operational best practices. The simulator is mounted on a motion platform for a realistic experience.


The simulator is part of a new classroom training module that is both easy to move around, while still having a moving platform. The training can be done from the standard operator seat or from the original RRC control. All scenarios can be done in the dark so that all realistic environments can be trained.


A comprehensive training package is also offered to go with the simulator: the Master Driller program. This consists of three different levels (Bronze, Silver and Gold) that take the operator from classroom training and simulator training to actual training on the drilling equipment.


Providing useful resources, articles and writings on crude oil, other petroleum products, energy and gas. By O'Niel Petroserve Nigeria Ltd, online.

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