Frustrated Commodore crosses the line

December 29, 2007

Matt Allen, the Commodore of the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, the organising club for the Rolex Sydney Hobart, has crossed the finish line in the Rolex Sydney Hobart at the helm of his modified Volvo 70 Ichi Ban.

She crossed at 6:01pm this afternoon, the third boat to finish the race. It has been a frustrating day for Allen and his crew. They were enjoying the best sailing of the race this morning ahead of a fresh northerly when a loud bang signalled the end of their bid for a podium spot. One of Ichi Ban’s twin rudders had snapped off. “We had dropped a spinnaker in the water as a result of a halyard failure half an hour before it broke and the spinnaker underwater did hit the rudder, but we don’t think that would have caused the failure,” Allen said. Volvo 70s have a rudder on either side, and it was the port rudder that went.  So, while the boat would continue to handle well on port tack, on starboard tack it would be very difficult to keep the remaining rudder in the water. 

 

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Iraq threatens to stop oil exports to South Korea over its direct dealings with Kurds

December 29, 2007

Iraq’s oil ministry has threatened to stop all crude exports to South Korea if that nation proceeds with a deal it signed with the semiautonomous Kurdistan regional government.

In early November, a consortium led by the state-run Korea National Oil Corp., or KNOC, secured exploration rights from the Kurdish regional government for an oil field in the Northern Province. The Korean consortium includes SK Energy, South Korea’s biggest oil refiner, and GS Holdings Corp. The ministry has made it clear that no contracts should be signed until a new national oil law is passed. There was a clear warning to these companies that they will be blacklisted and excluded from any future cooperation with the ministry. Iraq is the sixth-largest provider of oil to the country. The Kurds have signed more than a dozen contracts with foreign oil companies, insisting Iraq’s constitution gives them that authority.

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Mariner ties up StatoilHydro Gulf assets

December 29, 2007

Houston-based Mariner Energy would buy StatoilHydro’s Gulf of Mexico shelf operations for $243 million.

Mariner said it would take over StatoilHydro unit Hydro Gulf of Mexico, which controls the Norewgian giant’s operations in the region. The deal, which is expected to close by the end of next month, includes estimated proved oil and gas reserves of 52.4 billion cubic feet equivalent, of which 95% are developed. The assets also include 24.1 Bcfe of probable reserves. Production from the assets is 58.2 million cubic feet per day from 32 wells, out of which 71% are operated. The deal also includes 256,000 acres including 11 drill sites. The company said the acquisitions, on the Permian basin’s Spraberry field, included production of about 1250 barrels of oil from 348 wells.

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