In late 2008, I highlighted
Repsol YPF 's (NYSE: REP) plan to
number-crunch its wayto paydirt in the oil patch. Using a
supercomputer and reverse-time migration imaging technology,
the Spanish oil major thought it could improve its chances of
hitting offshore oil and gas targets.
Repsol thought right. The company has nailed a series of
big-time deposits.
To touch on just a few highlights, there was the Guara
well in Brazil, drilled with
BG and operator
Petrobras (NYSE: PBR). Repsol's 25% stake in
Guara could add 500 million barrels of oil to the company's
reserves. The trio made a more recent find in the same
deepwater block.
With
Eni (NYSE: E), the company made the largest
natural gas discovery in Venezuela's history, weighing in at
the equivalent of more than 1 billion barrels of oil. In that
case, the companies didn't even have to step out into the
deepwater, drilling the discovery well with an
Ensco (NYSE: ESV) jackup! Alongside partners
Anadarko Petroleum (NYSE: APC),
Woodside Petroleum , and
Tullow Oil , Repsol made the first-ever
discovery of hydrocarbons in offshore Sierra Leone.
Today we learn that Repsol has made two more oil finds,
this time with partners
BHP Billiton (NYSE: BHP) and
Hess (NYSE: HES) in the deepwater Gulf of
Mexico. One discovery was a new section in an existing well,
which added 497 feet of net oil pay. That's a huge oil
column, and interestingly enough, Repsol found it by testing
shallower sections, rather than drilling deeper. The other
discovery was a new well in another part of the same
development area.
I don't know that Repsol's supercomputing project, dubbed
Kaleidoscope, necessarily had a hand in all of these
discoveries, but the company has quickly asserted itself as a
force to be reckoned with in offshore exploration. I would
expect more good things from it going forward.
This article was originally published as
Repsol's Supercomputer Strikes Black Goldon
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