In its 28-year existence,
CAMAC Energy has transitioned from a private agricultural commodities trading
company to a publicly traded company with dual-listing on the New York Stock
Exchange and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Today, the Houston-based independent
oil and gas exploration and production company operates a portfolio of nine
exploration and production assets across Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and Gambia,
Africa.
With more than 167 million
inhabitants, Nigeria is the most populous country within the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and is Africa’s leading oil and gas
producer. CAMAC’s Oyo Field is located in deepwater (200-500 meters)
approximately 46 miles offshore Nigeria. In the first quarter of 2014, CAMAC
reported the arrival of the Northern Offshore Energy Searcher drillship, and
said it expects first production on the Oyo-8 well in October. From there, the
drilling rig will move to complete and hook-up Oyo-7, with first production
from the well expected before year-end.
Offshore oil deposits were
discovered in Ghana, West Africa’s second-largest economy, in 2007, with
commercial production following suit a short three years later. Ghana has
proved oil reserves of 660 million barrels, and oil production in the country
is expected to more than double to 250,000 barrels per day by 2021, according
to Bloomberg. It is here that CAMAC operates under a Petroleum Agreement with
the Government of Ghana covering the Expanded Shallow Water Tano (ESWT) block.
The block is located in the Tano Basin offshore Ghana, where significant
volumes of oil and gas have been discovered. Under this work program, CAMAC has
partnered with a leading global independent petroleum consulting firm to assist
with a required nine-month evaluation of the discovered fields’ economic
viability. CAMAC Energy Ghana Ltd., CAMAC’s indirect 50%-owned subsidiary, is
the operator of the ESWT block with a 60% participating interest.
Oil was discovered in the
Turkana District of Kenya in March 2012. By May, CAMAC was awarded Blocks L1B
and L16 onshore, and Blocks L27 and L28 offshore, and in August 2012 became the
named operator with 100% net interest. The Kenyan government has the option to
participate up to 20% upon development. Onshore, CAMAC has completed its Gravity
and Magnetic Survey as well as an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment
Study, and has submitted an “Invitation to Tender” request to active seismic
companies in the region. Offshore, the company has acquired multi-client 2D
seismic with processing currently underway; results from 2D interpretation will
be used to outline the location for a 3D seismic acquisition expected in
2014/2015. The company is also building a dataset for a Geological and
Geophysical Study of its offshore sites.
Gambia is one of Africa’s
smallest countries, and due to poor soil quality is heavily dependent on peanut
exports. Despite a long history of oil exploration in Gambia, oil has yet to be
produced in the small country. Yet, the government believes “that oil not only
exists in The Gambia, but exists in very large quantities,” according to an
earlier statement by President Yahya Jammeh, who has voiced his desire to turn
Gambia into an oil-producing state. CAMAC is participating in this quest,
conducting frontier exploration activities offshore Gambia on Blocks A2 and A5.
For 2014, CAMAC Energy is reprocessing existing 2D seismic; a regional geologic
study and possible 3D seismic survey are also planned. The company anticipates
that the first offshore exploration well in Gambia will be drilled in 2016.
CAMAC’s presence in the
growing African oil industry demonstrates the company’s ability to identify and
acquire attractive exploration assets, produce revenue and production growth,
and form key partnerships and agreements in the countries in which it conducts
exploration activities.
In the first quarter of
2014, CAMAC recorded revenues of $19.9 million on daily net production of 1,700
barrels of oil, net of royalties, for per barrel revenue of $109.11. CAMAC’s
plan is to end 2014 with an estimated production rate of 14,000 barrels of oil
per day from its Nigeria assets. The company posted a net loss of $4.6 million
for the quarter, and reported cash on hand of approximately $70 million.
CAMAC is already calling
2014 a transformational year, inclusive of the first-quarter $270 million
private equity investment from Public Investment Corp. for acquisition funding
and drilling capital. For the remainder 2014, CAMAC is focused on increasing
current production for revenue growth and following up on opportunistic
acquisitions and strategic partnerships to further strengthen its expanding
portfolio and exploration activities.
For more information visit
www.camacenergy.com
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