Afentra 旨在从棕地中获取更多黑金

Tullow Oil 前首席执行官 Paul McDade 领导着一家新公司 Afentra,旨在振兴成熟的西非油田。

保罗·麦克达德 (Paul McDade) 拥有振兴成熟石油项目的良好记录。现在,他把目光投向了西非近海的遗留资产。

Tullow Oil 前首席执行官现在领导 Afentra,该公司由他的一些前 Tullow 同事支持,在安哥拉近海建立了立足点。他们的目标是:为下刚果盆地的 3/05 和 3/05a 区块注入新的活力,勘探并潜在开发宽扎盆地的 23 区块。

自 2021 年 5 月成立以来,该公司一直致力于通过减少排放、增加石油和天然气产量来帮助非洲完成能源转型。

“[安哥拉]的大量石油将被出售并转移给较小的独立企业。”——Afentra 的 Paul McDade。 

Afentra 的首席执行官兼联合创始人麦克达德 (McDade) 职业生涯的大部分时间都在从超级巨头手中购买北海的棕地资产,并使其焕发活力,以延长其生产寿命。他说,西非开展同类活动的时机已经成熟,因为该地区的石油工业转型仅在过去几年才进行。

“比北海落后大约 15 到 20 年,”他说。

西非的石油工业转型与全球能源转型相结合,是麦克达德、他的联合创始人和支持者无法错过的“巨大”商机。他们将公司命名为 Afentra,以表达对非洲和能源转型的认可。

麦克达德表示,由于能源转型需要时间,而且石油和天然气将在一段时间内继续占据能源结构的很大一部分,因此负责任地生产碳氢化合物以及公司在资产管理方面保持透明至关重要。

但更重要的是,麦克达德说,任何在西非运营的公司都需要产生积极的社会影响。

“您在西非经营一家治理良好的企业吗?我们的答案是绝对可以,”他说。

该公司专注于排放量相对较高的现有资产。

“我们看到了很多减少这些排放的机会。如果你进入一个排放足迹较低的天然气项目,你就无能为力来改善它,”他说。“除了西非的一些旧资产,我们看到了很多创造价值的机会,在创造价值的同时,也减少了排放。”

他说,总的来说,“我可以利用高排放资产做更多的事情”。它会产生三角洲影响。”

安哥拉角

麦克达德表示,为了扩张,Afentra 在市场上获得了“相当多的债务能力”。前两笔交易涉及安哥拉近海区块,他称之为该公司的关键战略目标,但 Afentra 也在筛选西非海岸线沿线的其他资产。截至一月中旬,其中一项安哥拉交易已获得政府批准,另一项交易正在等待政府批准。

“我对安哥拉相当了解,”他说,并指出它历来都是综合石油公司的领域。阿芬特拉在安哥拉受到的接待“非常热情”。尽管我们规模庞大,但他们对 Afentra 给予了很多关注。”

他说,小公司受到欢迎的原因之一是,大公司正在远离浅水区,那里的成熟资产“对于国际石油公司(综合石油公司)来说还没有结束,他们很乐意出售这些资产”转向较小的公司。”

他说,政府正在鼓励规模较小的独立公司重新开发这些资产,通过延长现有许可证和改善财政条件来延长其生产寿命。

他说,目前安哥拉水域蕴藏着约15桶已发现但尚未开发的资源。

Afentra 旨在从棕地中获取更多黑金
Impala South F1 平台位于 Sonangol 运营的 3/05 区块。(来源:安哥拉国家石油公司)

“那里的大量石油将被出售并转移给较小的独立企业,”麦克达德说。

2022 年 4 月,Afentra 与 Sonangol 签署了一份关于这些区块权益的协议,随后又与 Industrija Nafte (INA) 签署了协议。两项交易均正在等待政府批准。

23 区块包括一个正在运行的石油系统,并包含一个小型的石油前发现。Afentra 从 Sonangol 购买了该区块 40% 的股份,该公司表示,该盆地 95% 的勘探不足,有可能利用先进的地球物理学来降低风险。

23 区块包含 2012 年 Azul 石油发现,这是宽扎盆地第一个深水盐下石油发现。

另外两个区块有更直接的可能性。

一般来说,Afentra 的目标是成为生产资产的运营商,并且“很乐意取代一家公司作为运营商”,但如果运营商打算在几年后分包,则愿意作为合资伙伴进入某项资产。

Afentra 将作为合作伙伴进入 Sonangol 运营的 3/05 和 3/05a 区块。

“他们正在寻找一个合作伙伴,以带来其他领域的经验,并以积极的方式将成熟的现场操作员带到谈判桌上,”麦克达德说。“我们不想成为被动的合作伙伴。”

座3/05

作为 3/05 区块的积极合作伙伴,主要期望之一是 Afentra 将帮助 Sonangol“挤压资产”,该公司目前通过覆盖 8 个油田的基础设施生产约 19,000 桶/天。该区块于 1981 年至 1992 年间发现的油田包括 Palanca、Pacassa、Buffalo、Cobo、Pambi、Oombo、Impala 和 Impala SE。

浅水区块中约有 3 桶轻质低硫油初始地质储量 (OIIP)。据 Afentra 称,这里的盈亏平衡点约为 35 美元/桶,OIIP 回收率每增加 1% 3 桶,就意味着产量增加 30 MMbbl。

“这是一项成熟的资产,使用寿命很长,”麦克达德说。“这里有很多修井机会,这是您对成熟资产所做的常见事情。”

Afentra 表示,它有一份提高产量和减少排放的愿望清单。

Sonangol 将 20% 的资产出售给 Afentra 后,以 30% 的股份运营该资产。Afentra 还从少数合作伙伴 INA 购买了 4% 的权益,使 Afentra 成为该区块的第二大权益持有者,拥有 24% 的权益。当道达尔在 2005 年至 2013 年分阶段移交该资产时,Sonangol 接管了该区块的运营权。

“他们在维护资产方面做得很好,但他们并没有挤压资产,”他说。

虽然该区块有 100 口井,但“目前只有一半的井处于活跃状态,”麦克达德说。“这里有很多机会进入并重新开发这些资产。”

Afentra 旨在从棕地中获取更多黑金
Sonangol 运营的 3/05 区块的帕兰卡加工平台。(来源:安哥拉国家石油公司)

他说,最初的目标是将目前 19,000 桶/日的产量提高到 20,000 桶/日以上,但“我认为我们可以将其提高到每天 30,000 桶。”

他说,首先将恢复注水以增加产量,因为“目前正在进行大量注水”。

麦克达德说,由于油藏压力增加,一些闲置井可能会通过注水恢复生产。

还计划使用轻型修井机重新进入一些闲置油井,并计划使用电动潜油泵测试油井的性能。

“如果有效的话,我们就会转向这个,”他说。

他说,大约 15 年来没有进行过加密钻探,因此确定这些井的潜在位置也在待办事项清单上。 

3/05a座

3/05A区块毗邻3/05区块,Afentra从INA收购了该区块5.3%的权益。

Sonangol运营的浅水区块有三项发现。3/05a 区块的三个油田于 1982 年、1986 年和 1990 年被发现,但直到 2015 年才开始首次生产。这些油田是 Punja、Caco 和 Gazela,储量约为 300 MMbbl。

“在主要区域进行加密钻探后,我们可以开始考虑开发这些资产并将其与基础设施联系起来,”他说。“这是我们在五年计划中考虑的一长串事情。”

原文链接/hartenergy

Afentra Aims to Get More Black Gold Out of Brownfields

Former Tullow Oil CEO Paul McDade is leading a new company, Afentra, aimed at rejuvenating mature West Africa oil fields.

Paul McDade has a track record of rejuvenating mature oil projects. Now, he has set its sights on legacy assets offshore West Africa.

The former CEO of Tullow Oil now leads Afentra, a company supported by a number of his former Tullow colleagues, establishing a foothold offshore Angola. Their goal: breathe new life into Blocks 3/05 and 3/05a in the Lower Congo Basin, explore and potentially developing Block 23 in the Kwanza Basin.

Since its founding in May 2021, the company has focused on helping Africa through the energy transition by reducing emissions while increasing oil and gas production.

“A lot of oil there [in Angola] is going to be sold and transitioned over to smaller independents.” — Paul McDade, Afentra. 

McDade, the CEO and co-founder of Afentra, spent much of his career buying brownfield assets in the North Sea from supermajors and rejuvenating them to extend their productive lifespans. West Africa is ripe for the same type of activity, he said, because the region’s oil industry transition has only been in progress for the past couple of years.

“It’s about 15 or 20 years behind where the North Sea is,” he said.

West Africa’s oil industrial transition paired with the global energy transition was a “huge” business opportunity that McDade, his co-founders and backers couldn’t pass up. They named the company Afentra as a nod to both Africa and the energy transition.

Because the energy transition will take time and oil and gas will continue to make up a large portion of the energy mix for a while, McDade said it’s critical that hydrocarbons be produced responsibly and for companies to be transparent about the management of assets.

But even more critical, McDade said, is that any company operating in West Africa needs to generate a positive social impact.

“Can you run a well-governed business in West Africa? Our answer is that absolutely you can,” he said.

The company is focusing on existing assets with relatively high emissions.

“We see lots of opportunities to reduce those emissions. If you go into a gas project with a low emissions footprint, there’s not much you can do to improve it,” he said. “But some of these older assets in West Africa, we see a lot of opportunity to create value, and in the creation of the value, reducing the emissions as well.”

Overall, he said, “there’s a lot more I can do with high-emission assets. It makes a delta impact.”

Angola angle

In order to expand, Afentra picked up “quite a bit of debt capacity” in the market, McDade said. Its first two deals were for blocks offshore Angola, which he called the company’s key strategic target, but Afentra is also screening other assets along the West African coastline. One of the Angolan deals received government approval while the other was pending government approval as of mid-January.

“I know Angola reasonably well,” he said, noting it has historically been the domain of integrated oil companies. Afentra’s reception in Angola was “very welcoming. They paid a lot of attention to Afentra, despite our size.”

One reason smaller companies are being welcomed, he said, is because the larger companies are migrating away from the shallow water where mature assets are “at the end of their lives for IOCs [integrated oil companies], and they are happy to sell them on to smaller companies.”

The government is encouraging smaller independent companies to redevelop these assets to extend their productive lives by extending existing licenses and improving fiscal terms, he said.

Currently, he said, Angolan waters hold about 15 Bbbl of discovered but not developed resources.

Afentra Aims to Get More Black Gold Out of Brownfields
The Impala South F1 platform on Sonangol-operated Block 3/05. (Source: Sonangol)

“A lot of oil there is going to be sold and transitioned over to smaller independents,” McDade said.

In April 2022, Afentra signed an agreement with Sonangol for interest in the blocks and later followed that up with a deal from Industrija Nafte (INA). Both transactions are awaiting government approval.

Block 23 includes a working petroleum system and contains a small pre-oil discovery. Afentra, which purchased its 40% stake in the block from Sonangol, said 95% of the basin is underexplored, with the potential to be derisked using advanced geophysics.

Block 23 contains the 2012 Azul oil discovery, which is the first deepwater pre-salt find in the Kwanza Basin.

The other two blocks have more immediate possibilities.

Generally speaking, Afentra aims to become the operator of producing assets and would be “delighted to replace a company as operator” but is willing to enter an asset as a joint venture partner if the operator intends to farm out after a few years.

Afentra is entering the Sonangol-operated Blocks 3/05 and 3/05a as a partner.

“They were looking for a partner to bring experience from other areas and bring a mature field operator to the table in an active way,” McDade said. “We don’t want to be a passive partner.”

Block 3/05

As an active partner in Block 3/05, one of the main expectations is that Afentra will help Sonangol “squeeze the asset,” which is currently producing about 19,000 bbl/d from infrastructure covering eight fields. The block’s fields, discovered between 1981 and 1992, are Palanca, Pacassa, Buffalo, Cobo, Pambi, Oombo, Impala and Impala SE.

There’s about 3 Bbbl of light sweet oil initially in place (OIIP) in the shallow water block. Breakeven here would be about $35/bbl, and every 1% increase in recovery from the OIIP of 3 Bbbl translates to 30 MMbbl of additional production, according to Afentra.

“It’s a mature asset with a long life ahead of it,” McDade said. “There’s lots of opportunities for workovers, the usual things you do for a mature asset.”

Afentra said it has a wish list of ways to improve production and reduce emissions here.

Sonangol operates the asset with 30% after selling 20% to Afentra. Afentra also bought 4% interest from minority partner INA, making Afentra the second largest interest holder in the block with 24%. Sonangol took over operatorship of the block when Total exited the asset in a phased handover from 2005 to 2013.

“They have been doing a good job of maintaining the asset, but they haven’t been squeezing the asset,” he said.

While there are 100 wells in the block, “only half of those wells are active at the moment,” McDade said. “There’s lots of opportunity to go in and redevelop those assets.”

Afentra Aims to Get More Black Gold Out of Brownfields
The Palanca processing platform on Sonangol-operated Block 3/05. (Source: Sonangol)

The initial aim is to boost current production of 19,000 bbl/d to over 20,000 bbl/d, he said, but “I think we can increase it to 30,000 barrels a day.”

First off the bat will be resuming water injection to increase production, he said, since there “hasn’t been a lot of water injection going on.”

Some of the inactive wells may resume production with the water injection due to increasing reservoir pressure, McDade said.

There are also plans to re-enter some of the inactive wells with a light workover rig, as well as plans to test how wells perform with electrical submersible pumps.

“We’ll move over to that if it works,” he said.

No infill drilling has been carried out in about 15 years, he said, so identifying potential locations for those wells is also on the to-do list. 

Block 3/05a

Block 3/05A is adjacent to Block 3/05, and Afentra acquired 5.3% interest in the block from INA.

The shallow water block operated by Sonangol has three discoveries. Block 3/05a’s three fields were discovered in 1982, 1986 and 1990, but initial production didn’t follow until 2015. The fields are Punja, Caco and Gazela, which hold about 300 MMbbl in place.

“After we do infill drilling in the main area, we can start to think about developing these assets and tying them back to infrastructure,” he said. “There’s a long list of things we’re looking at in the five-year plan.”