Hickory-1 Flow Test Operations Update

88 Energy Limited
28 February 2024
 

28 February 2024

88 Energy Limited

Hickory-1 Flow Test Operations Update

88 Energy Limited (ASX:88E, AIM:88E, OTC:EEENF) (88 Energy or the Company) is pleased to report final preparations for the commencement of flow testing operations are advancing at the Hickory-1 well, located within 88 Energy's Project Phoenix acreage directly adjacent to the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System and the Dalton Highway.

Highlights

·   Mobilisation operations are complete and pre-flow testing operations have advanced at the fully funded Hickory-1 discovery well, with current operations involving the testing of the blow-out preventers (BOP) installed on the wellhead.

·   Two flow tests are scheduled, one each in the Upper SFS and SMD-B reservoirs, with each expected to take approximately ten days.

·   Prior to perforating the first zone, wellbore preparations are required which include removing the existing string in the well, drilling out of the plugs and cleaning out of the wellbore.

·   Flow testing operations are set to deliver information critical to development planning, such as reservoir deliverability, fluid compositions, pressures and connectivity.

 

 

imageFlow test operations update

Current operations involve testing of the BOP followed by retrieval of the kill string from within the well, drill out of plugs, clean-up of the wellbore and change-out to completion fluid. This process is expected to span approximately five days.

Testing operations will focus on the two primary targets, the Upper SFS and the SMD reservoirs (refer Figure 1), which together represent a mean, unrisked, multi-hundred-million-barrel oil resource1,2,3 (refer Table 1).  The Upper SFS reservoir will be tested first followed by the SMD-B reservoir. Each zone will be independently isolated, stimulated and flowed to surface using nitrogen lift to assist in an efficient clean-up of the well. Perforation, completion-running and stimulation is expected to take approximately four days, followed by a clean-up and flow period of up to four days and a pressure build-up of up to two days for a total of ten days to complete each of the two flow tests.

Image 1: All American Oilfield Rig-111

1 Cautionary Statement: The estimated quantities of petroleum that may be potentially recovered by the application of a future development project relate to undiscovered accumulations. These estimates have both an associated risk of discovery and a risk of development. Further exploration, appraisal and evaluation are required to determine the existence of a significant quantity of potentially movable hydrocarbons.

2 Mean unrisked resource - Net Entitlement to 88E. Refer announcement 23 August 2022 for pre-Hickory-1 estimates.

3 Refer announcement dated 6 November 2023 for post-Hickory-1 for post Hickory-1 drilling resource estimates.

 

An extensive suite of data is planned to be captured including, but not limited to, downhole and surface fluid samples, downhole pressure and temperature data, surface pressure and temperature data, as well as flow rates of oil, gas and water. This data is essential in maturing development plans by accurately constraining reservoir models used to progress the next phases of Project Phoenix.

Any future development plan for Project Phoenix would be expected to include horizontal wells to maximise oil rates. As is evidenced in many Lower 48 analogues, horizontal wells typically produce at rates 6-12 times higher than vertical wells, once lessons from field development are captured in the appraisal phase.


Offset exploration vertical well tests, similar to the Hickory-1 discovery well, have all flowed in the 50-100 BOPD range per test. Water to oil ratios, gas to oil ratios and the evolution of rates and pressures over time are critical data sets that assist in development planning and forecasting. It is not uncommon for formation water to be produced sustainably in conjunction with hydrocarbons in these types of reservoirs, as is often observed in producing analogues in the Lower 48. Vertical wells provide cost effective access to test multiple reservoirs in a single wellbore and are therefore the crucial first steps on the path to development of Project Phoenix resources.

 

Figure 1: Flow testing program to target two of the four pay zones intersected in the Hickory-1 discovery well.

 

The Company looks forward to providing an update on commencement of the Upper SFS flow test (refer Figure 2).

 

A screen shot of a computer Description automatically generated

 Figure 2: Flow testing program timeline (scheduled days)

 

This announcement has been authorised by the Board.

 

Media and Investor Relations:

88 Energy Ltd

Ashley Gilbert, Managing Director

Tel: +61 8 9485 0990

Email:investor-relations@88energy.com




Fivemark Partners, Investor and Media Relations

 


Michael Vaughan

Tel: +61 422 602 720



EurozHartleys Ltd


Dale Bryan

Tel: + 61 8 9268 2829



Cavendish Capital Markets Limited

Tel: +44 (0)20 7397 8900

Derrick Lee

Tel: +44 (0)131 220 6939

Pearl Kellie

Tel: +44 (0)131 220 9775



 

Pursuant to the requirements of the ASX Listing Rules Chapter 5 and the AIM Rules for Companies, the technical information and resource reporting contained in this announcement was prepared by, or under the supervision of, Dr Stephen Staley, who is a Non-Executive Director of the Company. Dr Staley has more than 40 years' experience in the petroleum industry, is a Fellow of the Geological Society of London, and a qualified Geologist/Geophysicist who has sufficient experience that is relevant to the style and nature of the oil prospects under consideration and to the activities discussed in this document. Dr Staley has reviewed the information and supporting documentation referred to in this announcement and considers the resource and reserve estimates to be fairly represented and consents to its release in the form and context in which it appears. His academic qualifications and industry memberships appear on the Company's website and both comply with the criteria for "Competence" under clause 3.1 of the Valmin Code 2015. Terminology and standards adopted by the Society of Petroleum Engineers "Petroleum Resources Management System" have been applied in producing this document.

 

Table 1: Previously announced Prospective Resource assessment conducted prior to the drilling of Hickory-1

 

Project Phoenix: Alaska North Slope

Unrisked Gross Prospective Oil Resources (MMstb) 4,5

Prospects (Probabilistic Method)

Low (1U)

Best (2U)

High (3U)

Mean

COS 3

Shelf Margin Delta (SMD A, B and C)

70

224

518

231

81%

Slope Fan System (SFS)

37

134

345

141

50%

Kuparuk (KUP)

39

88

156

89

72%

Prospects Total

146

446

1,019

461 2

 

 

Project Phoenix: Alaska North Slope

Unrisked Net Entitlement to 88E 1 Prospective Oil Resources (MMstb) 4,5

Prospects (Probabilistic Method)

Low (1U)

Best (2U)

High (3U)

Mean

COS 3

Shelf Margin Delta (SMD A, B and C)

44

140

326

145

81%

Slope Fan System (SFS)

24

84

217

89

50%

Kuparuk (KUP)

24

56

98

56

72%

Prospects Total

92

280

641

290 2

 

 

1. 88 Energy net resources have been calculated using a 75.227% working interest and a 16.5% royalty.

2. The unrisked means, which have been arithmetically summed, are not representative of expected total from the prospects and implies a success case in all reservoir intervals. 88 Energy cautions that the arithmetically summed 1U estimate may be a conservative estimate and the arithmetically summed 3U estimate may be optimistic when compared to a statistical aggregation of probability distributions.

3. COS represents the geological chance of success as assessed by 88 Energy and reviewed and endorsed by LKA. 

4. Prospects are subject to a phase risk (oil vs gas). Chance of oil has been assessed as 100% for all targets except for the Kuparuk Formation which has been assessed as 70%.  Phase risk has not been applied to the unrisked numbers.

5. The Prospective Resources have not been adjusted for the chance of development. Quantifying the chance of development (COD) requires consideration of both economic and other contingencies, such as legal, regulatory, market access, political, social license, internal and external approvals and commitment to project finance and development timing. As many of these factors are outside the knowledge of LKA they must be used with caution.

6. Prospective Resource Estimates - determined pre-drilling of Hickory-1.

7. Updated Prospective Resource Estimates reflect the removal of the resource estimate for the Basin Floor Fan which as of 1 November 2023 has been redetermined and classified as a Contingent Resource. No other changes have been made to the original estimates, please refer to the ASX announcement of 23 August 2023.

 

 

Table 2: Previously announced Contingent Resource assessment for the BFF discovery at Hickory-1

 

Project Phoenix: Basin Floor Fan

Gross (100%) Contingent Resources 1,3

Probabilistic Method

Low (1C)

Best (2C)

High (3C)

Oil

Million Barrels

17

44

104

NGL

Million Barrels

35

91

218

Oil + NGL2

Million Barrels

52

136

322

Gas

Billion Cubic Feet

255

628

1,417

Total 2

Million Barrels of Oil Equivalent 4

98

250

580

 

Project Phoenix: Basin Floor Fan

Net Entitlement (~63%) Contingent Resources 1,3

Probabilistic Method

Low (1C)

Best (2C)

High (3C)

Oil

Million Barrels

11

28

65

NGL

Million Barrels

22

57

137

Oil + NGL2

Million Barrels

33

85

202

Gas

Billion Cubic Feet

160

394

890

Total 2

Million Barrels of Oil Equivalent 4

62

157

364

 

1. 88 Energy net resources have been calculated using a 75.227% working interest and a 16.5% royalty.

2. 88 Energy cautions that the reported totals for Oil+NGL and Total MMBOE are an arithmetic sum of the individual hydrocarbon types within the BFF reservoir. The arithmetically summed 1C estimate may be a conservative estimate and the arithmetically summed 3C estimate may be optimistic when compared to a statistical aggregation of probability distributions.

3. The Contingent Resource classification is not required to be adjusted for the chance of development, as per PRMS 2018 guidance, and hence has not been carried out in this assessment.

4. Natural Gas Liquids (NGL's) are converted to oil equivalent volumes via a constant ratio of 1:1. Gas is converted to oil equivalent volumes via a constant ratio of 5.5 BCF per 1 MMBoe.

 

 

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