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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Global Petroleum Limited | LSE:GBP | London | Ordinary Share | AU000000GBP6 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 0.0575 | 0.055 | 0.06 | 0.0575 | 0.0575 | 0.06 | 0.00 | 08:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gs | 0 | -1.28M | -0.0010 | -0.60 | 774.07k |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
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23/11/2018 08:45 | We get a mention here in our old subsidiary name Jupiter Petroleum, obviously the area is getting serious attention. Exxon are already in the same fairway as GBP and makes you wonder if they are the Major lining up the said Namibian farm in deal (from previous post) GBP has the size of acreage, with enough potential and percentage interest to attract a Major "Namibe basin at forefront of Angola's planned licensing round" Angola’s frontier Namibe basin is set to be the focal point of a licensing round, according to Sonangol, although US supermajor ExxonMobil has made an early play for a huge swathe of blocks in the area, writes Iain Esau. According to the Angolan state-owned company, ExxonMobil is in talks to secure blocks 30, 41, 42, 43, 44 and 45. An ExxonMobil spokeswoman declined to comment. Block 41 lies in the north of the basin, adjacent to and south of Total-operated acreage, while blocks 30 and 45 abut the Nambia maritime border. In Namibian waters, adjacent acreage is held by minnows Jupiter Petroleum and Camelot Investment Group. | jimarilo | |
22/11/2018 14:05 | Certainly is hotting up in Namibia, Kosmos just beat Woodside to a deal with Shell I would like to know who the Major is that's lining up farm in deal and who with ? How many blocks are left to farm into, with enough potential, in the right area to satisfy a Major ? Seems a coincidence that we have recently dropped Stellar imo AGM on the 29th | jimarilo | |
22/11/2018 10:03 | Yeah am good thanks, there has been a few posting over on the LSE BB Think the mm's been left holding some shares since the last move up, hence the tight spread online 2.0275p/2.05p | jimarilo | |
22/11/2018 09:58 | Total have a rig being towed all the way from the N/sea to drill in South Africa with AEC The rig not mentioned here is to berth in Walvis Bay first week in December before moving to the drill site in S/Africa As Total have the deepest well in Africa to drill in Namibia, this would seem to me to be the rig that could do the job (3000m water depth) It is a 1 well +1 option, wouldn't surprise me if this rig follows up with Totals well in Namibia | jimarilo | |
22/11/2018 09:14 | 5 days since a post, Jim, you OK?! Certainly hotting up in this geographical sector, and let's hope POO bucks up after the 6th. | chopsy | |
16/11/2018 19:41 | Finally, reporting from Africa Oil Week...subject Namibia ExxonMobil has already farmed in to one block in Namibia with Portugal’s Galp Energia and is just finalising another farm-in with Azinam, while the latest entrant is US independent Kosmos Energy, which has taken a large chuck of Shell’s operated PEL 39. Whispers in Cape Town suggest another international major lining up a farm-in deal within months. "Another International Major lining up a farm-in deal within months" | jimarilo | |
16/11/2018 19:23 | Shell & Kosmos finish seismic survey off Namibia and set sights on drilling work Cut and pasted these as you need to subscribe "Other suitors were attracted here including Woodside" Shell and Kosmos Energy have just completed a 3D seismic campaign in a block off Namibia where the latter recently farmed in, with the partners’ eyes on drilling after next year, writes Eoin O’Cinneide. “We have just finished, as of this week, a 3D programme of about 30 or 40 days,” Kosmos vice president of exploration Tracey Henderson told Upstream late last week. Kosmos recently farmed into the Anglo-Dutch supermajor’s operated block PEL 39 in the southern part of the Orange basin, with each now on 45% and state player Namcor on 10%. The deal is part of a wider alliance between the companies, which is also set to see Shell enter Kosmos acreage in Sao Tome & Principe. “Generally we take about a year to process the data — at least six months, sometimes longer than that, which we may do. “We will spend some time interpreting the data and maturing the prospects along with Shell as to what will come in first,” Henderson said of drilling, which is possible in 2020. The block is said to have attracted interest from other suitors — including Australia’s Woodside Petroleum — before Kosmos closed the deal. Both the US independent and Woodside are known to have been drawn by the clastics play on the block. “It was a really good marriage of skill sets with Shell, because we obviously have expertise in clastics along the margin,” Henderson said. “Shell has a good deal of expertise in carbonates, which is not one of our strengths. Both play types are in PEL 39 and I think both play types will get drilled — it is a matter of which first and timing, but there are some very nice carbonate prospects there, so I cannot imagine we will not drill those.” Namibia has seen a number of dry holes drilled recently, with Tullow Oil biting dust at the Cormorant-1 well and Chariot Oil & Gas striking out soon after at the Prospect S wildcat. “Oddly enough, to have several dry holes in it, it is an area that is still garnering a good deal of attention,” Henderson said. “A lot of them on that margin are trap failures. If you feel like the well gave you everything else, you just have to go out and define prospects that have a more robust trap.” Many of the failed wells this decade have been in the Walvis basin to the north. “The Orange basin is definitely more underexplored, but some of the wells have actually shown that there could be a mature oil source rock there that has not really been fully explored, or understood. It is early days, it is still very frontier and concept driven,” Henderson said. “Even some of the wells in the Walvis saw oil shows that were new source rock that had not really been fully recognised, and demonstrated that there was potential for oil and not just gas, like you see at the Kudu field. | jimarilo | |
16/11/2018 18:35 | ExxonMobil in talks over fresh Angola blocks Exxon US supermajor ExxonMobil is in talks with Angola’s authorities to secure access to six deep-water blocks in the country’s frontier Namibe basin, while four blocks in this undrilled area are set to be offered in a licensing round. According to state-owned player Sonangol, ExxonMobil is in negotiations to secure blocks 30, 41, 42, 43, 44 and 45. Block 41 lies in the north of the basin, adjacent to Total-operated acreage, while blocks 30 and 45 are adjacent to the maritime boundary with Namibia. Sonangol also said today that studies needed to underpin a future licensing round are under way on Namibe blocks 26, 27, 28 and 29, which are located in shallower waters due east of the acreage ExxonMobil is discussing. In the Lower Congo basin, meanwhile, Sonangol said that UK-based BP, Italy’s Eni and Equinor of Norway are in negotiations to be awarded ultra-deepwater blocks 46 and 47. These tracts are located adjacent to and due west of BP’s Block 31. In addition, the state-owned player said it aims to reduce its 100% stakes in blocks 1/14, 5/06, 6/15 and 18/15, with negotiations under way and a data room open on block 5/06 that was previously operated by US junior Vaalco Energy. With respect to blocks 20 and 21 - which Sonangol acquired after the collapse of US independent Cobalt International Energy – data rooms are believed to have closed at the end of September. In addition, new data rooms are set to focus on gas-prone acreage in the Lower Congo basin. The assets to be offered to industry include “gas concessions” 1/14, 2/15, 3/15, 15/14 and Block 2. Upstream reported earlier this month that a licensing round was believed to be afoot in Angola, with Sonangol due to release information in mid-November. In another move, Eni has secured a contract “addendum&rdqu Further exploration work is also planned in Sonangol-operated blocks 3 and 4. These multiple initiatives are being fast-tracked by Sonangol in order to encourage exploration dollars back to a country that has been starved of this type of expenditure for years. | jimarilo | |
15/11/2018 15:37 | After this significant rise the last two days, we still only have a m/cap of around £4.5m | jimarilo | |
15/11/2018 13:43 | Slightly different wording on this article ref TRP's new agreement which again points to a change in attitude? Previous drilling for oil and gas in Namibia, irrespective of the outcome, has placed the country, and particularly the Walvis Basin and Dolphin Graben, in a vantage position that cannot be ignored as they “are now attracting great attention from well-respected explorers, both large and small, and are also once more attracting considerable farm-in interest and investment.” A vantage position that cannot be ignored??? | jimarilo | |
15/11/2018 13:30 | sp showing weak bullish signals | squibno1 | |
15/11/2018 09:10 | For those that a new, here is TRP's CPR Page 17 shows the Delta prospect firmly in our new PEL94/2011A and attribute 9Bln barrels mid case to the area Also page 17 shows Gamma sliding into our PEL29 which already contains the Gemsbok prospect 3.66Bln barrels And the GBP CPR for PEL29 | jimarilo | |
14/11/2018 19:48 | I rather take notice of Eni The Italian Major Eni has just contracted a rig for 2-3 yrs to drill in the Adriatic Sea offshore Italy | jimarilo | |
14/11/2018 18:07 | Southern Adriatic yes, Italy, no. | thaaarg | |
14/11/2018 16:04 | Italian acreage is a waste of time. Find some oil / gas and the greens stop it. err...not that GBP have ever found any oil...anywhere! | thaaarg | |
14/11/2018 15:53 | From the recent activities report Global is encouraged that the appeals are in the process of being heard. The Company understands that recent appeals against other Environmental Decrees in the Southern Adriatic have been rejected by the same tribunal. pages 5 & 6 The out come of the Italian licences is due and could be subject to an up and coming deal | jimarilo | |
14/11/2018 15:40 | Makes you wonder why Char have been so "unlucky" consistently so.All that 3D seismic too.I wonder about char, something smells badly there.GBP I have more faith in.The directors here are straight as a dye.One of a few O&G Multi baggers that will really shift next year.CHAR might, they have a lot of other geographic areas.EOG very nice, huge upside.GBP though has the small mk cap and what looks to be near to some GIGANTIC BOE TARGETS.best of luck to us allWho've been in these for 10 years now.KM | kiwimonk | |
14/11/2018 14:14 | 500k @ 2.10p is a confident trade and the 350k yesterday | jimarilo | |
14/11/2018 13:35 | It may well be there is a different deal on the table from the one Stellar were contracted for We have new additional acreage since the Stellar mandate and a potential buy out is quite a different deal, time will tell what is on For sure you would not cancel Stellar unless there was another option imo | jimarilo | |
14/11/2018 12:39 | with increased interest in the area it makes you wonder why Stellar did not manage to progress anything beneficial. | squibno1 | |
14/11/2018 09:53 | Oranto estimate 5 Bln barrel potential in blocks 2011B and 2111A, adjoining the southern border of our 2011A (9Bln barrels as per TRP) These blocks are in the same fairway as Exxon and our selves The numbers in this area are off the scale Below is a link to their old farm out mandate, which shows details regarding the blocks and mentions the migrated oil Rosneft now partners them across all their African assets | jimarilo | |
13/11/2018 20:10 | The hunger among such companies to bag exploration licenses all over the continent -- from offshore Congo to Cote d'Ivoire, Gabon, Gambia, Namibia and Uganda -- bodes well. | jimarilo | |
13/11/2018 10:07 | I wonder what brings TRP to the above conclusion ? The Dolphin Graben is a very specific area.. an area located in the old PEL10, part of which is now GBP's new PEL94 "PEL0010 sits on a regional high, that will be a regional focus for migration and charge from alarge fetch area over the Walvis Basin, Dolphin Graben & Namibe Basin" | jimarilo |
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