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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (9947)4/5/1998 9:38:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1998 (3)

TOP STORIES

Northstar Energy Selling Its Non-Core Properties
The Financial Post

Northstar Energy Corp. is shedding high-cost, non-core producing properties as it pares debt and focuses on natural gas.

The firm said Friday it will receive $75 million by selling daily production averaging 3,800 barrels of oil equivalent a day.

Oil and gas liquids volumes averaged 22,000 barrels a day before the sale. Most of the assets sold have high decline rates and operating costs so the impact on cash flow will be less than the drop in output, the firm said.

Northstar built itself from a small junior to an intermediate in the early 1990s on the back of its gas production. It increased oil and liquids production with the takeover last year of Morrison Petroleums Ltd.

The Morrison purchase balanced production between oil and gas, but the firm's reserves stayed weighted to gas, said chief financial officer John Richels.

"We've always stayed a natural gas company and that's where our fundamental expertise is."

The properties, which were sold to a variety of buyers, have little potential for more drilling.

The sale will help the company upgrade its prospecting portfolio, Richels said.

Friday's announcement is just the latest move in Northstar's financial restructuring. Earlier this week the firm filed a notice with regulators to sell its 5.4 million shares of Morrison Middlefield Resources Ltd., part of the Morrison deal.

It also recently closed a US$150-million financing and completed the sale of its cogeneration unit for $72.3 million.

Victor Roskey, an analyst with Griffiths McBurney & Partners in Calgary, said the moves should give investors confidence the company is back on track.

"It's management following through on what they said they would do," he said. "They had a plan and now they have executed it. I think that's positive."

Syncrude Closing In On Billionth Barrel
Fort McMurray Today

The billionth barrel barrier is ready to be broken at Syncrude Canada.

The oilsands plant surpassed 996,670,000 barrels of Syncrude Sweet Blend Thursday and is expected to achieve the historic mark in less than two weeks.

"Syncrude's production per day fluctuations but right now we are running 230,000 to 240,000 barrels per day so everyone can do the mental arithmetic and figure it out," spokesman Peter Marshall said this morning.

As the billionth barrel day draws closer, Marshall said Syncrude's production planning people should be able to pin down the exact day, likely April 15 or 16.

Achieving the billionth barrel is "exciting and significant" for Syncrude, he said, because the plant will do so five years ahead of schedule. That's because when Syncrude's first barrel of upgraded crude oil flowed into the pipeline back in July, 1978, company officials estimated the plant would ship its billionth barrel 25 years later, not 19 1/2 years.

What they didn't anticipate were how improvements such as the capacity addition project in the late 1980s would lead to increase oil production, explained Marshall.

"All the employees at Syncrude, both past and present, are very excited about this event and it's a great source of satisfaction .... to reach this milestone," Marshall said.

When Suncor Energy and Syncrude began operating, in 1967 and 1978 respectively, many people were skeptical about technology and about the future of oilsands. No one in their "wildest imagination would have expected both plants to have been so successful and profitable," said Marshall.

In 1997, Syncrude's revenue exceeded $2 billion for the second consecutive year. Production from the Syncrude and Suncor oilsands deposits has now surpassed production from the Pembina oilfield, deemed the largest in the country at 1.475 billion barrels.

"When we hit our billionth barrel, the Athabasca oilsands deposit will be the largest oilfield in Canada and, of course, nobody will ever catch us ... We'll be growing and growing as both Syncrude and Suncor increase production and other oilsands projects come on line," Marshall said.

Over the next eight years Syncrude will spend $6 billion to expand production. Part of the expansion includes a $3-billion upgrader that, when completed by 2007, will boost average daily synthetic crude oil production from today's 230,000 to 480,000 barrels.

Gas Find Near Fort Liard

A press statement says the Ranger Oil well is planned to go into production in 1999 at 20 million cubic feet of gas per day

Northern News Services

FORT SIMPSON (Apr 03/98) - Ranger Oil of Calgary, who have been exploring in the Fort Liard area, had a major find last month.

One of their wells, Unocal Canada Exploration Limited and Canadian Forest Oil Limited also have an interest, has hit gas deposits that could total 200 billion cubic feet plus when all is said and done.

A Ranger press statement says the well is planned to go into production in 1999 at 20 million cubic feet of gas per day.

In Fort Liard, Shane Parrish, general manager of the Laird Valley Band Development Corporation, was ecstatic. "It's big," he said last week. "Now that we've had this significant discovery, we know the companies (exploring in the area) will be staying. The success here will generate more interest in the area, leading to more employment and business opportunities."

With all this activity going on around Fort Liard, Parrish is confident that the positive spinoffs will reach throughout the region.

"The oil and gas will require us to bring in more people from the Deh Cho," he said.

Parrish also said that exploration activity is proceeding in both the Fort Liard area of the NWT and across the border into British Columbia.

"This is what we're doing it for," he said. "We're (now) going from an exploration to a development phase."

Tight Supply Lifts Natural Gas Prices
The Financial Post

Natural gas prices have been on a roll recently, testing some of their highest levels since Canadian markets were deregulated in 1986.

Analysts say prices in Canada and the U.S. are zooming over concerns that supply is tightening heading into what is expected to be a scorching summer in the U.S. because of El Nino, and just ahead of massive pipeline expansions between Canada and the U.S.

The Alberta spot price finished at $2.41 a thousand cubic feet on Friday, up 9› on the day and up 38› since Monday's close.

The Alberta spot price was hovering around $1.60 a thousand range only a month ago.

Gas prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange closed at US$2.556 per million British thermal units for May delivery, down US0.6›, but up about US15› since Monday.

"Prices at these levels have never been seen at this time of the year," said industry analyst Peter Linder, with CIBC Wood Gundy Securities Inc. in Calgary.

"In fact, if we don't see the supply response shortly, these will be considered low levels three to four months from now."

Supply is tightening on both sides of the border. In Canada, a short winter drilling season has reduced well completions by 40%, while production declines from existing gas wells is estimated at 8% to 10% between now and the fall.

In the U.S., production is declining faster than reserves are being replaced, and replacement costs are increasing.

To make matters worse, low oil prices are putting pressure on producers' ability to crank up gas production, contributing to the tight situation, said Martin Molyneaux, director of research at First Energy Capital Corp. in Calgary.

"On the one hand, lower oil prices are driving producers toward natural gas, but most of them are carrying considerably higher debt levels and are seeing their cash flows erode dramatically due to lower oil prices, which reduces the capital available to spend on drilling natural gas wells," Molyneaux said.

He estimates the industry's indebtedness is at its highest level in 10 years.

With the winter drilling season over, meetings are under way across the industry to decide whether to implement a second major round of capital spending cuts because of low oil prices, or come up with ideas about how to bankroll a major push into natural gas, at a time when investors are cool to the sector, he said.

"Everybody is really focused on oil, and investors are underapreciating what is going on in these gas markets," he said. "They don't realize that the Canadian revenue stream is almost 40% natural gas" and is rising to outrank oil by next year.

Linder estimates Alberta gas production, at about 12.5 billion cubic feet daily, is about 300 million to 500 million short of where it should be at this time of the year.

"At this rate, Alberta gas storage may not be adequately replenished by next November, and total deliverability by next fall may not even come close to the 13.3 billion to 13.5 billion cubic feet daily necessary to fill the new export pipelines," he said.

Molyneaux puts the potential shortage at two billion cubic feet daily by the fall.

The Alberta price for next winter's delivery is now set at $2.63 a thousand cubic feet - almost $1.10 above last winter's price, Linder said.

Number Of Oil Rigs In Canada Is Down 69 & U.S. Is Down 15 From Previous Week

The number of rigs exploring for oil and natural gas in the United States stood at 875 as of Friday, down 15 from the previous week, and 43 below the year-ago total of 918, Baker Hughes Inc. reported.

The number of rigs drilling on land fell 20 to 717, while rigs working offshore rose six to 135. The number of rigs active in inland waters fell one to 23.

Among the individual states, the biggest changes occurred in Wyoming, down six, in Kansas, up four, and in Oklahoma down three.

The Gulf of Mexico rig count rose six to 134.

The number of rigs searching for gas fell six to 577, the number of rigs searching for oil fell by nine to 295, while the number of miscellaneous drilling projects remained at three.

There were 243 rigs drilling directionally, 57 drilling horizontally and 575 drilling vertically.

In Canada, the number of working rigs fell 69 from the previous week, to 173, vs. 245 one year ago.

Baker Hughes' weekly rig count reflects the number of rigs exploring for oil and gas, not those producing oil and gas.

In a separate report, Offshore Data Services said there were 169 rigs under contract in the Gulf of Mexico Friday, down two from the week before.

The utilization rate for rigs working in the gulf, based on a total fleet of 176, was 96 percent.

The number of working rigs in the European/Mediterranean area remained at 106 rigs under contract out of a total fleet of 110, a utilization rate of 96.4 percent.

The worldwide rig count remained at 583 out of a total fleet of 609, with a utilization rate of 95.7 percent.

For table detail, go to bakerhughes.com

Low Oil Prices Fail To Dampen Industry's Optimism

NEW ORLEANS, April 3 - Oil executives, barely deterred by the declining crude prices in the last five months, were mostly optimistic as they shared their company's fortunes with analysts at a key energy conference here this week.

Indeed, investors and analysts attending the Howard Weil Energy Conference heard how cheaper and more sophisticated technologies were allowing drilling projects that current crude prices might have precluded just a few years ago.

''Technology is what's driving this market,'' said one analyst attending the 26th annual conference, which ended on Thursday.

Also, many companies were sanguine enough to say prices had probably bottomed out, which would preserve many of their previously announced capital expenditure budgets, though there have been exceptions, such as Canada's Ranger Oil Ltd (RGO/TSE).

Ranger last month said low prices led it to trim its 1998 capital expenses by U.S. $50 million to U.S. $235 million.

But Chevron Corp Chairman and Chief Executive Kenneth Derr said this week that his company did not plan any changes in the company's capital budget, and he predicted predicted crude oil prices would rise back up above $17 in the 1998 second half.

''We haven't made any changes. I don't think we will make any significant changes,'' Derr told Reuters in an interview in New Orleans this week. ''I think by the second half of this year, we'll be back up up above $17 (a barrel), maybe before.

Royal Dutch Shell/Group (RD.AS)(SHEL.L) set the optimistic tone when its top executive opened the conference by saying he thought $18 crude prices were ''reasonable'' in the medium term.

Shell Managing Director Maarten van den Bergh's forecast was all the more remarkable since it came before OPEC penned an agreement in Vienna early Tuesday to cut output along with two non-OPEC producers by nearly 1.5 million barrels per day in a bid to halt sliding prices.

Light sweet crude oil futures for prompt delivery were higher Friday, trading at just under $16 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX)-- up from nine-year lows last month at $12.80, but well below levels over $23 last October.

Prices have slid on a combination of factors, including Asia's financial crisis, a mild winter in the northern hemisphere that hurt heating oil demand and the expansion of Iraq's export quota under its agreement with United Nations.

On the technological front, the growing importance of two and three dimensional seismic surveys was on display throughout the meeting, with company after company showing off seismic surveys of their respecitve prospects.

Also, several smaller exploration and development companies talked about floating production, storage and offtake vessels, which are being increasingly used for smaller offshore fields. The vessels, which can be moved as necessary, provide better economics than do permanent production platforms, and have allowed companies like Ranger to exploit North Sea fields.

Investors also heard bullish assessents from companies such as Anadarko Petroleum Co (APC) and Murphy Oil Corp. (MUR), who said lower crude prices was enabling them to buy stakes in upstream assets at cheaper prices.

Even troubled Triton, which announced early this week that management was putting up its Colombian and Thai assets--or even the entire company--for sale or farmout, was optimistic.

While analysts point to the difficulty Triton is likely to have in selling stakes in the Cusiana and Cupiagua fields, where guerrilla activity is a major drawback, Triton chairman and chief executive officer Tom Finck said several companies had already expressed interest the company or its assets.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (9947)4/5/1998 9:52:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACITIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1998 (4)

Oil in a Time of Glut
Kippinger On-Line

Saved by Technology

Though the price of a barrel of crude was recently $16, oil companies, both big and small, are making money. That's because the historic link between oil company profits and crude oil prices--a relationship which suggests that these companies should be on the ropes again--hardly exists anymore. "Technology and cost control, rather than oil prices, now rule the industry," observes Prudential Securities analyst Jeffrey Freedman. What he means is that technology allows oil companies to operate with fewer employees while greatly reducing the cost of finding and producing new oil and natural-gas reserves.

Although modern computers made the job of processing vast amounts of seismic and production data easier and faster, perhaps the most important innovation is the use of three-dimensional seismology. Simply put, 3-D allows geologists and other technicians to create realistic computer images of geological structures far beneath the surface of the earth. That enables them to pinpoint oil and gas deposits with greater accuracy. Result: The industry's success rate at making new discoveries has increased in the past decade from one strike for every four wells drilled to one in two.

Another breakthrough is the increased use of horizontal drilling. Froma conventional drilling platform, a well is dug straight down to a hydrocarbon-bearing structure. Then the well slants off horizontally and slices through a rock formation, which is usually longer and narrower than it is deep. Thinner pipe, made of more flexible alloys, has been developed to make it easier and faster to drill through a formation. The goal is to expose more oil-bearing rock to the well bore, which increases the production from each well and drains the reservoir faster with fewer wells. Horizontal wells drilled in North Dakota and south Texas show daily production rates three to five times those of conventional wells.

These technologies and others have reduced the cost of finding and producing oil and natural gas by 20% since 1986, from $5.50 per barrel to $4.40 per barrel. Exxon pursues only huge new fields; its finding cost per barrel is 50 cents, an 85% reduction in the past ten years. As a result, says the Fed's Bill Gilmer, the industry can thrive at $17 per barrel for oil and $1.70 per 1,000 cubic feet for natural gas. Until recently, oil sold for about $20 a barrel, and natural-gas prices were running above $2 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Improvements in deep-water-drilling technology have enabled oil companies to search in areas formerly considered inaccessible. As recently as 1992, oil and gas producers had written off the Gulf of Mexico as the "Dead Sea." They believed that all the oil and natural gas there had been found over decades of intensive exploration. Today the Gulf is one of the world's hottest exploration areas as companies venture into deeper and deeper water. The deepest well in the Gulf in 1987 was in about 1,300 feet of water. Exxon made two discoveries last year in 4,800 feet of water that contain the equivalent of 300 million barrels of oil. Shell Oil, a subsidiary of the Royal Dutch Shell Group, began producing natural gas last July from a record depth of 5,300 feet. In 1996 Shell drilled an exploratory well in 7,612 feet of water--also a world record.

Companies can operate at those depths by using floating platforms that are held in place by steel cables attached to the ocean floor. Another system, called subsea production, allows a company to install wellheads on the ocean floor and pump the oil and gas to a platform on the surface.

The impact of these new technologies has spread worldwide. A recent study estimated that between 1991 and 1995, new drilling techniques added 4.8 billion barrels of commercial reserves to the North Sea alone, worth from $30 billion to $40 billion. Some 60% of the gain came from new discoveries and 40% from earlier discoveries that had previously been unprofitable. Likewise, technological advances have led to a 40% increase in proven reserves in Alaska's Prudhoe Bay field since 1990.

Small is beautiful, too

Major oil companies are not the only beneficiaries of recent technological breakthroughs. Smaller companies, such as Houston's Santa Fe Energy Resources (SFR, NYSE, $11), operate successfully in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico and other locales that were once the exclusive province of the majors. For example, Santa Fe has drilled several horizontal wells on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, and it is using a development called floating-and-storage off-loading (essentially using a floating tanker for storage and then transferring its cargo to another tanker) in the South China Sea. "Before, we would have had to build a pipeline to get the oil to an onshore storage facility," says Tim Parker, division manager of international exploration. "That dramatically changes the profitability of smaller fields." Parker says smaller companies, like the majors, are now forced to venture abroad. "North America is the most picked-over part of the world," he adds. "There are simply more opportunities abroad, and a lot of them haven't been exposed to the new technology."

Even so, Santa Fe does not compete directly with the majors. Parker says his company concentrates on finding and developing fields containing 50 million to 100 million barrels of oil and natural gas. Fields of that size, he adds, are the most common but are too small to satisfy the appetites of the big companies. Santa Fe's formula for success is paying off. The company increased its reserves by 38%, to the equivalent of 171.1 million barrels of oil in 1997. Earnings last year rose to 32 cents per share, versus 4 cents in 1996. Ellen Hannan, an analyst at Prudential, predicts Santa Fe will earn 50 cents per share in 1998 and 70 cents per share in 1999.

Technology has also proved a blessing for niche players such as Denbury Resources (DNR, NYSE, $20). Denbury, headquartered in Dallas, uses horizontal drilling and 3-D imaging to find oil and gas in Mississippi and Louisiana, states that were thoroughly explored by the major oil companies in the 1940s and 1950s. The majors left behind many small deposits that are ideal for horizontal drilling. Denbury drilled one well in Mississippi at a cost of $950,000 that has already produced 65,000 barrels of oil and paid for itself in less than ten months. It is eventually expected to produce 430,000 barrels of oil at a per-barrel cost of $2.50.

The company earned 62 cents per share in 1997, up from 50 cents in 1996. According to analysts surveyed by Zacks, Denbury should earn 80 cents per share this year. The stock trades at 25 times that 1998 estimate.

Recently, historian Yergin was asked why the U.S. and other industrial countries are so blase about the potential impact of the Iraqi crisis on world supplies. "We now have a free market in oil and, most important, we know that it works," he said. "In 1973 there was a mind-set that oil, as a dwindling resource, had to be regulated by the government."

Job's A Real Beauty - Firm Recharges Land's Vibrancy
Calgary Sun

The brochure's colorful pictures put out by Treeline Well Abandonment and Reclamation Ltd. tell it all.

Abandoned oil and gas wells replaced by pastoral scenes. Greenery and wildlife instead of torn-up land.

Rick Peterson, a native of Trochu, and Dan Bryson, a native of Carstairs, paint it all in simple terms.

There are some 140,000 producing oil and gas wells in Western Canada, and 30,000 'shut in' wells that are no longer economical.

In the boom years of the 1970s, no one cared what happened when a well's days were over.

Oil prices were high and there was always more oil and gas to discover.

But then, and despite the bad name 'radical' environmentalists tried to give to the industry, along came the likes of investors like Ben Docktor and John Inverarity, who figured along with making money, there was a social obligation to shutting down and enhancing abandoned wells and making them fit the landscape again.

So, in 1991, Docktor and Inverarity established Kinnell Well Abandonment and Reclamation Ltd. Inverarity is no longer involved in the company, by the way.

Kinnell Well Abandonment was not, exactly, a glamorous name by any means -- even though it explained aptly what the company did.

And what Kinnell did was to shut old wells, clean any contamination left behind, and re-beautify the land around it.

You'd never have known a well had been there after the company did its work.

"We were so successful," explains Peterson and Bryson, "that our clients have ranged from the majors such as Gulf, Imperial, to intermediates like Northstar Energy, and to small ma-and-pa operations."

Bryson, 27, and Peterson, 36, don't particularly like to be described as "environmentalists."

But in my opinion, they do more to preserve our environment than some of the more publicized and radical types.

And they make money at it, too, and create employment for some 25 staff members.

That's a lot more than just screaming about environmental protection.

Peterson and Bryson estimated their team of experts reclaim and enhance 200 abandoned oil and gas wells a year, all set to Alberta government standards.

Actually, provincial law requires this, but among the many aspects of Treeline's work is the company does all the regulatory and administration needed for its clients and submits just one bill for each project completed.

That avoids the hassles of multi-billings and government hassles.

Simplicity in itself.

"What's more," explains Bryson, "every job we do has to count.

"One bad job and our reputation suffers. Our sales and service are based on repeat business all the way."

So far, clients affirm there has never been even one bad job, and that has been recognized by the Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors -- and other industry associations.

"The oil industry has been extremely good for our province, and here at Treeline we like to think we are helping to repay the faith the people of Alberta have put into our province," they say.

And who can doubt that?

Engineering Firms Mate
St John's Evenung Telegram

Two St. John's engineering firms with extensive experience in the offshore oil industry have joined forces to bring more engineering work to Newfoundland.

MNC Group Inc., owned by businesswoman Moya Cahill, and RDS Engineering Inc., run jointly by David Fong and David Rees, have merged the offshore divisions of their companies under the new name Pan-Maritime Energy Services.

The new company's goal is to get work in Newfoundland, Nova Scotia and South America, Moya Cahill said Friday.

"We're looking at building a core team of 20 to 30 engineers," Cahill said. "With MNC's environmental and safety side together with RDS's structural and pipeline experience, we feel that together we complement one another very well."

If Newfoundland hopes to build an engineering industry capable of completing large contracts associated with offshore work, companies will have to get bigger, she said.

"What Newfoundland firms have to do now is they have to start building to meet that need," Cahill said. "We'll be continuing to chase projects like Terra Nova and future oil and gas projects, not only here but in Nova Scotia."

Though the bulk of the engineering work for the Terra Nova project is already under way, Cahill said the industry has plenty of room to grow.

"Were still in our infancy but we have a guaranteed industry that will only get bigger, we're confident of that," Cahill said.

Both firms were involved in engineering at Hibernia. RDS played major role designing topsides and drill rig modules had more 65 people working in France.

MNC Group performed quality inspection and vendor surveillance work for Hibernia

Pan-Maritime Energy Services will allow the two groups to share marketing and administrative costs as well as pool resources, Cahill said.

The deal itself was an easy one to put together once the idea was on the table, she said, and the distribution of ownership is not a major issue.

"It's more important to have common mind set," she said. "If the people that can work together, then everything falls together. We feel that we build a company that can not only be a Newfoundland strength but also one that we can take and export."

NOIA Mission Off To Calgary For Show
The Evening Telegram

Seventy-five local business people representing 60 companies will showcase their expertise and acquire up to date information on East Coast petroleum projects during a two-day trade mission to Calgary next week.

The mission, on Monday and Tuesday, was organized by the Newfoundland Ocean Industries Association (NOIA) which represents almost 400 member companies which supply and service Canada's East Coast offshore oil and gas industry.

Heading up the delegation will be NOIA president Stephen Henley, vice-president of AMI Offshore Inc.

On Monday, the visiting group will be addressed by officials of companies such as Mobil, Petro-Canada, Husky Oil, Chevron and Norsk Hydro and the National Energy Board.

A keynote speech will be given at a luncheon for the delegation and the Calgary business community Monday by Gary Bruce, vice-president, offshore development and operations, Petro-Canada.

Bruce will present an update on Hibernia and Terra Nova oil projects and "discuss the future role that these and other projects will play in the development of the petroleum industry on the Grand Banks," Henley told The Evening Telegram.

The delegation will also hear about future plans for Canada's East Coast from Chris Pierce, vice-president, strategic planning, Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. There will be speakers as well from the Canadian Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors; Small Explorers and Producers Association of Canada; and the Petroleum Services Association of Canada.

On Tuesday, the visitors will hear from such groups as the Sable Offshore Energy Project; the Canadian Energy Pipeline Association; Canadian Gas Processors Association and Canadian Gas Processor Suppliers Association.

"As suppliers and service providers to the East Coast oil and gas industry, NOIA members have developed world-class, marine-based technologies and expertise - skills not readily found on Canada's West Coast," Henley said.

"This mission provides the forum in which relationships will be made and complimentary skills and opportunities identified between Alberta and Newfoundland oil and gas companies."

Henley added, "It should be a couple of really exciting days."