CEO interview: “Onshore oil industry must generate cash for well decommissioning”
The UK onshore industry needs to raise money to plug and abandon hundreds of redundant oil wells as part of the energy transition, Angus Energy’s chief executive told DrillOrDrop.
In an extended interview, Richard Herbert said the onshore industry had to follow the North Sea’s example and invest to decommission old wells.
He said:
Official data analysed by DrillOrDrop shows there are nearly 500 UK onshore wells that are not classed as operating but have not been fully decommissioned. More detailed article coming soon.
Mr Herbert said:
Mr Herbert, who runs the UK’s biggest onshore gas field at Saltfleetby in Lincolnshire, said the onshore industry was playing “a very important role” in the energy transition “that maybe people don’t’ understand when they look at our business model.”
He said:
He said the investment tax breaks in the energy profits levy – described by fossil fuel opponents as a loophole – were “critical capital allowances that allow the industry to invest and replenish our domestic production”.
Last month, the new Labour government extended the energy profits levy, also known as windfall tax, by another year. It also increased the rate of tax and removed the investment allowances.
Other key points
Mr Herbert has been Angus Energy’s chief executive since 2023 and was a senior executive at BP. As well as Saltfleetby, his company operates onshore oil sites at Balcombe and Lidsey in West Sussex and Brockham in Surrey.
In his DrillOrDrop interview, he also said:
- The oil and gas industry had to lower its climate impact but developing domestic oil and gas fields was in the best interests of the country
- The industry was “confused” about the implications of the recent landmark Supreme Court judgement on carbon emissions from the use of fossil fuels
- There are plans for new wells or workovers at the Saltfleetby gas field and hints of onshore acquisitions
- Angus is applying to bring in formation water for injection at Brockham
- Balcombe, in the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, would be “too difficult” if starting from scratch
- The Weald oil fields are “small and complicated” and there are questions over their potential
Read a transcript of the interview
Climate and onshore oil and gas
Mr Herbert said:
He said:
On the recent landmark Supreme Court judgement on carbon emissions, he said:
The court ‘s majority judgement said Surrey County Council should have taken into account downstream emissions from burning oil produced at UKOG’s Horse Hill site when deciding planning permission.
The decision is expected to have widespread implications for carbon intensive industries, including a new coal mine in Cumbria.
Mr Herbert said it was difficult to know how the judgement would affect Angus Energy and the onshore generally. He said “right now we are waiting to see.
He described the argument, put forward by the former head of BP, John Browne and others, against issuing new North Sea licences as “an interesting point to debate”.
He said:
He said he would be “the first to support” Labour’s plans for investment in alternative energy”.
But he said “it can’t come at the cost of the oil and gas industry”.
The energy transition “has to be done in the right way”, he said.
Angus Energy in southern England
The Weald – potential in question
Mr Herbert described the Weald oil fields in southern England as “small and complicated”.
Asked whether there was potential for future development of oil and gas in the Weald, he said:
He said there was “not much public support from the community” for the industry.
Balcombe – well test, stimulation and wrong location
At Balcombe, where there were near daily protests during drilling in 2013, local people have delayed a well test by bringing a legal challenge. Angus Energy and the Department of Housing, Communities and Local Government will defend the case at the appeal court in January 2025.
Asked whether the Balcombe oil site, in the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, was in the wrong place, Mr Herbert said:
He acknowledged local opposition to the plans, but said they were “borne out of the fear of fracking”. He said he thought the site could be “developed responsibly without putting at risk the water course and everything that’s in the AONB”.
The well would have to be flowed even if it was going to be abandoned, he said.
Asked if Angus Energy planned any form of stimulation of the Balcombe well, Mr Herbert said:
He said high volume hydraulic fracturing “never got off the ground in the UK. I don’t think it ever will”.
But he said the industry had been stimulating wells to deal with formation damage “for decades” and “no one ever made a fuss about it”.
Mr Herbert said Angus had no recent contact with Frack Free Balcombe Residents’ Association, the group bringing the challenge to the Balcombe well test.
Brockham and Lidsey – water injection plans
At Brockham, near Dorking, Angus said it was seeking permission to import formation water from other sites to inject into the reservoir. It currently has permission to inject just water from Brockham.
The company restarted production at Brockham in June 2024, after a break of 18 months. New production levels were 40-50 barrels of crude oil a day, Mr Herbert said. But 60% of the output from the field was formation water.
Mr Herbert said:
He said this permission would allow Angus Energy to restart production at its Lidsey field, near Bognor Regis, which has no water disposal facilities.
Lidsey produced about 15-20 barrels a day in 2020. Mr Herbert said even at this level of production the field “would still be economic”.
Saltfleetby
Last month, Angus Energy applied for planning permission for four new gas production wells at Saltfleetby.
Official figures show the field contributes about 80% of UK onshore gas production. But this represents less than 1% of total UK gas production.
Mr Herbert said the field was currently constrained to about 11 or 12 million cubic feet per day. He said he hoped new wells, workovers and a £3m project to install a booster compressor, would increase production at Saltfleetby.
The company was revising its reservoir model for the field, Mr Herbert said, to shape decisions on future wells and workovers.
Angus and its partner, Trafigua, are also looking at potential gas storage at Saltfleetby. Mr Herbert said “there could be a role” for market-driven storage at the field, where a trader buys a cargo of cheap liquefied natural gas (LNG) and stores it until prices rise.
He added:
He also said once Saltfleetby’s gas was worked out, the company would “be looking to see if there is anything else around”, including oil.
Acquisitions and hedging
Angus has previously hinted about new areas of interest and Mr Herbert suggested this could include additional UK onshore fields:
He said:
At the time of writing, Angus Energy’s share price was 0.25p. This is down from 1.37p when DrillOrDrop last interviewed an Angus Energy chief executive.
Mr Hebert said:
The company hedged Saltfleetby gas during a period of lower prices and before production from the field got underway.
Mr Herbert said the bubble in the gas price “largely coincided with the period when the field was still being developed”. He said the situation was worsened by the need to honour hedges when there was no production. He said: “there was a bit of a lost opportunity there”.
The hedging commitments will continue until summer 2025 and cash flow would be lower, Mr Herbert said.
The company restructured its debt earlier this year and Mr Herbert appeared optimistic for the future. He said:
DrillOrDrop has closed the comments section on this and future articles. We are doing this because of the risk of liability for copyright infringement in comments. We still want to hear about your reaction to DrillOrDrop articles. You can contact us by clicking here.
No comments:
Post a Comment