VANCOUVER, Feb. 1 /PRNewswire/ - Canadian listed,
New Zealand oil and gas producer
TAG Oil Ltd. (TSX-V: TAO), announced that the Sidewinder-2 well is
scheduled to begin drilling operations on February 7, 2011.
This is the first of several appraisal and exploration wells to
be drilled in the 7910-acre (12 section), 100% TAG-controlled
Petroleum Exploration Permit 38748 ("PEP 38748") in New Zealand's Taranaki Basin.
Following the success of the gas-rich Sidewinder-1 discovery,
the Sidewinder-2 and 3 wells will be drilled to a depth of
approximately 2400 meters, targeting the same Mt. Messenger
Formation play level as Sidewinder-1. However, these wells will be
drilled in a slightly downdip location to intersect an interpreted
"oil leg" associated with this proven accumulation.
TAG also announces its plans to conduct a multi-well,
high-impact exploration campaign in PEP 38748 targeting a number of
Mt. Messenger prospects similar to Sidewinder, that have been
identified permit-wide by 3D seismic.
Any successes arising from additional discoveries in PEP 38748
or additional Sidewinder production wells will be immediately tied
into the Sidewinder Production Station. Currently under
construction, TAG forecasts completion of the new facility by
mid-2011.
Production from the existing Sidewinder-1 well, forecast to
produce at rates of 8 to 10 million cubic feet of gas (1300 to 1600
barrels of oil equivalent) per day, will be brought on stream upon
completion of the Sidewinder Production Station.
Please see
http://tagoil.com/20101103-TAG-Oil-Announces-Strong-Results-at-Sidewinder-1-Flow-T.asp
for more information on the Sidewinder-1 discovery.
TAG Oil Ltd.
TAG Oil Ltd. is a Canadian-listed company (TSX-V: TAO) with
operations in New Zealand. With
100% control of its core assets, including oil and gas production
infrastructure, TAG is anticipating production growth through
development of multiple oil and gas discoveries in the Taranaki
Basin. TAG is also targeting high-impact drilling opportunities on
numerous exploration prospects identified over 3,500 sections of
land onshore.
In the East Coast Basin, TAG is pursuing the major
unconventional resource potential that has been demonstrated in the
Waipawa Black Shale and Whangai Shale source-rock formations. These
oil-rich, naturally fractured formations compare favorably to
fractured shale formations such as the Bakken Shale in the
Williston Basin.
"BOE"s may be misleading, particularly if used in isolation. A
BOE conversion ratio of 6Mcf: 1 Bbl is based on an energy
equivalency conversion method primarily applicable at the burner
tip and does not represent a value equivalency at the
wellhead.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
Statements contained in this news release that are not historical
facts are forward-looking statements that involve various risks and
uncertainty affecting the business of TAG Oil. These statements are
based on certain factors and assumptions including those related to
the exploration, development and daily production rates of TAG
Oil's Cheal oil field and Sidewinder discovery in the Taranaki
Basin of New Zealand. Actual
results may vary materially from the information provided in this
release and there is no representation by TAG Oil that actual
results realized in the future would be the same in whole or in
part as those presented herein.
Factors that could cause actual results to differ from those
contained in the forward-looking statements are set forth in, but
are not limited to, filings that the Company and its independent
evaluator have made, including the Company's most recent reports in
Canada under National Instrument
51-101.
Neither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services
Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX
Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or
accuracy of this release.
SOURCE TAG Oil Ltd.
Copyright b. 1 PR Newswire