Golar nets Equatorial Guinea FLNG contract

Golar LNG said it has signed a binding heads of terms with Ophir Energy for the provision of the GoFLNG vessel Gimi

The deal has been approved by Ophir’s Equatorial Guinea, Block-R upstream partner GEPetrol, and will be formally ratified by GEPetrol next week, Golar said in a statement on Tuesday.

The agreement will be structured as a 20-year tolling contract, commencing commercial operations in the first half of 2019. Block R’s 2.5 tcf of high purity 2P gas resources, situated in an area of benign sea states, are ideally suited for the application of Golar’s GoFLNG technology, the statement said.

Golar with its partners Keppel Shipyard and Black and Veatch committed to the Gimi FLNG conversion in December 2014. Gimi will benefit from utilising the same configuration of utilities and liquefaction facilities as its sister ship Hilli, with variations to accommodate production direct from the deep-water reservoir.

At full production the vessel will have a contracted capacity of 2.2 mtpa of LNG, to be marketed by Ophir and GEPetrol. The project is expected to deliver an EBITDA for Golar in the first full year of operation in the region of $350M.

The additional earnings associated with the vessel variations to accommodate deep water production have not been included in this estimate as the contracting strategy for this additional scope has not been finalised. Gimi will be Golar’s second GoFLNG vessel following Hilli, which is scheduled to commence commercial operations in Cameroon during the first half of 2017.

The integrated Ophir/GEPetrol/Golar project is expected to take FID during the first half of 2016 following completion of the upstream FEED study.

Nick Cooper, Ophir’s CEO commented “Finalising our midstream partner is a significant step forward for the Fortuna FLNG project. This agreement accelerates first gas date and reduces costs along the value chain. The project has been refined to allow the option to deliver LNG at attractive returns into both Pacific Basin and Atlantic Basin LNG customers. The agreement completes the value chain economics and allows Ophir to confidently plan for first gas, and c. 67,000 boepd of production in 1H 2019.

At a time when many other greenfield LNG projects are decelerating, Ophir has elected to accelerate the Fortuna FLNG Project to secure what it believes will be a better market opportunity at first gas and to lock in anticipated reduced upstream development costs. We will now move immediately into the upstream and midstream FEED with a view to reaching FID by mid-2016.”