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Opinion

Dorado: Australia's biggest oil discovery this century

1 minute read

Daniel Toleman

Research Director, Global LNG

Daniel's expertise covers global LNG markets, asset analysis, project economics, contracting and corporate analysis.

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Sometimes, just sometimes, exploration throws up a result that nobody saw coming. The Dorado-1 well, drilled in the under-explored Bedout basin off Western Australia, was pegged both by us and the operator Quadrant Energy as one of the top gas wildcats to watch in the region in 2018. The well was expected to produce 545 bcf of gas but resulted in something much more valuable – a large commercial oil find.

It's been such a long time since Western Australia had a significant oil discovery that most people have given up looking for liquids. The last discovery over 50 million barrels was way back in 2003. And you have to look back to 1996 to find a 100-million-barrel discovery. Given the wait, Dorado-1 has created a big exploration buzz around Perth.

Significant discovery for Quadrant and Carnarvon

An oil discovery is significant for block partners Quadrant and Carnarvon. Compared to gas, oil has a lower risk profile and does not require gas contracts or infrastructure. This means it is easier and faster to monetise. Although the true resource size will remain unknown until appraisal drilling takes place, a base case of 150 million barrels at Dorado is easily commercial. 

Quadrant executive Fred Wehr puts it in more dramatic terms:

“I'll tell you that the low case is solidly commercial, the mid-case is awesome and the upside is staggering. I hope I’m not overstating this or overselling it, but this is something I’ve never seen in a 35-year career.”

Fred Wehr, Quadrant Energy

Quantity and quality remain unknown

But many known unknowns remain. Not only the size of the find, but what it actually consists of. It is still unclear whether the discovery is mainly light oil or whether the oil is so light that it is in fact a condensate, which is normally a natural liquid that 'drops' out of wet gas production. The good news is that – either  way – very light oil is profitable and often commands a pricing premium to Brent. The bad news is that if it is a condensate with a lot of associated gas, it will require additional capital expenditure for gas handling and likely re-injection/recycling.

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An FPSO is the most likely development concept for Dorado. While an FPSO avoids the construction or installation of any fixed platforms, significant upfront capex funds for wells, subsea equipment, buying or leasing an FPSO etc., will need to be in place.

David Low, Upstream Analyst, Wood Mackenzie

Quadrant and Carnarvon are excited and so they should be. The next steps are to appraise the field to prove up the recoverable volumes, while also progressing a development concept. A floating production storage and offloading (FPSO) facility  is the most likely solution as it does not require the construction or installation of any fixed platforms. However, drilling the wells, purchasing subsea equipment and buying or leasing an FPSO would still require significant upfront investment.

Possible trigger for M&A activity

Therein lies an additional issue: small-cap explorers such as Carnarvon tend not to be in the big oil development game, in part because of the deep pockets required. With Quadrant's financial backers apparently looking at exit options, the find could spark M&A activity for the partners and those with acreage in the vicinity. Australia has not seen many high-profile new entrants to its upstream sector for a good few years – the opening of the Great Australian Bight was the last big ticket event. Could Dorado be the next catalyst?

If a high case outcome for Dorado materialises, could an E&P company or a large independent take a shot at Quadrant and/or Carnarvon? The options to secure 'value' from the find before development include a trade sale, farm-down, re-opening the Quadrant IPO idea, or splitting the business.

A trade sale may open up an exciting opportunity for a new buyer looking for a complementary business with cash flow positive assets to fund the future exploration and development costs of a conventional oil play in a politically stable region. For Quadrant, the excitement and potential upside of Dorado should be enough to overcome investor concerns about the maturity of the existing portfolio, putting a public listing back on the table.

Other routes to monetisation

The last option involves monetising Dorado upfront via an asset sale or farm-down. The question here becomes, is the discovery more valuable to the financial backers as a standalone asset sale, or rolled up into Quadrant's portfolio as a sweetener to the trade sale that has attracted very little interest?

For Carnarvon, the possibility remains of monetising the discovery upfront, if a player is looking for upside in a non-operated oil interest. Alternatively, options for funding include: project financing against the resource once volumes are confirmed, or an equity raising, which has been made significantly easier by the recent increase in share price.

A hot new exploration play in Western Australia

Putting corporate manoeuvres to one side, the Dorado oil find opens up a hot new exploration play in the region. We cannot underestimate how important the oil aspect is for the attractiveness of the play. A medium-sized gas play in this remote location would most likely be uneconomic – the isolation and the 75 tcf of undeveloped gas in neighbouring basins would see to that. But even a 50-million-barrel oil discovery should break even at US$49/barrel, well below today's oil price of US$73/barrel, without requiring the complexity of new export infrastructure or commercial arrangements.

The Dorado find has shown companies what the next big thing in Australia could be. We are anticipating exploration in the area to return with a vengeance. A key indicator will be the level of interest in nearby acreage releases W17-4 and W18-4 – the bidding on which is due to close in the fourth quarter of 2018.

Insight

The fundamentals for 2019 are encouraging, despite recent price volatility. Project sanctions are increasing, not only in number but also scale. Tight oil production is booming, the next wave of LNG sanctions is threatening to break and 2019 will likely be another huge year for discovered resource opportunities. But we live in interesting times, and geopolitical concerns continue to dog the market. What will OPEC do next to balance global oil markets, and how will recent price fluctuation affect upstream spending plans?

Global upstream: 5 things to look out for in 2019

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