2nd UPDATE: AED Oil Acquires Indonesian Oil, Gas Acreage
05 Februar 2010 - 7:06AM
Dow Jones News
AED Oil Ltd. (AED.AU) said Friday that a A$9 million purchase of
stakes in two Indonesian oil and gas properties from Canada-based
Nations Petroleum marks an end to its active search for
acquisitions.
"This is the last step for a while in our expansion," Chairman
David Dix told Dow Jones Newswires.
AED will pay Nations Petroleum US$1.5 million and issue it 12
million AED shares, worth about A$7.2 million on Thursday, for 100%
and 60% stakes in permits in West Papua and Madura Island,
respectively.
The deal marks a continuation of AED's attempt to reinvigorate
its business after a horror 2008 culminated in the sale of 60% of
its underperforming Puffin project in the Timor Sea to China's
Sinopec for A$600 million.
Since then its had to pull out of a proposed A$155 million
investment in Nexus Energy Ltd.'s Longtom gas project after Nexus
failed to meet a first production deadline for the development.
After that deal fell through, AED in November bought 50% of a
permit in Brunei, also from Nations Petroleum, for around A$17
million in cash and shares.
According to AED, a concentration by Nations Petroleum on
developing its U.S. assets has put pressure on its balance sheet,
making it a more willing seller of its South East Asian assets.
The latest deal, which is subject to AED shareholder approval,
will increase Nations Petroleum's stake in AED to around 17%.
Dix said AED's 50% joint venture in Brunei intends to drill two
wells this year, one in March and another between April and
July.
At South Madura, one small well is planned to be drilled this
year in an attempt to source gas for a nearby power station.
Dix said drilling on the Rombebai asset in West Papua probably
won't commence for another 18 months. "Rombebai will be more
expensive but we've got a longer timeframe to put that in place,"
he said.
"If it's the size that we anticipate, then it's probably going
to justify an LNG (liquefied natural gas) type operation."
AED had A$86.1 million cash at Dec. 31 and Dix said it intends
to fund the drilling campaigns through existing cash reserves.
The Melbourne-based company said four wells drilled in the
Rombebai contract area in the 1950's by Royal Dutch Shell PLC
encountered gas, but the company was looking for oil at the time,
so it didn't attempt to develop the resource any further.
Further testing by Nations Petroleum has indicated that the
permit's Gesa reservoir could possibly contain about 5 trillion
cubic feet of gas, "although there is a large range of
uncertainties as the reservoir sands have not yet been penetrated
by drilling," AED said.
The South Madura contract area is surrounded by a number of oil
and gas discoveries, AED said.
AED shares slid 4.5 cents, or 7.5%, to 55.5 cents on Friday amid
a wider sell-off among energy stocks hit by a steep drop in the oil
price.
-By Ross Kelly, Dow Jones Newswires; 61-2-8272-4692;
ross.kelly@dowjones.com
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