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Oil Rigs – Booming Oil Business

Posted by Oilism.com on January 2nd, 2008 at 07:09am

Oil explorers expect to aim more for deepwater rigs this year as shortages caused crude oil prices to triple in the world’s second-biggest market for the oil rigs. This is the tightest oil rig market not seen in a lot of years. Stated by an U.N. Executive at Oil & Natural Gas, who has spent 31 years in oil exploration.

Oil Rig, Oilism, oil, pumpA boom in exploration in India,the fourth-biggest Asian economy, has tripled oil rig usage over the past four years, adding to a global shortage and causing delays in tapping natural gas off the Indian east coast. Transocean, the world’s largest offshore drilling company, may raise oil rig prices further after India completes the biggest auction of offshore blocks this month.

“Most of the oil rigs in Asia are from India”, said Tony Regan, a consultant in Singapore at Nexant, a U.S.chemicals, oil and gas consultant. “The demand for oil rigs will continue in response to the new exploration rounds”. India intends to offer 55 exploration areas this month and announces a new round for more rigs in March especially to serve the hydrocarbons plants in India.

Oil explorers have drilled less than half of the 218 wells agreed under exploration licenses awarded by the government since 2000, underscoring the need for more rigs. The area covered by the licenses is the size of Texas USA. India is deploying 31 floating rigs, some able to drill holes as deep as 9,100 meters, or 30,000 feet and to 85 rigs for the United States as of November. The Asia- Pacific region accounts for 108, or 31 percent of the world’s offshore oil rigs. Explorers worldwide were using 92 percent of the offshore oil rigs deployed. The rig utilization rate in South Asia was 97.6 percent. Oil Rig rents have tripled since 2005 for new oil rig contracts stretching up to 2012 as explorers seek to decrease the delay between discovery and development and refinery to take advantage of current high oil prices.  

Daily Oil Rig Costs

An offshore rig cost an average of $137,509 a day in December, compared with a worldwide average of $99,382 in January 2006. The number of rigs earning at least $300,000 a day in 2006 rose to 29. Offshore jack-up rig hiring rates have risen to as much as $200,000 a day from $40,000 a day in 2002-3. Reliance is paying $320,000 a day until August 2008 to rent the Deepwater Frontier rig, more than twice what the rig’s owner, Transocean, charged an earlier client, according to Transocean. The rent is set to rise to $477,000 a day, if Reliance extends the contract in 2008 for another three years. The increase in rig rentals has doubled the costs and delayed development at Reliance’s biggest gas discovery in the Krishna Godavari Basin. Two of Transocean’s rigs will arrive late. 

Oil rig, oil, pump oil, drill, oilism 

Transocean, whose oil rig helped make the first Indian offshore discovery in 1974 at Mumbai High, has increased its work force in India to about 1,700 on 10 rigs, or 15 percent of the global total, from 25 workers in 2001. The company, based in Houston, plans to add three oil rigs in India the upcoming year. Transocean, the world’s largest offshore drilling contractor with 82 units, made $296 million, or 10.2 percent, of total sales from India, according to its 2005 annual report. Revenue from India more than doubled since 2003, the fastest among Transocean’s main markets. Shares of Transocean climbed 16.07 percent last year compared with a 13.61 percent increase in the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index. Transocean shares closed at $80.89 Friday, trading at a multiple of 38 times. 

Oil Companies in India are entering the rig business because of the scramble for oil rigs worldwide, fueled by a boom in offshore exploration in the Gulf of Mexico and off China, West Africa and Brazil.

Under Oil Drilling+ Oil Rig+ Oil and gas+ Oil business+ Oil company+ Oil fields

1 Comment for Oil Rigs – Booming Oil Business

  • 1. Stephen Morgan  |  May 19th, 2008 at 4:09 pm

    truTV’s Thrilling New Original Series BLACK GOLD

    Digs into the High-Stakes World of Texas Oil Drilling

    Roughnecks Risk Life and Limb to Tap Into America’s Most Crucial Energy Resource

    Gripping Series about Life on an Oil Rig Premieres Wednesday, June 18, 10 p.m. (ET)

    From the creator of Deadliest Catch and Ice Road Truckers comes one of the most explosive, relevant and thrilling original series of the year. truTV’s BLACK GOLD, premiering Wednesday, June 18, at 10 p.m. (ET), follows the high-stakes world of drilling for oil in west Texas. With the ever-increasing tensions from rising gas prices and dependency on foreign oil, BLACK GOLD goes inside the world of men who risk their lives drilling for American crude. It’s a multimillion-dollar race to tap into the nation’s last remaining reserves, and BLACK GOLD presents an unfiltered look at lives on the line.

    It costs oil men millions of dollars to drill two miles into the Earth in search of crude, and every second can lead to boom or bust. Each one-hour episode of BLACK GOLD focuses on oil rigs and the men who hope to strike it rich. With only 50 days to successfully locate and retrieve the precious commodity, the roughnecks, as they are called on the rig, endure exhausting, dangerous work demands and face losing something more valuable than the money of the oil men. They risk losing their own lives. It all adds up to big risk, big reward, big characters and most of all big business.

    BLACK GOLD gives viewers front-row seats to three different rigs – Longhorn, Viking and Big Dog – funded by two oilmen who have risked their fortunes in hopes of striking it big and keeping the drill bits turning. In the end is the moment of truth – was it all worth it? It’s a multi-million dollar roll of the dice. With enough time to drill only three wells, they have to contend not only with such elements as scorching heat and sudden lightning storms, but also the danger of working on the rig itself, where anything can go wrong at any moment and at every turn.

    Each rig is led by the driller, who takes care of everything from mechanical issues to manpower problems. The most challenging part for drillers is finding men brave enough to lift and move tons of iron and trying to ensure that these hard-partying roughnecks will actually show up for work. For many drillers, most of their time is spent trying to teach their most inexperienced roughnecks – or worms as they’re called in the oilfield – how to survive on a rig and how to avoid getting hit with iron pipes flying around. Drillers know that just one wrong move can cost a man his finger, his arm or even his life.

    The oil boom has brought the 60-year-old Longhorn rig out of retirement. Gerald, an old-school driller, with 32 years of experience and a hand missing half a thumb from a long ago mishap, leads the rig and expects a lot from his crew. He isn’t afraid to tell them when they’re not cutting it.

    Just 500 yards away is the brand-new Viking rig, where the technology and the men in charge are a very different sort. While Gerald, a tough leader who has only nine toes left, barks at his roughnecks, Viking driller Wayne treats his young crew like his family. Both Longhorn and Viking are drilling for oilman Mike LaMonica and his upstart company, ExL Petroleum. Mike’s eager to cash in on the high prices being paid for crude, but if this play doesn’t work out, it could put them under.

    The final rig is the Big Dog. Its name fits since it’s larger than the competition and unlike the other rigs, Big Dog driller Tim, does not have decades of experience. Big Dog is drilling

    for local legend Autry Stephens, who is one of the most successful independent

    Jaime Yandolino truTV 212/692-7844 jaime.yandolino@turner.com

    Jaime Yandolino

    Public Relations Manager

    truTV

    600 3rd Ave

    New York, NY 10016

    212-692-7844

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