AWE burns A$113m on unsuccessful exploration
AWE burns A$113m on unsuccessful exploration
By Pattrick Smellie
Aug. 24 (BusinessDesk) - Tui oilfield participant AWE Ltd. expressed disappointment today about the lack of success in its high profile season of exploration in New Zealand, Australia, and Indonesia.
The shares fell 3.7% to A$1.58 on the Australian Stock Exchange, after announcement of a statutory net loss after tax of A$28.9 million for the year to June 30. ASX-listed AWE shares have fallen 39% in the last six months, as a string of unsuccessful, capital-intensive exploration announcements came through.
The most recent, falling outside the last financial year, was the Tuatara-1 well off D’Urville Island, and two unsuccessful side-well plays in the highly prospective Tui licence, already a producing oil and gas field, also came up short, although one may be useful in future as a gas injection reservoir.
Exploration write-offs of A$113.1 million are “largely related to unsuccessful drilling activity in New Zealand, Australia and Indonesia,” the company said in a statement to the ASX. A significant abnormal item relates predominantly to asset impairments ($23.4 million in the onshore Perth Basin). After adjustment for abnormal items, the underlying net loss after tax was $21.1 million.
The year to June 2010 had been disappointing, said outgoing chairman Bruce McKay. “Whilst revenues and cashflows remained solid, the high-profile exploration program did not produce the anticipated results.”
While AWE’s total 2011 production is expected to be higher than 2010, the Tui oilfield is on a production wind-down after three years of high production.
Also announced were the appointments of Bruce Phillips as the new chairman and Nick Jukes as a non-executive director.
(BusinessDesk)