Thanks Doggie. Good story. Certainly seems Adani is intent on making it's LNC coal investment effective and profitable. Making sure that no one else takes shark size chunks out of the deal along the way is excellent business sense. And it emphasizes the long term nature of the project VS shorter term issues
From LNC shareholder POV it strengthens the certainty and value of the residual royalties - around $100m + a year for 20 years at 2010 prices. That is not small potatoes.
Be interesting to see if this encourages participants in the sale of the Teresa coal mine to jump into the project with a similar long term perspective. Nothing like someone else leading the way to encourage others to follow !
This is another article relevant to Linc energy.
It perhaps highlights a reason the next coal tenement sale is taking longer than anticipated.
http://www.couriermail.com.au/business/costs-may-mar-high-hopes-for-galilee-basin/story-e6freqmx-1226073945951
LNC Holder.
The company has just had approvals for a coal development in South Africa and LNC wants the UCG and oil rights. Only cost them peanuts ( $1.8m ) and assuming it all goes according to Hoyle there should be some big bucks in the deal.
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This should be interesting. I have just a few comments...
1. How will this benefit the LNC shareprice. The SARand has significantly devalued over the past 10 years.
2. How did Sasol (Linc has a few of ex-Sasol engineers) not get into this resource
3. S-African Gov is strife with corruption. Lots of talk by ANC youthleague to nationalize resources and anything that makes cash.Which one of Zuma's son's is sitting behind Sekoko.
4. I hope Firestone has done their risk assesment.
I suppose $1.8mil is small change once QLD ten is sold.
For the record, PDVSA (the Venezuela national oil company) was pretty highly regarded for its technical expertise prior to Hugo and his revolution which essentially trashed it.It would be kinda hard to nationalize an operation that you can't operate. Hugo is screwing up his nationalized oil fields for lack of expertise and oil tech is widely understood, imagine what a mess the SA lot would make of Linc's operations?
Shouldn't the buyback have increased the value?
Shouldn't the buyback have increased the value?
Seems like a good buy at the moment?
In the June 30th Quarterly Report from Linc they told us 2 facts regarding their first oil/gas well at Arckaringa-
a) Page 5:-
Linc Energy spuds its first well in the Arckaringa Basin On June 9th 2011 Linc Energy announced it had spudded its first oil and gas exploration well as part of its program for the Arckaringa Basin in South Australia. Known as Haystack 1, the well will be drilled to 1,200m or 3,800 feet. b) Page 7:-
Arckaringa Basin Update Hunt Rig 3 was accepted and spud Haystack 1 oil and gas well (PEL121) during June. The well was at 468m at the end of the period with a forecast depth of 1200m. If they were at 468m on June 30th gives a drill rate of 22.3m per day. That means 1200m will take approx 54 days ("approx" as obviously the type of rock they have to drill through will change and impact the drilling speed). That means they would have hit their target drill depth on July 30th!
So I would guess that makes drill results imminent!
Although finding oil/gas, even by professional/experienced oil companies, seems to be like trying to find a needle in a Haystack (pun intended) a positive result here WOULD make this stock soar rather more than this annoyingly illusive coal sale! .
Gentlemen, place your bets please!
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