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CGG conducts magnetic survey offshore South Africa

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Oilfield Technology,


CGG has announced that it will commence a multi-client airborne gravity and magnetic survey offshore South Africa. The Petroleum Agency of South Africa (PASA) has authorised the programme, which will extend across two blocks totaling approximately 78 000 line km. The survey areas are located offshore Cape Agulhas (West Bredasdorp area) and offshore Durban (Eastern Margin area). Data acquisition will commence in January 2016 and is anticipated to take four months utilising specialised geophysical survey aircraft. The project has received significant prefunding from the oil industry; survey data and interpretation products will be available for licensing in mid-2016.

The survey will provide partial coverage of the Western Bredasdorp, Durban and Zululand basins and the data will aid with mapping crystalline basement and magnetic and density anomalies within the sedimentary section. The airborne survey will allow data collection through the “transition zone” from the marine environment to the near-shore.

A comprehensive interpretation, combining this new data set with available geologic and geophysical data, will also be undertaken by CGG’s in-house interpretation team. Deliverables will include a full geophysical interpretation report, including definition of basement lithology and structure, mapping of sediment fairways and depositional-centres and any intrusives or salt which may be present in the sedimentary section. The final results will be presented in ArcGIS® format for assimilation into the clients’ own seismic, geological and well control databases.

PASA Acting Chief Executive Officer, Mrs Lindiwe Mekwe, said: “The oil industry’s funding of CGG’s early-phase exploration effort offshore South Africa is a testament to the prospectivity of the region. PASA expects that the geological insights of the West Bredasdorp and Eastern Margin areas gained from the CGG survey will attract further exploration investment and help focus explorers’ efforts.”

Greg Paleolog, Senior Vice President, Multi-Physics, CGG, said: "Our multi-client South Africa project will be a great addition to our existing multi-client gravity & magnetic database that contains over 16 million line kilometers of profile data. It will result in a unique exploration dataset in an exciting frontier area about which we have, as yet, very little information regarding active petroleum systems."

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