Wintershall announces an oil discovery in exploration licence F17a in
the Dutch North Sea about 120 kilometers north of Den Helder.
Exploration well F17-10 found a Late Cretaceous Chalk reservoir of good
quality containing crude oil. Oil was produced during a production test.
The well was spudded on 18 September 2012 with jack-up rig GSP Saturn
in a water depth of 44 meters. The well drilled to a total depth of 1490
meters into the top of a salt dome. Measurements taken in the well
indicate the presence of a significant oil column. Preliminary resource
estimates indicate a potential of at least 30 million barrels
recoverable oil with a more than significant upside. The well will be
plugged and abandoned. Commercial viability of the discovery as well as
further upside will need to be confirmed through appraisal drilling
planned in 2013.
Gilbert van den Brink, Managing Director of Wintershall Noordzee B.V.
stated: “We are delighted with the results from this well. It has been a
while since one of our exploration wells has been targeting for oil.
Although we are also operating the Kotter and Logger oil fields, for
some time now the focus of Wintershall Noordzee is set around producing
gas fields and exploring for gas. This discovery gives us the
opportunity to grow our business in the Netherlands and provide a more
balanced portfolio in terms of oil and gas. Our challenge now will be to
move this discovery from the exploration phase, through appraisal
drilling in 2013, to the development phase thereafter. Furthermore, we
are looking for additional exploration drilling in this area. It would
be great if we can add one or two additional oil fields on the map
again.”
A positive signal about the future of exploration in the southern North Sea
Wintershall is one of the largest gas producers in the southern North
Sea and operates 25 offshore platforms there overall – 23 in the Dutch
North Sea, one in the British and one in the German North Sea. The
wholly owned BASF subsidiary has been active in the region since 1965.
Wintershall controls 19 of these platforms from Den Helder, Netherlands,
with one of the most modern radio surveillance and control systems in
order to manage these operations efficiently. At the beginning of 2012,
Wintershall launched tight gas production from the K18-Golf field in the
Dutch North Sea. In October 2011, the company commissioned its first
Wintershall-operated natural gas production facility in the British
North Sea with the Wingate platform. With investments of more than 50
million euros in the Wingate project, Wintershall is also sending a
positive signal about the future of exploration in the southern North
Sea. Besides that Wintershall is also exploring in Denmark.
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