Lundin makes oil discovery in Norway
Posted: 21 October 2009
Lundin Petroleum reported the successful completion of the exploration well 24/9-9 and two further sidetracks which were all oil discoveries.
The wells were drilled on the Marihøne prospect in PL340, 28 kilometers south of the Alvheim field in the Norwegian North Sea.
"We are very pleased to make another discovery in the Alvheim area," said Ashley Heppenstall, President and CEO of Lundin Petroleum.
"The most likely development of the Marihøne discovery is a tieback to the Alvheim FPSO."
The objective of the wells was to prove petroleum in the Hermod Formation in Paleocene age reservoir rocks. All wells encountered oil columns in the Hermod sandstone. The two sidetrack wells were both drilled 1.5 kms from the discovery well. All three wells were drilled to a depth of approximately 2,200 metres.
Communication probably exists between the oil zones in the three wells, and extensive data acquisition and sampling have been carried out.
The size of the discovery is between 20 and 30 million barrels of gross recoverable oil equivalent reserves (boe).
Lundin Petroleum has 15 per cent working interest in PL340 with partners Marathon Petroleum Norge AS (operator) and ConocoPhillips Scandinavia AS.
Posted by Richard Price, Editor, EnergyME.com
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