Continental Focus, International Reach

Cormorant-1 Drilled — Namibian Prospectivity Still a Mystery

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Preliminary results for Tullow Oil’s Cormorant-1 exploration well drilled offshore Namibia on PEL-37 are in. According to Tullow, the well encountered hydrocarbons, however they were non-commercial and as a result the Cormorant-1 is being plugged and abandoned.

The well was drilled to a total depth of 3,855 meters and penetrated the objectives of the Cormorant prospect. Sandstones were encountered in the primary objective of the well but these proved to be water bearing. Wet gas signatures, indicative of oil, were encountered in the overlying shale section.

A statement issued by Tullow, who is the operator, said that important geological data was gained and, in combination with high quality 3D seismic data, will provide valuable insights into the prospectivity of the group’s Namibian acreage in PEL-37 and PEL-30.

The Cormorant-1 well was drilled safely and efficiently by the Ocean Rig Poseidon drillship in a water depth of 548 meters. Following a farm-out in 2017, Tullow’s net expenditure on this well is expected to be approximately $5 million.

Tullow operates the PEL-37license with 35% equity and is partnered by ONGC Videsh Ltd (30%), Pancontinental Oil & Gas (30%) and Paragon (5%).

Angus McCoss, Exploration Director, Tullow Oil, commented,“The Cormorant-1 frontier exploration well was a bold attempt to open a new oil play in this area of Tullow’s offshore Namibia acreage. Gas readings while drilling continue to support the concept that there is a working oil system in the area. As a result, following the conclusion of operations, we will analyze the data gathered before deciding on any future activity. While this is not the outcome that we had hoped for, the efficiency of our drilling and our risk management processes resulted in a low financial exposure to this well.”

 


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