RAS AL KHAIMAH

Data rooms for information on an oil and gas licencing round covering onshore and offshore areas of Ras Al Khaimah opened yesterday in London and Ras Al Khaimah, according to a statement on the website of government-owned RAK Gas.

The licencing round follows a review by RAK Gas of onshore and offshore sub-surface potential. A 3-D seismic programme covering around 2,000 sq.km. of the offshore area got under way early last month and is due to continue until early February.

The data room will be open until early July, following which there will be a three-month period during which interested companies can submit bids for acreage. Contract awards are expected in October.

According to RAK Gas, the emirate’s complex geology creates diverse exploration opportunities, with both Speculative prospects and Proven prospects analogous to the Cretaceous Carbonates in the offshore Saleh field, operated by Norwegian firm DNO, controlled by RAK Petroleum, and now coming to the end of its commercial life.

Bids for a licencing round for four blocks in Oman closed on December 31, 2017. Block 43B, covering 11,967 sq.km. in the coastal zone, north of the Hajar Mountains, was previously relinquished by Hungarian oil group MOL, and is seen by Oman’s Ministry of Oil and Gas as a conventional gas play. Block 47, covering 8,524 sq km. adjacent to the southern boundary of Block 43B, was relinquished by Norway’s DNO. Four gas and gas/condensate prospects have been mapped. Block 51, covering 10,132 sq.km, is in interior Oman, and has previously been explored by a number of companies, with gas and condensate shows, while the small Block 65, covering 1,230 sq.km., formerly operated by Oman Oil Company Exploration and Production, has produced oil and gas shows.