RE: Wow, who has seen where BOIL has just been featured :)10 Jun 2024 14:39
Baron Oil, to be renamed Sunda Energy later this month, is gathering momentum behind the scenes as Andy Butler continues to put his stamp on the junior energy company that's preparing to seize an exciting opportunity.
The plan for 2024 could see the company reach a major value catalyst by year's end.
Right now, Baron is undertaking preliminary work – completing site surveying, rig contracting and permitting for the Chuditch gas discovery in Timor Leste.
Chuditch, first found in 1998 by Shell, has the potential to be a significant and valuable project, not least for the state of Timor Leste as the project promises to be a new and important input for its economy.
Its importance to the country is underlined by the state's active participation in the project via its national energy company Timor Gap EP (TGEP).
Project: Baron is undertaking preliminary work – completing site surveying, rig contracting and permitting for the Chuditch gas discovery in Timor Leste +1
Project: Baron is undertaking preliminary work – completing site surveying, rig contracting and permitting for the Chuditch gas discovery in Timor Leste
Baron holds a 60 per cent interest in Chuditch, with TGEP owning the other 40 per cent.
TGEP's stake increased earlier this year through an 'earn-up' deal in February, acquiring a 15 per cent 'paying interest' on top of its original 25 per cent carried stake. It will deliver to the project around $7.5million during 2024 – whilst Baron received $1million of cash for back costs.
In March, not long after the TGEP deal, Butler was promoted to group chief executive, stepping up from his previous position as the company's Asia-Pacific lead.
With the fresh financial backing and with Butler at the helm, Baron is now putting in the remaining groundwork for an appraisal programme that aims to not only confirm the scale of opportunity at Chuditch but to also provide insights that the company and Timor Leste can use to develop and commercialise the field.
Key to unlocking the field has been the use of contemporary technology and analysis to better model the discovery.
'The issue in that area tends to be that because of some very shallow geology and some complications in the seabed, seismic imaging at depth has proven very challenging in the past,' Butler explained to Proactive.
'You can see [in the data] where the well was drilled by Shell when they discovered this field 25 years ago, but before you couldn't really see the extent of the field, to the parts that go up from the well towards the crest of the field, it was just invisible in the data.
'In the past, you would really be guessing as to how big it [the resource] was. And of course, you can't really invest on that basis.
'So we've been able to do using modern algorithms, seismic reprocessing, and a very intricate and intense process is to get an understanding of all of the geology above the field, in great detail.'