OF
COURSE this could not have anything to do with an earthquake, even
though the has been demonstrated to be so elsewhere in the world! -
LOL
Fracking
figures in Castlepoint drilling scenario
A
small but rapidly growing oil company plans to drill for oil near
Castlepoint in Wairarapa, hoping to strike it rich in untested oil
shales in the area.
27
July, 2013
Vancouver-owned
New Zealand Energy Corporation plans to drill at least one
exploration well on the East Coast of the North Island next year,
after some initial sampling work at its Castlepoint permit late last
year.
NZEC's
website shows the Castlepoint permit has a prospective resource of
208.6 million barrels, while the adjacent Ranui permit has 40.5
million barrels.
The
East Coast has more than 300 oil and gas seeps, sourced back to two
oil shale formations, but there have been no commercial discoveries
in the region.
NZEC
said yesterday it was likely to drill an exploration well at its
Castlepoint permit in the first half of 2013, targeting
unconventional “oil shales” and it had not ruled out using
fracking to get a well to produce.
“Since
neither NZEC nor any other companies have yet to drill an exploration
well into the shales, there is not enough information to say with
certainty that fracking will be required to get them to produce. But
. . . they are considered an ‘unconventional play' which often
involves horizontal drilling and fracking,” said NZEC
vice-president, communications and investor relations, Rhylin Bailie.
Meanwhile,
NZEC plans to drill eight wells in its south Taranaki permits,
starting next month, with at least one new well a month.
This
year it has already had four consecutive oil discoveries from its
Copper Moki wells, with three now in production. With another eight
wells, it hopes to increase reserves and production with a daily
target of 3000 barrels.
Its
existing three wells in production averaged the equivalent of about
688 barrels of oil a day, with roughly half oil and half gas. All
three of NZEC's producing wells in Taranaki are at the very northern
part of the Eltham Permit on the Copper Moki site. All eight wells
planned for the rest of this year will be on the Eltham Permit, but
the locations are not public information yet.
NZEC
announced yesterday that its new New Zealand country manager is Chris
Bush, formerly from Australian giant Origin Energy, half owner of
Contact Energy. Bush is chairman of the New Zealand Petroleum
Exploration and Production Association.
With
a completion date of October, NZEC is buying from Origin Energy four
central Taranaki petroleum mining licences known as TAWN (Tariki,
Aruhoa, Waihapa and Ngaere), plus the Waihapa production station east
of Stratford.
NZEC
is still waiting for a Crown permit for its East Cape prospect which
has a prospective resource of 355.4 million barrels.
TECHNICAL
DETAILS SOUGHT
N
ew Zealand Energy Corporation recently completed 100 kilometres of
2-D seismic on the Castlepoint and Ranui permits next to the
Wairarapa coast to further its understanding of two oil shale
"packages". It describes its work on the East Coast so far
as “technical in nature”.
“We
have drilled three stratigraphic core wells, which means we drill a
small-diameter hole and collect core samples that are then sent off
to labs for analysis of the rock characteristics,” New Zealand
Energy Corp's Rhylin Bailie said.
Of
the “core” wells, Orui went to 125 metres, Te Mai went to 195m,
collecting core from the Waipawa and Whangai shales. The Ranui-2 hole
was drilled in early 2012 to a depth of 1440m and collected core from
the Whangai shale.
Bailie
said the focus was to increase technical understanding and engage
with communities and iwi but no exploration wells were planned on the
East Coast until 2013.
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