An 'Enterprising' North Sea Discovery

Historical Highlight: Nelson Field

In 1973 British Gas discovered the Wytch Farm oilfield in Dorset, England, which, with its offshore extension, became Europe’s biggest “onshore” oilfield.

Then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asked her energy secretary, Peter Walker, what state-owned British Gas was doing with an oilfield, and said that it must be sold to the private sector, which they did. Soon after she found out that British Gas also had some oil interests in the North Sea, operated by Amoco – and she said they also should be sold.

Walker then bravely suggested that these North Sea interests, which included minority stakes in five commercial oilfields and a small stake in 19 other northern and central North Sea blocks, might form the basis for a new British oil company.

“Jolly good idea!” Mrs. Thatcher reportedly said, “and it shall be called Enterprise Oil.”

Thus in 1983 was born a remarkably successful company that its employees proudly dubbed “the world’s greatest independent oil company.”

AAPG member J. Myles Bowen, who in April will receive AAPG’s Pioneer Award at the Annual Convention and Exhibition in Houston, was Enterprise’s second employee – and on April 1, 1984, he was appointed exploration director.

Bowen quickly set about staffing his department and designing a daring and aggressive exploration-intensive business strategy. The company’s activities began in the British sector of the North Sea and later were expanded to Norway, Vietnam, Italy, Malaysia, Brazil, the Gulf of Mexico and six other countries.

Enterprise’s successful first two years of farm-ins and small company acquisitions were to be topped by a venture that became headline news: the Nelson discovery in North Sea Block 22/11.

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In 1973 British Gas discovered the Wytch Farm oilfield in Dorset, England, which, with its offshore extension, became Europe’s biggest “onshore” oilfield.

Then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asked her energy secretary, Peter Walker, what state-owned British Gas was doing with an oilfield, and said that it must be sold to the private sector, which they did. Soon after she found out that British Gas also had some oil interests in the North Sea, operated by Amoco – and she said they also should be sold.

Walker then bravely suggested that these North Sea interests, which included minority stakes in five commercial oilfields and a small stake in 19 other northern and central North Sea blocks, might form the basis for a new British oil company.

“Jolly good idea!” Mrs. Thatcher reportedly said, “and it shall be called Enterprise Oil.”

Thus in 1983 was born a remarkably successful company that its employees proudly dubbed “the world’s greatest independent oil company.”

AAPG member [PFItemLinkShortcode|id:2062|type:standard|anchorText:J. Myles Bowen|cssClass:|title: Career Included ‘Rough Stuff’|PFItemLinkShortcode], who in April will receive AAPG’s Pioneer Award at the Annual Convention and Exhibition in Houston, was Enterprise’s second employee – and on April 1, 1984, he was appointed exploration director.

Bowen quickly set about staffing his department and designing a daring and aggressive exploration-intensive business strategy. The company’s activities began in the British sector of the North Sea and later were expanded to Norway, Vietnam, Italy, Malaysia, Brazil, the Gulf of Mexico and six other countries.

Enterprise’s successful first two years of farm-ins and small company acquisitions were to be topped by a venture that became headline news: the Nelson discovery in North Sea Block 22/11.

Four Duds …

UK North Sea Block 22/11, on the Forties Montrose High in the Central Graben area about 200 kilometers east of Aberdeen, Scotland, had seen a history of unsuccessful exploration involving five companies drilling four inconclusive wells over two decades.

♦The first well, 22/11-1, was drilled by Gulf in 1967 and had the Permian Rotliegendes Formation as its objective – which was found wet. Electric logs, however, indicated a “ratty” hydrocarbon-bearing uppermost Paleocene sandy interval with a gross column of 178 feet that on an open-hole drill stem test produced only water and oil-cut mud.

The well was not tested further.

♦Some five years later, in 1972, Conoco drilled a second well in the block that only found oil shows in the “ratty” Upper Paleocene sands.

♦Eleven years later Conoco drilled a third well that was also abandoned as a dry hole.

The chain of events that led to the discovery of the Nelson Field started in 1985, when Enterprise Oil and its partners carried out a detailed seismic survey over the Montrose Field and its undeveloped neighbor Arbroath in the block immediately south of Block 22/11, with the objective of convincing the authorities that the latter was a separate field, because that had important consequent tax benefits.

The resulting interpretation proved conclusively the two fields were separate Upper Paleocene Forties Formation accumulations, restricted laterally within NNW-SSE trending sand lobes and separated from each other by shaly “inter-channel” zones.

In 1985, as these studies continued, Enterprise entered into discussions with the Conoco/Chevron/Britoil group with a view to earn farm-in equity by drilling wells in nine of their blocks.

One of the blocks that Enterprise Oil had insisted be in the deal was 22/11.

The only data available to Enterprise Oil on the block was the Gulf well 22/11-1, plus a very old regional seismic well-tie line running from the UK coast to Norway passing across Gulf’s well. Geophysicist Dave Rhodes and geologist (and AAPG member) Mike Whyatt, working on the Montrose/Arbroath field separation issue, studied it, immediately saw the similarity and concluded that Gulf’s well 22/11-1 had penetrated a shaly Upper Paleocene “inter-channel” sequence – with good seismic evidence of thick channel sands immediately to the east and west.

The farm-in agreement for Block 22/11 dictated that Enterprise drill a well in the block’s southwest corner to test a decent Jurassic Fulmar Formation prospect. The well, the fourth in the block, was abandoned, as the objective was wet – but it did find a well-developed, yet wet, Upper Paleocene sand section.

… And a Gusher

Having drilled this commitment well, Enterprise then gained access to all the existing data – including a 3-D survey shot by Shell over the prospect, which reinforced its concept of a major Upper Paleocene exploration objective in the northeast corner of Block 22/11.

Enterprise, now with a 30 percent stake, informed the partners of its ideas about the first well on the block and proposed that the partnership re-drill the closure first tested by well 22/11-1 – but this was rejected by the partners.

It was at this moment that Enterprise made the strategic decision to concentrate its efforts on Block 22/11, and Bowen initiated a complex series of individual and discreet acreage swap negotiations with the other three companies. By early December 1987 Enterprise had executed all the necessary swaps and achieved its objective of controlling 100 percent of Block 22/11.

Enterprise Oil was so certain they would have a commercial discovery that they constructed a four-well template for the drilling of one deviated well each into each of two sand lobes, plus the option of drilling two further wells from the same location.

Well 22/11-5 was spudded on Dec. 19, 1987; well 22/11-6 was spudded three days later.

Both wells found the Forties Formation oil bearing, and the geoseismic model was borne out when well 22/11-5 came in at 6,720 bopd of 40.1 degree API oil and well 22/11-6 tested 10,224 bopd.

The field’s discovery was announced in March 1988, and a month later the Shell/Esso partnership proved the extension of the accumulation into adjoining Block 22/6a.

After Enterprise’s successful production tests the question arose as to what to name the new field. Bowen was in the office of CEO Graham Hearne, overlooking Trafalgar Square with Admiral Horatio Nelson’s statue in its center, and posed the question.

Graham just pointed out the window and said, “Look no further!”

Thus was named a field of about half a billion barrels of oil, one of the largest discoveries of the decade – an effort that capped a complicated series of business maneuvers that the UK daily newspaper Independent later described as “little short of brilliant.”

In 2002 Enterprise Oil was acquired by Royal Dutch Shell for $6.2 billion – a bid that its board of directors decided represented good value and recommended the shareholders to accept, which they did.

It marked the end of an independent operator that had shown a smaller company could have – and creatively apply – the technical and managerial expertise to outwit major ones.

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