UPDATE: Venezuela Takes Control Of Idle Ensco Oil Rig
28 1월 2009 - 8:57AM
Dow Jones News
Petroleos de Venezuela SA, or PdVSA, said Tuesday it had taken
control of an off-shore oil rig owned by Ensco International Inc.
(ESV), following failed talks to settle a pending bill.
PdVSA's move to seize the oil rig is the first such measure
taken at a difficult time for the cash-strapped oil company. As oil
prices have dropped by more than $100 a barrel from their record
highs last summer, PdVSA has fallen behind on payments to
suppliers, a growing concern within Venezuela's oil industry.
Ensco, a leading energy drilling contractor and owner of the
Ensco 96 rig, "paralyzed [the rig's] operations and abandoned its
contractual obligations," PdVSA said in a statement.
Ensco officials could not immediately comment on the matter.
The Ensco 96 was deployed to oil-pumping operations in the Paria
Gulf's Corocoro field, an area that U.S. company ConocoPhillips
(COP) once controlled before leaving the Andean nation in 2007.
Conoco is now in arbitration proceedings with PdVSA following
the nationalization of its assets in the Orinoco region.
Venezuela's state oil company now runs the field.
The Texas-based Ensco chose to cease operations even as it
negotiated "terms and conditions (for PdVSA) to pay off pending
debts," the note added. PdVSA said Ensco refused to accept several
settlement proposals presented by Petrosucre, a joint venture
company that PdVSA controls.
PdVSA did not specify how much it owes Ensco or what it plans to
do with the company's equipment, but said that Ensco has managed to
make as much as $110 million from the rig's operations.
The Ensco 96 is the company's sole rig in the oil-rich country.
According to Ensco's latest offshore rig report, the company was
charging PdVSA a day rate in the "mid $180,000s" for the rig. Since
it began operations in January 2006, the rig has helped drill 18
wells.
Venezuela's Petroleum Chamber has lately pressed PdVSA to pay
off hundreds of millions of dollars in unpaid bills to oil service
companies and other contractors. So far, however, no agreements
have been reached to settle these obligations.
-By Raul Gallegos; Dow Jones Newswires; +58-212-905-6338;
raul.gallegos@dowjones.com
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