Kudu gas field

      Kudu gas field
      Kudu gas field is located in Namibia
      Location of Kudu gas field
      Country Namibia
      Offshore/onshore offshore
      Coordinates 27°55′34″S 14°36′00″E / 27.926°S 14.600°E / -27.926; 14.600Coordinates: 27°55′34″S 14°36′00″E / 27.926°S 14.600°E / -27.926; 14.600
      Partners Tullow Oil, Itochu, Namcor, Gazprom
      Field history
      Discovery 1974
      Start of production 2013
      Production
      Estimated gas in place 1,300×10^9 cu ft (37×10^9 m3)
      Producing formations Barremian sandstones

      The Kudu gas field is a offshore gas field in Namibia approximately 170 kilometres (110 mi) north-west from the city of Oranjemund. It is located in the Orange Sub-basin in 170 metres (560 ft) of water.[1]

      History

      Discovered in 1974, the license has been held by a number of companies including Royal Dutch Shell, Chevron Texaco and Energy Africa. In 2004, Tullow Oil acquired Energy Africa for US$570 million and with its 90% interest in the license. Later Tullow Oil sold 20% of the project to Itochu.[2] The remaining 10% is held by Namibian state oil company Namcor.[3]

      On Tuesday, 18 September 2007, shares of Tullow Oil declined by more than 3.0% after the group announced that it had to abandon the Kudu-8 exploration well offshore Namibia and that a second well planned nearby won't be drilled.

      In 2010, Namcor and Russian gas company Gazprom agreed to establish a special purpose company to take a majority stake in the Kudu gas field.[4]

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      Reserves

      The field is estimated to contain 1.3 trillion cubic feet (37×10^9 m3) of proven natural gas reserves however more recent exploration and analysis suggests that reserves could reach 3 trillion cubic feet (85×10^9 m3) with potential up to 9 trillion cubic feet (250×10^9 m3).[3][5] These figures though are dependent on further work that is yet to be carried out by Tullow Oil on different parts of the field with other geological settings.

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      Development

      Suggested development of the field has been for a subsea tie back which would potentially make it one of the world's longest. The tie back would connect it to an 800-megawatt power plant to be located near Oranjemund. The field would be crucial in meeting Namibia's growing energy demand.[3]

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      References

      1. ^ "Tullow mulling options for Kudu gas". International Oil Letter (IHS Inc.) 25 (12). 2008-03-23. Retrieved 2010-03-14. 
      2. ^ "Gazprom to Get Shares in Kudu". Namibian (AllAfrica). 2009-11-17. Retrieved 2010-03-14. 
      3. ^ a b c Ingi Salgado (2007-03-29). "Tullow in partnership talks for Kudu gas field". Business Report (Business Report & Independent Online (Pty) Ltd). Retrieved 2007-06-01. 
      4. ^ "Gazprom signs up for Kudu". Upstream Online (NHST Media Group). 2010-03-05. Retrieved 2010-03-14. 
      5. ^ "Kudu gas phases under review". Offshore (PennWell Corporation). 2006-04-23. Retrieved 2007-06-01. 
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      Last modified on 17 March 2013, at 02:30