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Royal Navy Caught Argentina Ship ‘’Snooping’’ For Oil Off Falklands

The Royal Navy of the United Kingdom has intercepted an Argentinian survey ship that a Navy commander suggested had been 'snooping for oil' on the edge of British territorial waters off the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic, The Telegraph reports.

HMS Clyde, which was patrolling the waters, saw off on Sunday Argentina's survey ship ARA Puerto Deseado that had switched off her satellite tracker and approached UK territorial waters, the Royal Navy revealed to The Telegraph. The Argentinian ship that had equipment to survey the ocean retreated swiftly after HMS Clyde approached it, in what navy officials and experts called a minor incident near the Falkland Islands that have been a long-standing territorial dispute between the UK and Argentina, who also staged a brief war over the Falklands in 1982.

Commander Tom Sharpe, former captain of frigate HMS St Albans, told The Telegraph that the Argentinian ship had probably been "snooping" for oil.

Earlier this decade, the waters off the Falklands were proved to contain a billion barrels of oil, but exploration plans were stalled by the oil price slump.

Rockhopper Exploration, which found the oil, believes that the North Falkland Basin could have 1.7 billion barrels of oil in place.

Rockhopper and partners are working to reach a final investment decision on the Sea Lion project in the basin toward the end of this year. Gross capital expenditure (capex) for first oil is estimated at US$1.5 billion, with gross annual production planned at 80,000 bpd. Gross project revenue per year at peak production and oil prices at US$65 a barrel is expected at US$1.8 billion.

Rockhopper's partner in the Sea Lion project, Premier Oil, said in July this year that a pathfinder bank was appointed to assist with the development of the senior financing structure for the project. Premier Oil continues to focus on securing funding for the project ahead of a final investment decision, it said.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews.  More

Comments

  • Robert Morris - 10th Sep 2018 at 3:47am:
    I find it is a bit ironic that Britain has control of the Falkland islands and the United Nations Security Council has never demanded that Britain return control of the Falklands to Argentina but they constantly call for the return of Parts of Israel which were taken from Jordan during the six day war and never belonged to the Palestinians. The land in question had belonged to Israel until the Jewish Diaspora happened in in 79 AD when Jerusalem was sacked and burned by the Roman Empire. Israel simply reclaimed what was theirs much like Argentina tried to do with Britain.
  • Tony - 9th Sep 2018 at 10:47am:
    Get some big international money tied up with those oil reserves ASAP - then no one else will be allowed to touch it without fear of serious reprisal.
  • Adolf - 8th Sep 2018 at 2:47am:
    Argentina has all rights to do anything it. Wants as long as it is NOT in British waters.
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