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Gold/Mining/Energy : KOB.TO - East Lost Hills & GSJB joint venture

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To: Bearcatbob who wrote (901)12/10/1998 2:48:00 PM
From: JL  Read Replies (1) of 15703
 
Bob Christie News:

Lost Hills find sparks stock activity

December 10, 1998

By BOB CHRISTIE
Californian staff writer
e-mail: bchristie@bakersfield.com

The oil-well explosion near Lost Hills may have extinguished itself, but
there's no doubt the possibility of a big find is fueling a raging sale among
selected Canadian oil stocks.

Stocks in several of the Canadian oil and gas companies involved in the
blown-out well tumbled Wednesday after increasing in value by leaps
and bounds during the two weeks the well was blazing. Some of the
stock prices increased nearly 500 percent before taking big hits — as
much as half — as the news of the flameout hit the Canadian exchanges
Wednesday.

"Obviously the run-up was on the expectation of a significant gas find,"
said Alan Knowles, an analyst with Research Capital Corp. in Calgary.
"There were a lot of numbers floating out there, from 1 trillion up to 3
trillion cubic feet of natural gas, and higher."

That bubble burst with the news Tuesday afternoon that the fire had
gone out after the well began spewing a greater percentage of water.
Stocks in the more speculative companies fell by 50 percent in trading on
the Vancouver and Toronto stock exchanges Wednesday.

There are eight Canadian companies invested in the well, one American
publically traded company and two private oil and gas firms.

Two of the Canadian firms — Berkley Petroleum Corp. and Paramount
Resources Ltd. — have assets of nearly $1 billion; their stock prices
decreased in the past two weeks because the well isn't as significant to
their potential profits as the state of the world oil market, which has
grown gloomier, Knowles said.

Three lesser players — Elk Point Resources, Inc., whose subsidiary,
Bellevue Resources Inc., is the well operator, Richland Petroleum Corp.
and Westminster Petroleum Ltd. — are smaller companies with
significant other holdings.

The stocks of these companies increased from 50 percent to 129 percent
in the past two weeks before falling again Wednesday.

The really high flyers, both on the upside and on the downside, are the
three Canadian companies whose main asset is an interest in the well.
One in particular, Kookaburra Resources Ltd. had a stock price increase
of 480 percent over the two-week period before plummeting again to
about 100 percent above its price before the blowout.

Regardless of the volatility of the stocks, some investment advisers are
saying they remain confident that the well could hold significant
potential. At Yorkton Securities Inc. in Vancouver, vice-president Tim
Bowes wrote in his daily investment report Wednesday morning that his
company "still believes there are enough positive signs coming from the
well (pointing) to a significant find."

The flow of water that put out the fire simply reinforces Yorkton's view
that the field could be an important find, but should be considered only a
possible discovery at this point.

The investment activity actually spurred a Vancouver TV station to
come to Bakersfield and file reports Tuesday and Wednesday. The
Californian's bakersfield.com Web site has been monitored by many
Canadian investors.

The well blew out and caught fire on Nov. 23, and shot a huge flame
into the sky for more than two weeks before it went out Tuesday
afternoon. Water, gas and oil continues to spray skyward in an
uncontrolled flow from the well, drilled to a depth greater than 17,000
feet.

At the well site Wednesday, crews from Boots & Coots International
Well Control fitted a new well head to well casing.

This morning, they are expected to move in a new blowout preventer and
cap the well itself, diverting the flow of natural gas and condensate, oil
and water into two burn pits, said Jim Fox of Driltek of Bakersfield, who
is managing the site for operator Bellevue.

In coming days, they will hook up accumulators to collect the
hydrocarbon liquids and water, while attempting to burn off any natural
gas.

The relief well that has been planned is now expected to begin drilling in
three to four days.

That well will be drilled to more than 13,000 feet before the bit is turned
to intercept the blown-out well.
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