Ophir acquires interest in seven PSCs in Indonesia

Ophir Energy has entered into an agreement with Niko Resources to acquire interests in seven deepwater production sharing contracts in Indonesia.

The transaction brings access to large acreage positions in highly prospective basins and expands Ophir’s footprint in South East Asia, following the award of acreage offshore Myanmar earlier this year.

Nick Cooper, CEO, Ophir Energy, said, “We are excited by the exploration and market opportunities in South East Asia, which can complement our continued expansion in Africa. This transaction with Niko Resources provides one new country entry but access to three new core areas. The asset package adds a high impact, deepwater, exploration portfolio to our existing asset base at a very low entry cost.”

Cooper added that Indonesia is a mature, hydrocarbon producing province with a long-established regulatory and fiscal framework that contains an exciting mix of proven and frontier deepwater basins. The latter are largely underexplored and are in-line with the company’s strategy of early entries into operated, potentially transformational acreage where multiple geological plays have been identified.

“This deal represents a significant reloading of the company’s exploration portfolio, expanding our gross acreage by 40% and in combination with Ophir’s recent Myanmar PSC award, positions Ophir as a leading deepwater Asian explorer. We look forward to delivering a number of high impact wells from this new Asian portfolio as well from our existing African assets in the coming years,” added Cooper.

The seven PSCs equity interests are ranging from 18.5-100%, six of which will be operated positions, with partners including Statoil and ENI. In total, the acreage covered by the PSCs is approximately 21,500km2 with significant 2D and 3D seismic data already acquired by Niko. Multiple leads and prospects, along with underexplored new plays, have been identified across the portfolio, across a mix of clastic and carbonate play types in both proven and frontier basins.

The licences are split broadly into three core areas – West Papua, Western Birds Head and the Makassar Strait. The West Papua area is frontier and potentially high-impact, primarily prospective for oil within a carbonate play in which reservoir quality has been partially de-risked by drilling to date.  The Western Birds Head area, prospective for both oil and gas in clastic and carbonate plays, has been de-risked by existing discoveries on the Kofiau PSC. The Makassar Strait area is a proven, world class hydrocarbon province in which several large fields feed the multi-train, but now under-utilised, Bontang LNG plant located onshore East Kalimantan. The acquired acreage has already seen some 3D seismic acquisition and the maturing of several leads and prospects that could be commercialised via this route with the threshold for commercial volumes as low as c.200BCF.

The initial focus of activity will be to re-interpret the existing 3D seismic data and to commission new 3D surveys on several blocks. It is expected that the first drilling campaigns are likely to start early 2016. Ophir may decide to reduce its cost exposure to some of these wells prior to drilling.

Total net remaining liabilities and minimum spend commitments under the current terms of the PSCs are estimated at US$1.3million. The company also expects a number of key Niko personnel based in country to transition across with the assets on completion.

Ophir will pay Niko Resources US$31million on completion of the transaction, with further success payments payable on the declaration of commerciality of up to four discoveries, and consequently first production from up to four future developments. In aggregate, the total further consideration payable on success is capped at US$56million.

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Press Release; Image: Niko Resources