Dana Gas PJSC has revealed that its share of the proved plus probable (2P) hydrocarbon reserves at Pearl Petroleum Company’s Khor Mor and Chemchemal Fields in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI) have increased by 10% following the recent certification of reserves by Gaffney Cline Associates (GCA).
2P Reserves Upgrade
The independently audited report showed that the total share for Dana Gas, which holds 35% of Pearl Petroleum, is equivalent to 1bn barrels of oil equivalent (boe), up from 990mboe when GCA first certified the fields in April 2016. This confirms that the fields located in the KRI could be the biggest gas fields in the whole of Iraq. The reserves were boosted in part by the booking of oil reserves in the Khor Mor Field for the first time.
GCA’s most recent report confirmed that Dana Gas’s share of the Khor Mor and Chemchemal 2P reserves was 4.4trn cubic feet gas, compared to the 2016 estimate of 5.3tcf, 136mn barrels of condensate (2016: 109 MMbbls), 13.3 million metric tonnes LPG and 18 MMbls of oil, the equivalent of 1,087 MMboe, as compared to 990 MMboe in April 2016.
“The Gaffney Cline report has independently confirmed Dana Gas’ 2P reserves in our KRI assets at over 1bn barrels of oil equivalent and our belief that the Khor Mor and Chemchemal Fields will most likely be the biggest gas fields, not just in the Kurdistan Region Iraq, but the whole of Iraq, making them world-class assets,” said Dana Gas CEO Patrick Allman-Ward. “It is also satisfying to see that our auditors have formally booked oil reserves for the first time in Khor Mor.
“We believe that this is just the tip of the iceberg confirming our estimate of oil resource potential of over 7bn barrels. These additional resource declarations will underpin our future development plans which will provide a reliable source of energy to meet the needs of electricity generation as well as industrial development in the region.”
Earlier in the year, Pearl Petroleum signed a 20-year gas sale agreement with the Kurdistan Regional Government that will facilitate the production and sale of an additional 250 MMscf/d of gas. Pearl Petroleum’s expansion plan will see output increase to 650 MMscf/day in 2022, and then to 900 MMscf/day by 2023 from the current 400 MMscf/day. With the price of oil ranging between $60 to $70 per barrel, each of these two new gas production trains will generate between $175mn to $200mn to the company’s share of revenue and project’s cash flows per annum.