Shell to get four deepwater blocks off Nova Scotia

Jan. 23, 2012
The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board has decided to award exploration rights to Shell Canada Ltd. for four deepwater parcels offshore southwestern Nova Scotia.

The Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board has decided to award exploration rights to Shell Canada Ltd. for four deepwater parcels offshore southwestern Nova Scotia.

Shell has committed to spend $970 million exploring the properties in the next 6 years. Award of the blocks is expected in March 2012. No bids were received for four other parcels posted in the province’s 2011 call for bids. The next call for bids is to be posted in May 2012.

Nova Scotia Energy Minister Charlie Parker noted that the province had “invested in world-class research and committed to sharing our findings with oil and gas companies around the world. We’re seeing the results of that investment today” (OGJ, July 4, 2011, p. 48).

The province has invested $15 million of offshore revenues in an analysis to prepare a 350-page atlas of the offshore. The Offshore Energy Technology Association commissioned RPS Consulting and Beicip Franlab for the industry-standard analysis. Dalhousie and Saint Mary’s universities, Natural Resources Canada’s Geological Survey of Canada, the CNOPB, and Department of Energy also contributed.

The study calculated that the province could have potential reserves of 120 tcf of natural gas and 8 billion bbl of oil.

About the Author

Alan Petzet | Chief Editor Exploration

Alan Petzet is Chief Editor-Exploration of Oil & Gas Journal in Houston. He is editor of the Weekly E&D Newsletter, emailed to OGJ subscribers, and a regular contributor to the OGJ Online subscriber website.

Petzet joined OGJ in 1981 after 13 years in the Tulsa World business-oil department. He was named OGJ Exploration Editor in 1990. A native of Tulsa, he has a BA in journalism from the University of Tulsa.