Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM), the world’s largest publicly traded international oil and gas company, and its consortium of partners recently began a drilling campaign in the waters off the west coast of Ireland.
The company and its partners will be exploring the Dunquin prospect, located in the Porcupine Basin approximately 90 miles off the coast of County Kerry. The area is named after Ireland’s most westerly settlement and is estimated to contain recoverable reserves of around 5.5 trillion cubic feet of gas and 850 million barrels of oil – potential thought to be similar to EnCana Corporation (USA) (NYSE:ECA)‘s Panuke field offshore Nova Scotia.
Along with Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM), the consortium of companies involved in the project includes Italy’s Eni, Spain’s Repsol, and Ireland’s Providence Resources with its partner Sosina. The drilling program, estimated to last about six months, could cost as much as $200 million.
To explore Dunquin, which had been avoided by energy producers for decades, Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) has dispatched a semi-submersible rig to the area that was previously drilling off the coast of Liberia. Providence Resources reported last month it began drilling the 44/23-1 well at the Dunquin prospect. Tony O’Reilly, Providence’s CEO, said in a company statement:
We are pleased to confirm that drilling operations on the Dunquin exploration well have now commenced. This is a landmark well given that it is the first to be drilled in the central part of the deep-water southern Porcupine Basin and is designed to test a new and potentially material Lower Cretaceous carbonate exploration play concept. The 44/23-1 well is the second of six wells being drilled as part of Providence’s Irish concerted multi-basin, multi-well drilling program which kicked off in November 2011 with the Barryroe appraisal well.
Providence’s announcement came just days after Kosmos Energy Ltd (NYSE:KOS) inked a deal with Europa Oil and Gas and Antrim Energy to begin drilling in nearby blocks of acreage, according to the Financial Times. Kosmos was instrumental in developing the Jubilee field, one of the biggest African deepwater discoveries of the past decade, along with partner Tullow Oil, and its expertise should prove useful in exploring Dunquin.
The companies involved in the drilling campaign hope Dunquin will yield similar success to other recent projects in the area, such as the Barryroe discovery in the Celtic Sea off Ireland’s southern coast, which was recently estimated to hold technically recoverable resources totaling nearly 350 million barrels of oil equivalent.
High risk, high reward
Though hydrocarbons have been discovered off Ireland’s west coast before, previous exploratory programs failed to recover commercial quantities of oil and gas. But now, with the benefit of significantly improved drilling technology, better infrastructure, and currently favorable tax laws, the companies involved are hoping for a breakthrough.
Kosmos Energy Ltd (NYSE:KOS)’s senior vice-president and chief geoscientist, Paul Dailly, described his company’s interest in the Porcupine Basin as an opportunity to invest in “overlooked and under-explored basins.” New investments in largely untested deepwater exploration prospects such as Dunquin illustrate how energy companies are taking on greater risk by pursuing ventures in harder to reach deepwater locations in search of oil and gas.