Gulf Indonesia budgets US$40m to explore: Report
Thursday, March 21 2002 - 01:56 AM WIB
?We intend to spend $120 million this year, plus or minus, and getting on for a third of that would be for exploration. Exploration is going to be part of our future,? President and Chief Executive Paul Warwick was quoted by Reuters as saying.
The firm, which had 303 million barrels or equivalent of proved oil and gas reserves as at end 2001, found both at its Ketapang operations in Java is now doing a seismic survey of the area, but said it was too early to say how big the find was.
?We?ll probably drill some wells in the early part of next year, depending on the completion of the seismic survey,? he said.
Some 94 percent of the proved reserves of Gulf Indonesia, majority owned by Conoco Inc. of the United States, are in South Sumatra.
?Our onshore operations in South Sumatra are at the end of their life as such, but there?s probably a long tail to that life?.but they are not going to be the long term oil future,? he said, despite the possibility of adding small, incremental finds in the locality in future.
Warwick said Indonesia?s new petroleum laws passed in November, which herald the break up of state oil giant Pertamina, could put new emphasis on future development of smaller wells.
But Warwick, speaking on the sidelines of investment bank Credit Suisse First Boston?s annual investment conference in Hong Kong, said the biggest potential for his firm was in natural gas, which represented about 90 percent of Gulf Indonesia?s business.
?Our gas business is a great business. There?s a lot of potential, we?re working that potential and some of it is going to come out,? he said.
Investors have been cheering that potential in recent weeks, pushing up the firm?s New York-listed stock some 20.6 percent to $10.19 as of Tuesday.
?Basically we do have a very good growth story,? Warwick said.
?We?ve sold gas to Caltex in a second contract and we have a gas sales agreement from our West Natuna field into Singapore as well. That growth is tangible, the projects are on schedule and as an organization, we?re doing the right things,? Warwick added.
The market is also eying an anticipated bid by Gulf Indonesia as part of one of four consortia slivering over a stake in a $9 billion pipeline contract to transport gas from Indonesia to Singapore.
The deal, in which Indonesian gas distributor PT Perusahaan Gas Negara is selling a slice of the pipeline to comply with loan requirements of multilateral lenders to Jakarta, is set to close by the end of this month.
Warwick declined to comment on the specifics of the bid or if a bid would be delivered by the March 26 deadline. (*)
