Statoil ASA (STO) said Thursday it and its partners had substantially
upgraded estimates for the Brazilian Campos basin pre-salt oil and gas
discoveries, to a total 1.24 billion barrels of oil equivalent, and the
Norwegian oil giant said this also increased its optimism for its geologically
similar acreage in 
Angola
. 
	
	
Statoil said the companies had updated their estimates of the Brazilian
discoveries Seat, Gavea and Pao de Acucar to a total of 700 million barrels of
oil and three trillion cubic feet of natural gas--which is equal to 540 million
barrels of oil equivalent--after previously estimating the discoveries as
"high impact," defined as more than 250 million barrels of oil
equivalent, or a share of 100 million barrels for Statoil alone. 
	
	
Pre-salt, a geological formation off the African and Brazilian coast, is
expected to contain huge amounts of oil and gas that could contribute billions
of new barrels to global reserves and help Statoil fulfill its goal of
increasing its daily international production to 1.1 million barrels by 2020,
from about 600,000 barrels currently. 
	
	
But these resources are buried under a thick layer of salt at huge water
depths, which means wells are much more complicated and risky to drill than
conventional offshore wells. 
	
	
The Brazilian discoveries are "more than one billion barrels combined, so
it's really significant," Statoil's vice president of exploration Tim
Dodson told reporters in 
Oslo
. 
	
	
Operator Repsol Sinopec, a joint venture between 
Spain
's
Repsol YPF SA (REP.MC) and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. [600028.SH],
holds 35% in the pre-salt block BM-C-33, Petrobras (PETR4.BR) holds 30% and
Statoil 35%. Production is shared according to each company's stake. 
	
	
He said the companies are learning new things about their pre-salt acreage all
the time. 
	
	
"The reservoir type and the oil type is different. The oil is light and
good, and we are very encouraged by that," Dodson told Dow Jones
Newswires, adding that the presence of gas makes production somewhat more
complicated than if it had only been oil. 
	
	
Dodson said that at around 2,800 meters water depth the discoveries are fairly
complicated to drill, but that the reservoirs are better than expected. 
	
	
"It is a special type of reservoir. It doesn't necessarily mean it is
difficult to produce, but it is difficult to predict and to know where the
reservoir is. It isn't a conventional sandstone reservoir like we have in 
Norway
,"
he said. 
	
	
The original Brazilian pre-salt discoveries were made in the 
Santos
 basin
to the south, he explained, while Statoil and partners' more recent discoveries
are situated in the 
Campos
basin, further from the Brazilian coast. The Pao de Acucar discovery is 195
kilometers off 
Rio de Janeiro
. 
	
	
"We see a lot of upside potential in this part of the 
Campos
basin. Unfortunately, that isn't readily available because there is no license
rounds planned for this basin," he said, adding that Brazilian authorities
has no plans to open the area for the time being. 
	
	
Dodson said that his optimism about the potential of Statoil's pre-salt acreage
in the Angolan Kwanza basin had also been strengthened by the Brazilian
discoveries. 
	
	
"This juxtaposes on the Angolan acreages," Dodson said, adding that
the news flow the last months has been positive towards Statoil's Angolan
position. "We are nicely flanked now by these big, light oil, pre-salt
discoveries, so that's a good sign." 
	
	
At 1325
GMT, Statoil shares traded 1.3% higher at NOK138.230.