Cairn
Energy drills 82-million-dollar loss
By
Amelie Herenstein
AFP
LONDON
Petroleumworld.com
03 28 07
British oil firm Cairn Energy said on Tuesday that it dived into the
red in 2006 with a net loss of 82 million dollars after downgrading
energy reserves estimates at its Sangu field in Bangladesh.
The loss, which was equivalent to 61.5 million euros, compared with
profits of 79 million dollars in 2005, Cairn Energy said in its earnings
statement.
Revenue climbed nine percent to 286.3 million dollars, but total production
sank 13.0 percent to 24,523 barrels of oil equivalent per day.
"The group made a loss after tax of 82.0 million dollars, mainly
due to the exceptional oil and gas write down of 71.5 million dollars
as a result of the downward reserves revision on Sangu," Cairn
said.
The Sangu field, offshore of southern Bangladesh, has been hit by
falling output and drilling delays.
Cairn said on Tuesday that the total asset write-down relating to
Sangu now stood at 213 billion standard cubic feet (6.39 billion cubic
metres), compared with an earlier estimate of 187 billion that was
given in January.
Estimated reserves at Sangu stood at 116 billion standard cubic feet.
That was about 5.0 percent of Cairn's total booked reserves for 2006
compared with 6.0 percent previously.
Booked reserves refers to the amount of oil which a company believes
it can recover from the ground.
In morning trade, Cairn's share price fell 1.41 percent to 1,611.00
pence, while London's second-tier FTSE 250 index, on which the group
is listed, rose 0.02 percent to 11,657.40 points.
In response to the results, broker Merrill Lynch said that the Sangu
downgrade lowered the group's net asset value by 7.0 pence per share,
adding that it was the third reserve downgrade in 18 months.
The
Edinburgh-based company raised 1.98 billion dollars earlier this year
with the listing of its Indian unit, Cairn India, on the Mumbai stock
exchange.
The parent company Cairn retained a majority 69.5-percent holding
in its Indian offshoot.
Turning to its vast Rajasthan project in western India, Cairn said
talks with the country's state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corp about
pipeline construction were "progressing well."
The company also reaffirmed estimated oil reserves in Rajasthan of
more than 3.6 billion barrels, and planned production from the field
of 150,000 barrels of oil per day.
The first oil production from Mangala, the largest of the fields,
is on schedule for 2009, the group added.
In
July last year, Cairn signed a one billion dollar agreement with more
than a dozen banks to develop the Mangala, Aishwariya, Saraswati and
Raageshwari oilfields in the Rajasthan basin.
AFP
27 1034 GMT 03 07
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