Hess Seeks $30-40 Mln from Schlumberger in Well Valve Dispute

July 27, 2016

Hess Corp said on Wednesday it was pursuing legal action against Schlumberger NV for as much as $40 million, claiming the oilfield service provider supplied a defective valve for a U.S. Gulf of Mexico oilfield that shuttered three wells and crimped production.

Hess took the unusual step of announcing the move on its quarterly earnings conference call, publicly mentioning Schlumberger and decrying the quality of service and parts provided.
Photo: Hess
Photo: Hess
Oil producers such as Hess have been battling with Schlumberger and other oilfield service providers over price and other financial matters at a time when depressed crude prices have eroded profits for the entire industry.
"It's extremely disappointing," Greg Hill, chief operating officer at Hess, said on the earnings call of the alleged defective valve.
Schlumberger representatives were not immediately available to comment.
Hess claims it is owed between $30 million and $40 million in remediation fees, attorney fees and lost profit from the shutdown of some wells at its deepwater Tubular Bells field, roughly 135 miles southeast of New Orleans.
Two of Tubular's four wells had been closed in the second quarter for regular maintenance that was supposed to last 31 days. But Hess said a faulty valve earlier this month forced the closure of another well.
As a result, Hess slashed its production outlook from the Tubular project to about 10,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d) for the year, down from previous estimates for at least 25,000 boe/d.
"It relates to some quality control and some of the components of the valve," Hill said.
He did not say if Hess had filed a lawsuit or was seeking arbitration.
Hess said it expects the platform to be fully back online later this year.
Hess holds a stake of about 57 percent in the Tubular project, with Chevron holding the rest. Chevron was not immediately available for comment.
Earlier on Wednesday, Hess reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss, but cut its 2016 budget, citing depressed crude prices.
Shares of Hess fell 5.5 percent to $50.77 in Wednesday midday trading. Shares of Schlumberger fell 0.9 percent to $79.93.


(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Terry Wade and David Gregorio)

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