Some research .... part 113 Jul 2018 09:39
Dear All,
I have been trawling through articles in the Bahamian press (Tribune) and indeed had a look at the latest Budget speech.
– The islands needs jobs
– A refinery has been “agreed” - Oban (as below)
– The Government at the highest levels realise that Oil is only around for another 20 years at the “above USD$70” level
This is not a ramp – just maybe an insight to why the BPC deal would be HUGE for the islands, the company and indeed us!
March 26th 2018:
OBAN Energies has moved to reassure its $5.5 billion project is ‘for real’ amid concern that the ongoing controversy could deter other investors from coming to Grand Bahama.
The oil storage terminal/refinery developer, in recent upgrades to its website, named 40-year oil industry veteran John ‘Jack’ Lipinski, who began his career with Texaco, as one of two senior advisory directors.
The other is George Matelich, one of three ‘managers’ at Oban Energies Management, the entity that replaced controversy-ridden non-executive chairman, Peter Krieger, as Oban Energies’ manager.
Mr Lipinski, whose qualifications ‘check out’ based on research by Tribune Business, most recently served as chief executive and president of CVR Refining, a US-based company that operated a 185,000 barrel per day refining system and 6.4 million barrel storage facility.
April 30th 2018:
Oil exploration in Bahamian waters is one step closer to reality after an application for environmental approval was submitted to the Government late last week.
Bahamas Petroleum Company (BPC), which has spent more than a decade on its exploration project, confirmed it has "lodged an application for Environmental Authorisation" with the Ministry of the Environment and Housing over its plans to drill a first well in waters south-west of Andros.
Simon Potter, BPC's chief executive, told Tribune Business yesterday that the submission was another "step" in the process to 'spudding' that first well, having taken two years to complete.
He added that it would aid BPC's search for a joint venture partner, which has received a further boost in recent months from the increase in global oil prices to over $70 per barrel.
This, Mr Potter explained, had made the Bahamas - and specifically BPC's project - "quite attractive" again to oil industry players whose exploration appetites have been stoked by the rise in global prices and potential profit margins.
He further described BPC's prospects of discovering commercial quantities of extractable oil as "the best I've seen", based on the company's $100 million investment to-date in obtaining seismic data and 'de-risking' the project.
BPC is currently working on a 'parallel track', which involves obtaining the necessary environmental approvals from the Government at the same time as it seeks to secure a 'farm in', or joint venture, partner to share the financial and technical burden of drilling that first exploratory well.