BP hits more gas off Egypt

BP Egypt said it has made another important gas discovery in the North Damietta offshore concession in the East Nile Delta.

The “Atoll-1” deepwater exploration well, currently being drilled using the 6th generation semi-submersible rig “Maersk Discoverer,” has reached 6,400 metres depth and penetrated approximately 50 metres of gas pay in high-quality Oligocene sandstones, the company said in a statement. Expected to be the deepest well ever drilled in Egypt, the Atoll well still has another 1 kilometre to drill to test the same reservoir section found to be gas bearing in BP’s significant 2013 Salamat discovery, 15 kilometres to the south.

Expected to be the deepest well ever drilled in Egypt, the Atoll well still has another 1 kilometre to drill to test the same reservoir section found to be gas bearing in BP’s significant 2013 Salamat discovery, 15 kilometres to the south.

Bob Dudley, BP Group Chief Executive, said “This is the second significant discovery in the licence after Salamat. The estimated potential in the concession exceeds 5 trillion cubic feet and we now have a positive starting point for the next possible major project in Egypt after BP’s West Nile Delta project.”

Atoll-1 was drilled in 923m water depth around 80km north of Damietta city, 15km north of Salamat and only 45 km to the north-west of Temsah offshore facilities. BP has 100% equity in the discovery.

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Image: Maersk