DEA Clinches its First Operated Blocks in Danish North Sea
The Danish Energy Agency has awarded DEA Deutsche Erdoel AG two licences in Denmark. The concession area of about 530 square kilometers is located in the southern Central Graben in the western part of the Danish North Sea.
With this award, DEA is now is now an operator in Denmark for the first time with a share of 50% each in licences 8/16 and 9/16.
“We’re delighted to have been awarded these two licences as a positive supplement to our portfolio and that we’re now also represented as an operator in Denmark,” Head of DEA’s Germany/Denmark Division, Uwe Balasus-Lange.
The main geological target in the concession area is Lower Cretaceous sandstones, DEA said. It is supposed that they contain oil, which will be verified in the next few years through seismic investigations and exploration drilling.
In addition to DEA, 15 other E&P companies applied in the 7th licensing round in Denmark. The concession areas are in the Central Graben, where most of Denmark’s current productive fields can be found.
DEA’s upstream activities mainly focus on the core countries Norway, Denmark, Germany, Egypt and Algeria. Recently, DEA succeeded in taking an initial step in accelerating its growth strategy with the completion of an acquisition in Norway, which includes among others shares in more than 40 licences and significant production volumes from producing oil and gas fields.
DEA has participated in exploration and production licences in Denmark since 1995 and has been producing oil in the Danish North Sea as a partner since 2003. DEA has a share of around 44% in the oil field Cecilie and a 43% holding in the offshore field Nini in the North Sea.