Baytex Energy Corp., an oil and gas corporation based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, has agreed to acquire Aurora Oil & Gas Ltd. for $2.6 billion, providing Baytex with 22,200 net contiguous acres in the Sugarkane field of the Eagle Ford shale play in South Texas. The total consideration to be paid by Baytex is $1.8 billion, plus assumed debt of $744 million, for a total transaction value of $2.6 billion. All amounts are in Canadian dollars.
Aurora’s fourth-quarter 2013 gross production was 24,678 boe/d (82% liquids) of predominantly light, high-quality crude oil. The company forecasted this year’s average gross production at 29,000–32,000 boe/d, about a 43% increase from 2013.
The Sugarkane field has been largely delineated with infrastructure in place, facilitating low-risk future annual production growth. The company noted that the assets have future reserves upside potential from well downspacing, improving completion techniques, and new development targets in additional zones.
Following the purchase, Baytex’s 2014 production is expected to reach 85,000 boe/d, comprising 53% heavy oil, 34% light oil and liquids, and 13% natural gas. The deal gives Baytex additional proved reserves of 106.7 million boe and proved plus probable reserves of 166.6 million boe.
Regarding the acquisition, Baytex President and CEO James Bowzer said, “Baytex will acquire premier acreage in the core of the Eagle Ford, one of the leading shale oil plays in the US. The acquisition will provide our shareholders with exposure to low-risk, repeatable, high-return projects with leading capital efficiencies. This is a highly accretive transaction on a per share basis to reserves, production, and funds from operations. The Eagle Ford play provides not only exposure to light oil, but also to Gulf Coast crude oil markets with established transportation systems. A portion of the produced crude oil benefits from Louisiana Light Sweet based pricing, which currently trades at a premium to WTI.”
In 2012, Baytex purchased 100% working interest in 46 sections of undeveloped oil sands leases in the Cold Lake region of northeastern Alberta, Canada, for $120 million. Provincial authorities had conditionally approved the company’s 1,200 steam-assisted gravity drainage (SAGD) pilot and a 10,000-b/d development that was expected to launch in 2013.
Baytex is engaged in the acquisition, development, and production of crude oil and natural gas in the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin and in the Williston Basin in the US.