GulfSlope encounters oil sands at Canoe well in Gulf of Mexico

GulfSlope Energy has informed that its Gulf of Mexico well targeting the Canoe prospect has encountered oil sands.

According to GulfSlope, the well was drilled to a total of 5,765 feet measured depth (5,700 feet true vertical depth) and encountered no problems while drilling.

“A full integration of the well informed and seismic data will be performed for further evaluation of the shallow potential of the wellbore and the block, and to define commerciality of these oil pays. The well is being temporarily abandoned with multiple open hole plugs to be set across several intervals,” the company said.

The well is equipped with a mud-line suspension system for possible future re-entry. A deeper subsalt prospect on VR 378, for which the block was originally leased, is not yet drill-ready and is pending further seismic enhancement, GulfSlope said.

Tau prospect next

The Rowan Ralph Coffman jack-up rig is expected to be under tow to GulfSlope’s Ship Shoal Area, South Addition Blocks 336/351 location by August 31, where drilling will start on the Tau Subsalt Prospect.

This will be the inaugural well in GulfSlope’s Phase 1 Subsalt Drilling Portfolio of high potential prospects, which will test Miocene reservoirs beneath thick salt sheets on the shelf in 300 feet to 400 feet of water depth. At a planned depth of 29,860 feet measured depth (26,132 feet true vertical depth), the Tau Prospect exploratory well is projected to drill one of the thickest sub-seafloor geologic sections in Gulf of Mexico history almost five miles below the seafloor.

GulfSlope is the operator of the Tau well with a 20 percent working interest. Delek GOM Investments LLC, a subsidiary of Delek Group Ltd. (“Delek”) will have a 75 percent working interest and Texas South Energy Inc. will own a five percent working interest.