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AUT - Aurora Oil and Gas

A Breakthrough Invention in the O&G Market?
An oil and gas entrepreneur in the US has devised an inexpensive way to capture oil and natural gas vapors around a well site - and sell them to make money.
These vapors are often flared (burned), or vented into the atmosphere – and trust me, if people really knew how much oil and gas was flared around the world every day – even in first world countries – the media outcry would make the "water-fracking" issue look like a kindergarten party. In fact satellite images show intense flaring occurring - principally in third world countries. Shell has just committed $2 billion to reduce flaring from its operations in Nigeria.
“Air pollution requirements related to oil and gas production from the states are becoming increasingly restrictive,” says co- inventor Dr. Paul Trost. And Trost's solution can be profitable.
He adds that a study near Denver in the hydrocarbon rich Denver Basin containing almost 8000 oil and gas wells showed the “fugitive” hydrocarbons – gases emanating from production tanks-can be captured and sold at a profit rather than burned in a flare.
Just like water evaporates in a dish, oil and gas evaporates from the production tank at a well site, and escapes into the atmosphere or alternately is burned (flared). The problem becomes bigger when a combination of gas and oil are produced with the gas being injected into a pipeline having pressure. The oil then is also pressurized and the pressurized gases (like gas in a pop can) then “flash” or boil off like a shaken beer can. In certain areas these gases are captured and directed to a flare for burning rather than being allowed to vent to the atmosphere.



Trost’s invention, called the V3RU (Variable Volume Vapor Recovery Unit), is different than other vapor recovery systems in that it uses a flexible accumulator (bag) to capture the vapors. “It swells up like it is taking a deep breath,” says Trost. “The bag thus captures both the flash gas and also any contained liquids. We exhale it slowly into compressor for injection and sale to a pipeline. It’s a variable volume bag and it’s safety rated. The alternative energy industry already uses it around breweries located in or adjacent to cities.”
Without a bag, Trost says oxygen can get at the vapour and then it won’t meet pipeline specifications. The gas is then useless and must be flared. Using a bag allows some back pressure to be used, so it won’t let air in, and the gas retains its purity and suitability for pipeline sale.
Trost says the payout for the V3RU increases as the oil content of the natural gas increases, and also as the oil gets lighter (has a higher API rating) and contains more condensate. Typically the V3RU will range in cost from $8,000-$30,000.
He gives a real life example of a gas/condensate well in Colorado that was producing about 30 BOPD and 400 mcfd, but high pipeline pressures were causing a large amount of “flash” gas - containing both recoverable oil and gas - was being lost.
Application of the V3RU will allow the operator was able to capture an additional 8-10 boe/d, resulting in roughly a 2 year payout.
The product has been used almost exclusively in the Denver Basin, Trost says, but it is now starting to be used in other areas. Trost is a board member of Nextraction Energy (NEX-TSXv), which will be using the V3RU vapor recovery system to meet air quality regulations at Nextraction’s newly discovered gas-condensate well located at the Pinedale Anticline play in Wyoming.
MV LLC, the owner of the technology, is a subsidiary of Strategic Environmental and Energy Resources, symbol SENR on the pink sheets. I hold no interest or position in either Nextraction or SENR.

From Oil and Gas Journal email
 
SYDNEY (Dow Jones)--Crude oil futures rose in Asian trading Wednesday, as key snapshots of business sentiment in Japan and manufacturing activity in China suggested Asia's top economies are in better health than many thought.

The data helped the oil market to build on early price gains after the American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, reported overnight Tuesday a larger-than-expected drop in crude oil inventories in the U.S.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light, sweet crude futures for delivery in November traded at $76.45 a barrel at 0613 GMT, up $0.27 in the Globex electronic session. November Brent crude on London's ICE Futures exchange rose $0.36 to $79.07 a barrel.

From WSJ
 
The Eagle Ford play is now believed to have the best natural gas economics in North America because of the liquids window, beating even the Marcellus. Natural gas production from this new but strategically important area is expected, by industry participants, to exceed 1 billion cubic feet per day(Bcfd) and 35,000 barrels per day (Bpd) of oil by end 2012, inducing new infrastructure investments as well. Already, 50 companies are active in the Eagle Ford (compared with around 60 in the much older Barnett), which is viewed as a corporate resume enhancer for even large companies. Several of the bigger players who accumulated skills and experience in the Barnett are also now prominent in the Eagle Ford.

Full article: http://seekingalpha.com/article/227539-natural-gas-the-hybrid-model-is-expanding




US energy companies rush into shale oil projects
Financial Times - Sheila McNulty - ‎12 hours ago‎
Other fields, such as the Eagle Ford Shale in Texas and the Niobrara Shale are now being targeted. “We'll see a doubling of the rig count in the next two ...

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/4f2cc0ce-cb1b-11df-95c0-00144feab49a.html

Aslo read a funny article not worth posting, but it was titeld something like "peak oil a load of rubbish" but ti then discredited peak oil, only to say we have a wose scenario, all the new oil fields are located in enemy territory or worse deep under the sea. The conclusion was get americans to buy small cars and buy houses close to public transport, as either way prices of oil look set to skyrocket.
 
Oil up strongly overnight. Im now almost convinced we are in wave 3 of an elliot wave, the longest in the 5 wave cycle. Obviously the global debt issues are a concern, as is terrorism etc, but in isolation the aussie stocks are starting to look like taking on higher prices for a while imo. Could be wrong so DYOR.
 
Hmmm this thing has had a few goes at breaking the $1.50 mark recently without much success. Market depth has swung around now...could be retrace time. The RSI and Stochastics were quite overbought so I guess today's movement makes sense from a charting perspective.

Its unfortunate because the price of oil was up last night but all the small cap oilers are either flat or down a bit today.
 

Yeh weve had a good run, and invetiably it neads to take a breather. I just hoe we have very light volume to keep the traders out a bit, i like that tightly held feeling where when the buyer line up she goes like a bullet.
 
Good to see Hilcorp keeping buisy with two new drilling permit applications on the TRRC web site, Turnbull 4h and Guilly Unit 1h
 
Nice to see another Turnbull so soon, i honestly thought they would sure up sugarloaf first, but with higher interest this suits AUT holders just fine.

Perhaps they are so impressed with the liquids at Longhorn, they have gone for another earlier then previously indicated. I cant wait to see those unrestricted or fully fracced longhorn flows. They may not be as high as Rancho and Morgan, but they will certainly be very very economic imo.
 
House passes shale gas production tax
GOP-controlled Senate will likely amend the bill
Thursday, September 30, 2010
By Tom Barnes, Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau
HARRISBURG -- Democrats and environmentalists praised it, while Republicans and gas industry officials pilloried it. But in the end, a bill to create Pennsylvania's first Marcellus Shale gas severance tax took a step forward Wednesday.

Senate Bill 1155, after being totally rewritten by House Democrats, would slap a hefty levy of 39 cents per thousand cubic feet (MCF) of gas extracted from underground shale throughout Pennsylvania.



Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/10273/1091447-454.stm#ixzz110eKQzed
 
That Turnbull lease looks to be about 3800 acres, thats another 3 wells drilled to hold it fully as I understand. I guess theres plenty of infrastructure set up around Turnbull already if thats becoming a bottle neck, maybe something to watch.
 
Oil up very nicely on upbeat economic news. Can it be sustained. This will once again accellerate well payback times and cash flow which now must be imminent.



NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Crude futures climbed to seven-week highs Thursday, helped by improving economic data and continued support from last week's declines in U.S. oil and fuel inventories.

Light, sweet crude for November delivery settled up $2.11, or 2.7%, at $79.97 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest settlement price since Aug. 10. The contract briefly broke above the $80 a barrel mark late in floor trading.

Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange recently traded $1.59 higher at $82.36 a barrel.

"Investors are a little more bullish" on oil, said Chris Barber, an analyst with Energy Security Analysis Inc. Thursday's better-than-expected economic data lifted U.S. energy demand expectations slightly, he said.

The Commerce Department reported Thursday that the U.S. economy was a little stronger in the second quarter than earlier believed. In a separate report, the Labor Department said weekly initial unemployment claims fell in the week ended Sept. 25.

The data offer a precursor to an important report on manufacturing from the Institute for Supply Management Friday morning. Strengthening in the industrial sector, a major oil consumer, would bolster the view that oil demand is steadily improving.

"If we see decent manufacturing data ... we could get a bump up," said Matt Smith, an analyst with Summit Energy.
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100930-712831.html
 
A new board member...

Non Executive Board Appointment
Aurora Oil & Gas Limited (“Aurora”) is pleased to announce the appointment of Fiona Harris as a non-executive director effective 1 October 2010.
A professional non-executive director for the past 15 years Fiona has held board positions for over 25 companies. She is a member of the national board of the Australian Institute of Company Directors and was formerly Western Australian State President.

Director of ASX listed companies Altona Mining Limited, Territory Resources Ltd and Sundance Resources Ltd, and Director of private company Perron Group Limited.

More on the asx announcement..

Sundance spreading the love around!
 

Interesting choice of a director. I believe her speciality is in capital raising and financial management. Is it an indication of things to come. Why did they need her? there must be a specific reason.
 
Interesting choice of a director. I believe her speciality is in capital raising and financial management. Is it an indication of things to come. Why did they need her? there must be a specific reason.

Interesting indeed!!


Fiona Harris’s Summary

BACKGROUND

Fiona Harris has been a professional non-executive director for the past 15 years. In addition, for a 5 year period until December 1999 she was an executive director of Barrington Consulting Group Pty Ltd, a company providing consulting services in the areas of strategic and business planning. She currently acts as non-executive Chairman of that company.

Fiona began her career with chartered accountants KPMG and was a partner in their Sydney office when she left that organisation in December 1994.
During her 14 years with KPMG, Fiona worked in Perth, San Francisco and Sydney specialising in financial services and superannuation. She was also involved in capital raisings, due diligence, flotations, capital structuring of transactions and litigation support.


http://au.linkedin.com/pub/fiona-harris/8/b1a/874

Surely they dont need any more capital... but if they do whats the plan..??..
 
Interesting choice of a director. I believe her speciality is in capital raising and financial management. Is it an indication of things to come. Why did they need her? there must be a specific reason.


hmmmm ..... it would make good sense for AUT ta merge with, or acquire EKA ......... a possibility ??? whatya think nioka
 
hmmmm ..... it would make good sense for AUT ta merge with, or acquire EKA ......... a possibility ??? whatya think nioka

It has always made sense that AUT take over EKA in my mind. If they dont then I suggest that AWE will. However AUT need not raise capital to do that job. Just pick the right time for a share swap. I don't really care of the ratio. I hold both so what I lose on one i would gain on the other. todays value would be about right.
 
They have a planned cap raising in H2 2011 irrespective of other shenanigans.

EKA not a target imo, obvious synergies, but why not chase the raw acerage without the premium. They have the contacts and know how.
 
Oil up very nicely over night again, now at $81.60, very nice indeed for AUT and all oilers / condensators.
 
I updated my valuations spreadsheet this morning in light of the 6%+ rise in oil prices and the return to risk placing higher PE on energy stocks.

I used $77Condensate , $3.25Gas, PE12 and get

Current Valuation imo $1.47
End of 2010 $1.70
Endo od 2011 $4.60

Note this is only opinion , and is based on all other factors reamaining equal which they innevitabley wont. Always DYOR and seek expert advice.
 
I would love for EKA and AUT to merge (holder of both), as it would really expand AUT's holdings and even further solidify it's place as a true big name oil/gas producer.

They're also so close to home with each other, so nothing drastic would need to be changed.

Takeover or not, both companies (especially AUT) have a very prosperous future.
 
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