Record rights sale brings in $842M

Producers target central Alberta plays

 
By Dina O’Meara and Rebecca Penty, Postmedia News 
Alberta will rake in $842 million from its largest sale of oil and gas drilling rights on record -including a whopping $107 million for a 7,900-hectare licence northwest of Red Deer.
Alberta Energy reported Wednesday afternoon it had sold leases or licences on 271,000 hectares at an average price of $3,100 per hectare.
The sale almost doubles the provincial take to date in 2011 -in nine sales through May, it had raised $902 million at just $694 per hectare -and puts it on track to beat the record of $2.39 billion set in 2010.
Land sales are considered a key indicator of future drilling activity and oil and gas production.
Energy Minister Ron Liepert said the injection of cash is unexpected, but welcome.
“Certainly, what it means for the government is it’s about $840 million we had not budgeted for,” said Liepert, reached while touring the oilsands in northern Alberta.
The provincial government is forecasting a deficit of $3.4 billion for 2011-12. Liepert declined to estimate how big an impact the land sales revenue will have.
“It’s too early to tell because we haven’t even finalized last year’s budget yet, but it’s an injection into the revenue stream,” he said.
The biggest single parcel sale was registered to land agent Meridian Land Services, acting for an unnamed client, and valued the land at $13,530 per hectare.
Another parcel with the same regional co-ordinates was sold to agency Canadian Coastal Resources, won with a bid of $57 million, or nearly $14,400 per hectare.
The payouts in central Alberta raised eyebrows among industry insiders as the region had not seen much interest prior to Wednesday’s sale.
“That’s amazing,” said Kathleen Dorey, chief geologist with Petrel Robertson Consulting. “It’s interesting because it is definitely an attractive area, and there hasn’t been a lot of activity there.”
The central Alberta region is part of the venerable Pembina oilfield trend, Alberta’s most prolific pool, which has been producing since 1953.
Dorey said producers likely are targeting light oil and liquids-rich natural gas from Belly River, Nisku and possibly Cardium plays.
“If there is a land base available, which there seems to have been, that makes it really attractive, too,” she said. “The fact that they can actually get in there and drill wells that could potentially be oil rich is a big thing.”
Producers who had participated in the sale were flabbergasted by the results.
“Holy smokers, that’s unbelievable,” said Anthony Lambert, president and chief executive of Daylight Energy Ltd., upon hearing the overall size of the sale. “That’s a horrendous pile of money.”
Daylight bought three parcels near Edson in its own name for a little over $10 million, paying between $1,600 and $3,200 per hectare.
Lambert said it is filling in the spaces around its Cardium liquidsrich gas play.
He said the bigger bids in the Rimbey area northwest of Red Deer are likely targeting the Duvernay shales.
Liepert said the massive land sale shows that industry players are taking advantage of advances in technology that allow companies to produce from reservoirs that would have previously been considered depleted.
“When we made the changes last spring with the royalty regime, it was to incent new technology and I think it’s working well,” Liepert said.
Travis Davies, a spokesman with the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, agreed.
“I think it’s reflective of advances in technology that’s enabled a resurgence of production of conventional oil from tight or low permeability reservoirs that we couldn’t access effectively or economically before.”
Calgary Herald

0 comments on “Record rights sale brings in $842M

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *