Romania: Parapet and Alerion...

Romanian renewable energy engineering company Parapet has signed seven new contracts with Italian...

North Macedonia: Day-ahead power...

In October 2025, electricity trading on North Macedonia’s day-ahead market reached 146,498 MWh,...

Greece: ExxonMobil, Energean and...

A new stage in Greece’s offshore energy exploration has begun as ExxonMobil, Energean,...

Croatia: CROPEX electricity trading...

In October 2025, a total of 1,449,339.1 MWh of electricity was traded on...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeSEE Energy NewsSEE region: OMV...

SEE region: OMV Petrom to operate Han Asparuh offshore perimeter in Bulgaria

OMV Petrom replaced TotalEnergies as the operator of the Han Asparuh deep water perimeter in Bulgaria, according to unnamed sources, local media reported.

The Romanian company, part of the Austrian group OMV, is also negotiating to take over the 57% majority stake from the French company. It already owns the remaining 43% stake.

Han Asparuh is adjacent to the Neptun Deep perimeter in Romania, also operated by OMV Petrom, but the gas output estimated so far is slightly larger.

Last summer, TotalEnergies EP Bulgaria CEO Yves Le Stunff said the Han Asparuh perimeter is estimated to have the potential to produce a total of 13 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year from two fields, compared to 8 billion cubic meters per year during 2030-2040 (the “plateau” period) estimated at Neptun Deep.

The Vinekh field, located near Turkish waters, is expected to produce about 5 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year from 2030 to 2040 and then 3 billion cubic meters per year over the next decade, Le Stunff told the Bulgarian Parliamentary Committee on Energy.

The Krum field is expected to produce 8 billion cubic meters per year between 2031 and 2044, rising to 4 billion cubic meters per year by 2050, according to Le Stunff’s presentation.

The project partners plan to start exploratory drilling for natural gas in the Han Asparuh block in the second quarter of 2024, Le Stunff said. Alternative exploratory drilling work is also planned, with each exploratory drilling process expected to cost around USD 100 million, romania-insider.com reports.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

Romania: Parapet and Alerion sign seven new solar projects totaling 80 MW

Romanian renewable energy engineering company Parapet has signed seven new contracts with Italian renewables developer Alerion, expanding their long-term partnership with projects totaling nearly 80.8 MW across Romania and Italy. Construction will take place in Romania’s Teleorman and Călărași counties...

North Macedonia: Day-ahead power trading jumps 82% year-on-year in October 2025

In October 2025, electricity trading on North Macedonia’s day-ahead market reached 146,498 MWh, marking an 81.7% increase compared to the same month last year and a 43% rise from September. According to the market operator MEMO, the average market-clearing price...

Greece: ExxonMobil, Energean and Helleniq launch new offshore exploration phase in Ionian Sea

A new stage in Greece’s offshore energy exploration has begun as ExxonMobil, Energean, and Helleniq Energy signed a farm-in agreement granting them joint ownership of 60% in Block 2 of the Ionian Sea, located northwest of Corfu. The signing...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!