Shell begins critical flow tests on Namibia well to gauge scale of promising oil discovery

Shell has just started carrying out flow tests on a key appraisal well drilled on its large Jonker oil discovery in Namibia’s Orange basin. The Jonker-2A well is being drilled an impressive 23 kilometres from the discovery well and was spudded in late November by semi-submersible rig Deepsea Bollsta.

Shell carried out a flow test in the early hours of this morning at the deepwater probe, according to satellite data which showed flaring at the drilling location. A spokesperson for the supermajor declined to respond.

Jonker is expected to be the first of Shell’s four discoveries in Namibia to be developed. Jonker-2A is located about 7.5 kilometres southwest of Jonker-1A — the first appraisal well — and 23 kilometres west of the Jonker-1 discovery well, a distance that would seem to indicate the scale of this deep-water discovery. In addition, according to data from marine intelligence provider VesselsValue, this latest delineation well is located just two kilometres from the boundary of TotalEnergies’ block 2913B which hosts the huge Venus discovery.”

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