Reports shown below contain the financial & operating metrics of each deal and are available to Full Subscribers to Evaluate Energy.
Normalised Asset Value Analysis
By Date
By Date Normalised upstream metrics ordered by date
By Company
By Company Normalised upstream metrics ordered by acquiring company
By Country
By Country Normalised upstream metrics ordered by country
By Resource Type
By Resource Type Normalised upstream metrics ordered by resource type
All Recent Deals (past 7 days)
All Recent Deals (past 7 days) Select this report to view all deals announced in the previous 7 days.
All Recent Deals (past 14 days)
All Recent Deals (past 14 days) Select this report to view all deals announced in the previous 14 days.
Cost per boe of Reserves
Cost per boe of Reserves Components: Acquirer All companies Target Company All items Deal Type All items Total Acquisition Cost (000) Cost per boe of 1P Reserves Cost per boe of 2P Reserves Reserves 1P - Natural Gas (bcf) Rederves 1P - Liquids (000 bbls) Reserves 1P (000 boe) Reserves 1P - % Gas Reserves 2P - Natural Gas (bcf) Reserves 2P - Liquids (000 bbls) Reserves 2P - (000 boe) Reserves 2P - % Gas Reserves - Comments Reserves - Basis of Figures Date Announced Any date Original Source Information
Cost per b/d of Production
Cost per b/d of Production Components: Acquirer All companies Target Company Deal Type All Deal Total Acquisition Cost (000) Cost per boe/d of Production Production - Natural Gas (mcf/d) Production - Liquids (000 bbls) Production - boe/d Production - % Gas Production - Comments Production - Basis of Figures Date Announced Any date Original Source Information
Cost Per 1P Barrel (Chart)
Cost Per 1P Barrel (Chart) Chart showing cost per barrel of proven reserve by quarter
Cost Per Flowing Barrel (Chart)
Cost Per Flowing Barrel (Chart) Chart showing cost per flowing barrel of production acquired by quarter
Value of Deals Announced (Chart)
Value of Deals Announced (Chart) Chart showing accumulated value of all deals per quarter
Refining Deals
Refining Deals Deals relating to refineries.
Storage Terminals - Cost per Capacity Acquired
Storage Terminals - Cost per Capacity Acquired For storage terminal deals. Cost per boe acquired and cost per original unit acquired. Original unit refers to the native measurement of the product type i.e. mmcf for Gas and 000s of barrels for oil and oil products.
NPV Analysis
by Acquiring Company
by Acquiring Company Select this report and choose the acquiring company or companies that you are interested in.
by Asset Type (Limited to Past 5 Years)
by Asset Type (Limited to Past 5 Years) Select this report and select the resource type or kind of assets you are interested in.
by Company Ownership Type (Limited to Past 5 Years)
by Company Ownership Type (Limited to Past 5 Years) Select this report and select the kind of company for which you would like to see deals. For example, NOCs, Publicly Quoted, Private companies and so on.
by Company Country of Origin (Limited to Past 5 Years)
by Company Country of Origin (Limited to Past 5 Years) Select this report and select the country countries of origin you are interested in.
by Target Country (Limited to Past 5 Years)
by Target Country (Limited to Past 5 Years) Select this report and then choose the country or countries you wish to run the report for.
by Basin
by Basin For upstream deals. Select this report and then choose the basin(s) you wish to run the report for.
by Shale Play
by Shale Play Deals done for Shale Gas resources. Shale has such low permeability that it releases gas very slowly. However, shale can hold an enormous amount of natural gas. The most prolific shales are relatively flat, thick, and predictable, and the formations are so large that their wells will continue producing gas at a steady rate for decades - 30 years or more. Effective, economic hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling are the primary enabling technologies behind the recent surge in shale gas production. Horizontal drilling has been an efficient way of removing gas from conventional reservoirs, coal seams, and even from tight gas reservoirs. Shale gas wells are not hard to drill, but they are difficult to complete. In almost every case, the rock around the wellbore must be hydraulically fractured before the well can produce significant amounts of gas. Fracturing involves isolating sections of the well in the producing zone, then pumping fluids and proppant (grains of sand or other material used to hold the cracks open) down the wellbore through perforations in the casing and out into the shale. The pumped fluid, under pressures up to 8,000 psi, is enough to crack shale as much as 3,000 ft in each direction from the wellbore. In the deeper high-pressure shales, operators pump slickwater (a low-viscosity waterbased fluid) and proppant. Nitrogen-foamed fracturing fluids are commonly pumped on shallower shales and shales with low reservoir pressures. Gas shale reservoirs in the United States tend to be found within three depth ranges between 250and 8,000 ft. The New Albany and Antrim shales, for example, have some 9,000 wells in the range of250 to 2,000 ft. In the Appalachian basin shales and the Devonian and Lewis shales, there are about 20,000 wells from 3,000 to 5,000 ft. Although the Barnett and Woodford shales are much deeper, the Caney and Fayetteville shales are from 2,000 ft The Barnett Shale in the Fort Worth basin of North Central Texas is by far the most active shale gas play in the United States. The reservoir ranges from 100 ft to more than 1,000 ft in gross thickness and holds from 50-200 bcf of gas per square mile. The Gas Technology Institute estimates that organic shale reservoirs in the United States contain up to 780 trillion cu ft of gas. So far the United States is the only country with a large shale gas industry. Source: Schlumberger White Paper on Shale Gas
by Deal Status (Limited to Past 5 Years)
by Deal Status (Limited to Past 5 Years) Select this report and then choose the status of deal you wish to run the report for. Deal starus' include Completed, In-progress and Cancelled.
by Advisor
by Company (Acquisitions and Divestitures)
by Company (Acquisitions and Divestitures) Select this report and choose the acquiring/target company or companies that you are interested in.
Build Your Own Report
Build Your Own Report Use this report to specify the resource type, company ownership type, company country of origin and country in which the deal is done. This report gives you a summary of all the deals meeting your criteria. You can then edit it to add the data you want.
Onshore - Conventional (Limited to Past 5 Years)
Onshore - Conventional (Limited to Past 5 Years) Deals done for onshore E&P producing properties, reserves or acreage.
Offshore - Shallow Water
Offshore - Shallow Water Deals done for offshore shall-water producing properties, reserves or acreage.
Offshore - Deepwater
Offshore - Deepwater Deals done for offshore deepwater producing properties, reserves or acreage.
Shale Gas or Liquids
Shale Gas or Liquids Deals done for Shale Gas resources. Shale has such low permeability that it releases gas very slowly. However, shale can hold an enormous amount of natural gas. The most prolific shales are relatively flat, thick, and predictable, and the formations are so large that their wells will continue producing gas at a steady rate for decades - 30 years or more. Effective, economic hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling are the primary enabling technologies behind the recent surge in shale gas production. Horizontal drilling has been an efficient way of removing gas from conventional reservoirs, coal seams, and even from tight gas reservoirs. Shale gas wells are not hard to drill, but they are difficult to complete. In almost every case, the rock around the wellbore must be hydraulically fractured before the well can produce significant amounts of gas. Fracturing involves isolating sections of the well in the producing zone, then pumping fluids and proppant (grains of sand or other material used to hold the cracks open) down the wellbore through perforations in the casing and out into the shale. The pumped fluid, under pressures up to 8,000 psi, is enough to crack shale as much as 3,000 ft in each direction from the wellbore. In the deeper high-pressure shales, operators pump slickwater (a low-viscosity waterbased fluid) and proppant. Nitrogen-foamed fracturing fluids are commonly pumped on shallower shales and shales with low reservoir pressures. Gas shale reservoirs in the United States tend to be found within three depth ranges between 250and 8,000 ft. The New Albany and Antrim shales, for example, have some 9,000 wells in the range of250 to 2,000 ft. In the Appalachian basin shales and the Devonian and Lewis shales, there are about 20,000 wells from 3,000 to 5,000 ft. Although the Barnett and Woodford shales are much deeper, the Caney and Fayetteville shales are from 2,000 ft The Barnett Shale in the Fort Worth basin of North Central Texas is by far the most active shale gas play in the United States. The reservoir ranges from 100 ft to more than 1,000 ft in gross thickness and holds from 50-200 bcf of gas per square mile. The Gas Technology Institute estimates that organic shale reservoirs in the United States contain up to 780 trillion cu ft of gas. So far the United States is the only country with a large shale gas industry. Source: Schlumberger White Paper on Shale Gas
Oil Sands
Oil Sands Deals done in the oil sands sector
LNG
LNG Deals relating to LNG assets.
Power Deals - All
Power Deals - All Deals relating to Power
Power Deals - Renewable Sources
Power Deals - Renewable Sources Deals relating to Renewable Power
Pipelines
Pipelines Deals involving purchase or sale of oil and gas pipeline assets.
Refining
Marketing
Marketing Deals involving purchase or sale of marketing operations.
Oil Services Deals
Storage Terminals
Storage Terminals Deals involving purchase or sale of storage terminals
Coal Bed Methane
Coal Bed Methane Deals done for coal bed methane resources
All Deals Over $1 Billion Report
All Deals Over $1 Billion Report Select this report to view all deals where total consideration is in excess of US$1 billion
All Deals Over $500 Million Report
All Deals Over $500 Million Report Select this report to view all deals where total consideration is in excess of US$500 million
All Deals Over $50 Million Report
All Deals Over $50 Million Report Select this report to view all deals where total consideration is in excess of US$50 million
By Company Ownership Type (Limited to Past 5 Years)
Publicly Quoted
Publicly Quoted Deals done by publicly quoted companies.
Private Companies
Private Companies Deals done by privately owned companies
National Oil Companies
National Oil Companies Deals done by National Oil Companies
Hybrids (partly state-owned)
Hybrids (partly state-owned) Deals done by partly state-owned oil and gas companies
By Target Region (Limited to Past 5 Years)
North America
North America Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in North America
Latin America
Latin America Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Latin America.
Europe
Europe Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Europe
Asia - Central
Asia - Central Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Asia Cenral
Asia - Pacific
Asia - Pacific Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Asia Pacific
Middle East
Middle East Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in the Middle East
Africa - Central
Africa - Central Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Africa Central
Africa - North
Africa - North Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Africa North
Africa - Southern
Africa - Southern Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Africa Southern
Africa - East
Africa - East Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Africa East
Africa - West
Africa - West Corporate, asset and farm-in deals done in Africa West
By Company Country of Origin (Limited to Past 5 Years)
US
US Deals done by companies based in the United States
Canadian
Canadian Deals done by companies based in Canada
European
European Deals done by companies based in Europe.
S. American
S. American Deals done by companies based in South America
Asia/Pacific
Asia/Pacific Deals done by companies based in the Asia/Pacific region.
Chinese
Chinese Deals done by companies based in China
Russian
Russian Deals done by companies based in Russia.
Middle Eastern
Middle Eastern Deals done by companies based in the Middle East.
Welcome GUEST
As a Guest user you have access to:
Key oil & gas company data for 2006/7
Summary M&A deals in global oil and gas
Up to 12 months of company news
REGISTER for FREE to get more:
Key oil & gas company data up to 2008
Latest M&A deals in global oil and gas
Up to 18 months of company news
Download data to Excel
View results in any currency
All Deals Over $50 Million (Previous 5 years)
All Deals Over $50 Million (Previous 5 years) Select this report to view all deals where total consideration is in excess of US$50 million
All Deals - Post-2016
All Deals - Post-2016 All deals in the Evaluate Energy M&A database
All E&P Deals - Post-2016
All E&P Deals - Post-2016 All E&P deals, whether conventional or unconventional. Please Edit this report to add more data or edit its content.
All E&P Farm In Deals - Post-2016
All E&P Farm In Deals - Post-2016 All E&P farm in deals. You can Edit this report to add data or customise content.
All E&P License Deals - Post-2016
All E&P License Deals - Post-2016 All E&P licensing deals. You can Edit this report to add data or customise content.
All R&M Deals
All R&M Deals All refining and marketing deals. Please Edit this report to add data or customise content.
All Midstream Deals
All Midstream Deals All midstream deals. You can Edit this report to add data or customise content.