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Total Nigeria discovers on Etisong
Field
OUR REPORTER
Total announced on
Tuesday that its Nigerian subsidiary, Total E & P Nigeria Ltd. (TEPNG),
has encountered hydrocarbons in the area within the
south-eastern corner of Oil Mining License (OML) 102, offshore
south-eastern Nigeria, about 15 kilometres from the Ofon Field,
in a water depth of seventy metres. OML 102 is run by the joint
venture Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)/Total,
operated by TEPNG in which Total holds a 40 per cent interest
and NNPC 60 per cent . The Etisong-1 well was drilled to a total
depth of 2,207 metres and produced from turbiditic reservoirs
over 6,000 barrels per day of oil with an API of 40° during the
test. This well constitutes the first step of an exploration and
appraisal programme from 2009 to 2010 designed to demonstrate
the feasibility of a new development pole on OML102, combining
the Etisong main discovery and the surrounding structures.
The Etisong main discovery when confirmed by further appraisal
results should contribute towards helping to meet the
Government’s objective of renewing national reserves. Total has
been operating in Nigeria for more than 50 years. Developing the
country's deep offshore resources is one of the Group's main
growth drivers in Africa, with, in particular the deep offshore
Akpo field in OML 130, which it operates. Akpo is scheduled to
come on stream early 2009. Development studies for the Egina
oilfield, also located in OML 130, are underway. Additionally
the development of the offshore Usan field was launched early
2008 and should come on stream in 2011. Total's offshore
operated production in Nigeria currently comes from the OML 99,
100 and 102 blocks as part of a joint venture with NNPC.
The main fields are Amenam-Kpono, Ofon and Odudu area fields.
The Group's onshore production comes from the OML 58 block, also
operated by Total as part of a joint venture with NNPC. The main
fields here are Obagi, for oil, and Ibewa, for gas. A project to
increase the production capacity of oil, gas and condensates on
this block has recently been launched. In addition, Total has
significant equity production in Nigeria from its interests in
non-operated ventures, particularly the SPDC JV (10 per cent )
and SNEPCO (12.5 per cent ), which includes the Bonga field.
Total also holds a 15 per cent interest in NLNG, where annual
LNG production capacity has risen to 21.9 million metric tons
since Train 6 was brought on stream end 2007. Total has
committed itself to a local content policy on the Usan and OML
58 projects, where respectively 60 per cent and 90 per cent of
the man hours planned will be performed in Nigeria.
The Group continues to develop the expertise of Nigerian
companies in deep offshore project-related work. This is
particularly the case in the Niger Delta region, from which more
than half of Total's Nigerian employees come and where the
majority of the Group's operations in the country are located.
Total is one of the main oil majors in Africa and produces oil
or gas in Algeria, Libya, Nigeria, Angola, the Republic of
Congo, Gabon and Cameroon. Total is one of the world’s major oil
and gas groups, with activities in more than 130 countries. Its
96,000 employees put their expertise to work in every part of
the industry – exploration and production of oil and natural
gas, refining and marketing, gas and power and trading. Total is
working to keep the world supplied with energy, both today and
tomorrow. The Group is also a first rank player in chemicals.
CBN steps in to stabilise naira The naira may be converging to
the NGN130/$1 level, after the CBNsold$900millionlatelast week
at this cut-off rate. Due to public holidays in Nigeria Monday
and Tuesday, it will become clearer today whether the interbank
FX market stabilises, having been effectively closed since last
Wednesday. Although naira devaluation has become a reality, a10
per cent depreciation is not cataclysmic from a macroeconomic
standpoint, notably in a global environment characterised by
more significant exchangerate fluctuations in some emerging and
developing economies. Maintaining appropriate exchange rate
stability will be critical in the coming weeks if the CBN wants
to prevent a self-fulfilling depreciation of the currency.
Without CBN intervention and FX liquidity, we believe the naira
could test NGN135/$1, but with foreign reserves of $57.2 billion
the CBN has the capacity to support the exchange rate at its
current level and provide market liquidity. A caveat to this is
that oil
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