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1 October 2005 Energy Summit 2005: Louisiana’s Integration with Global Energy Markets.

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Presentation on theme: "1 October 2005 Energy Summit 2005: Louisiana’s Integration with Global Energy Markets."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 October 2005 Energy Summit 2005: Louisiana’s Integration with Global Energy Markets

2 2 I. Corporate Overview II. Historical Perspective III. Beginnings of CO 2 IV. Current Presence V. The Future VI. Questions or Comments Table of Contents

3 3 Company Snapshot ►Market Cap (7/31/05):  Approx. $2.7 Billion ►Proved Reserves (12/31/04):  129.4 Million BOE – (55% Developed) (101 MMBbls Oil / 168 Bcf Gas) ►Production (2Q05):  30,469 BOE per Day ►Production Profile (2Q05):  Approx. 68% Oil / 32% Gas ►Total Debt (7/31/05):  $245 Million* ►Unused Bank Borrowing Base (7/31/05):  $180 Million * Excludes approximately $7 million of capital leases.

4 4 Historical Perspective New Orleans Baton Rouge L O U I S I A N A M I S S I S S I P P I Jackson Meridian ►Denbury was Founded in 1990 ►Acquisition and Exploitation Company  Goal – Double the Reserves Acquired ►Geological Focus on Exploiting What Others had Left Behind ►Major Oil Companies were Exiting MS ►Acquisition Opportunities were Plentiful ►Acquisitions were Funded with Debt and then Subsequently the Debt was Repaid by Issuing Equity ►Reserves Grew from Essentially Nothing in 1990 to almost 65 MMBoes at 12/31/97  27+ MMBoes Attributed to Heidelberg Field which was Purchased on 12/31/97  Then 1998 Occurred!!!  Year End Reserves were 36+ MMBOes  Oil Price - Averaged $7.40/Bbl net to field McComb Operating Areas 1998

5 5 Beginnings of CO 2

6 6 Beginnings of CO 2 ….. ►Company Financial Strategy Changed  Live within Cash Flow for Operations  Acquisitions were still plentiful  Equity Markets were all but Closed to Oil and Gas Companies ►Cash Flow was Significantly Low due to Oil Prices  No Employees were Laid-Off  Began Studying all of our Assets  Re-discovered some CO 2 Studies and CO 2 Pilot Projects that had been Performed in our East MS Assets  Began Looking for Ways to Develop this Potential  CO 2 Source was 90 miles Away ►Several Years Earlier DRI Reviewed a CO 2 Flood Acquisition  Active CO 2 Flood in West MS  Acquired Little Creek Field  Educate Ourselves on an Active Flood Prior to Spending the Capital to Build a 90 Mile Pipeline.

7 7 Beginnings of CO 2 ….. ►Why CO 2 ?  Low Risk Profile –Millions of Barrels of Oil had Already Been Produced From Prospective Fields  Applicable to Many of the Fields DRI Already Owned and Operated  Essentially No Competition for CO 2 Assets  Large Volume of CO 2 Available

8 8 Current Presence

9 9 Southwest Mississippi CO 2 (1) Reserve Growth (MMBOE) 88 60 28 (1) Based on 12/31/04 SEC proved reserves plus inception to date production Gross Oil Production DRI Operated Only Jackson Dome CO2 Pipeline Mallalieu Brookhaven Little Creek Lazy Creek Lockhart Crossing McComb Jackson New Orleans Baton Rouge Meridian McComb M I S S I S S I P P I L O U I S I A N A Smithdale

10 10 Proved Reserves (SEC Pricing) 36.4 60.2 87.4 90.7 114.2 Net Proved Reserves (MMBOE) 112.2 129.4 Excludes All Historical Offshore - 10 22 24 31 39 CO 2, % of Total Reserves

11 11 Average Daily Production (BOE/d) 16,748 21,399 31,185 35,573 34,704 Increasing Volumes of Light Sweet Oil from Tertiary CO 2 Flooding (1) Defined as less than $2.00 NYMEX variance (1) 28,086 30,469

12 12 Mallalieu, West Field Mallalieu, West Unit: 3,574 Acres Phase I Pilot Phase V Phase II Phase IV Phase III ACTIVE CO 2 INJECTOR WELLS LEGEND WATER INJECTOR WELL ACTIVE CO 2 PRODUCERS

13 13 Mallalieu, West Field CO 2 InjectionWTR Injection PDPPNPPUDDPL/P&A As of 12/31/02: 899 BOPD As of 07/18/05: 5,295 BOPD Phase I Pilot Phase V Phase II Phase III Phase IV Phase I Pilot Phase V Phase II Phase III Phase IV

14 14 Jackson Dome (CO 2 Source) Current Rate: 263 MMscf/d as of 07/2005 Deliverability: 385 MMscf/d Sweet CO 2 100 MMscf/d Sour CO 2 485 MMscf/d Sweet/Sour CO 2 Peak Rate: 665 MMscf/d in 2009

15 15 CO 2 Business Model – Phase 2 Constructing East Mississippi CO 2 Pipeline Existing CO 2 Pipeline Cumulative Production

16 16 CO 2 Business Model – Phases 1 & 2 Projected Net Oil Production Combined Phases Yield Predictable Growth Thru 2011 25% Annual Production Growth (2004–2011) Note: Forecast based on internal management estimates. Actual results may vary. Net BOPD

17 17 The Future

18 18 Future CO 2 Projects RegionNo. of Reservoirs Estimated Recoverable (MMBbls) Louisiana1281,430 – 3,240 Mississippi17150 – 330 Texas (District 3)541,020 – 2,290 Total1992,600 – 5,860 Estimated Recoverable Reserves from CO 2 -EOR Source: U.S. Department of Energy report dated March 2005 – “Basin Oriented Strategies for CO 2 Enhanced Oil Recovery: Onshore Gulf Coast”. Potential Expansion Throughout Gulf Coast Region

19 19 Current CO 2 Sources & Pipelines Great Plains Coal Gasification Plant LeBarge Ridgeway CO 2 Discovery McElmo Dome Sheep Mountain Bravo Dome Ammonia Plant Gas Plants Jackson Dome Rockies 5 Fields – Additional 2 Proposed (Anadarko) 19,520 Gross Bbls/d Operators: Exxon/Chevron/Merit CO 2 Source: Natural/Manufacturing Rockies Permian Basin 42 Fields 155,000 Gross Bbls/d Operator: Multiple (16) CO 2 Source: Natural Permian Basin Mid-Continent 4 Fields 9,800 Gross Bbls/d Operators: Exxon/Anadarko/Chaparral CO 2 Source: Manufacturing Mid-Continent Eastern Gulf Coast 3 Fields 12,000 Gross Bbls/d Operator: Denbury CO 2 Source: Natural Eastern Gulf Coast CO 2 to Canada Prolific Natural Sources of CO 2 are Associated with Volcanic Activity and are Very Rare

20 20 The Future…. ►South Louisiana  Positives –Great Reservoirs –Light Sweet Crude –Tax Relief is Available  Negatives –Majority of Reservoirs are in water locations (higher costs) –No Distribution Network –Most Likely CO 2 Source will be Industrial Waste –Net Revenue Interest are low compared to other basins –State Tax on Oil is 12.5% which is twice what most states collect CO2 Pipeline McComb Jackson New Orleans Baton Rouge Meridian Planned 80 Mile Pipeline Potential 120 Mile Pipeline Jackson Dome

21 21 The Future…. ►Other Areas  Essentially all Depletion Drive Oil Reservoirs are CO 2 Candidates ►Where is the CO 2 going to come from?  Naturally Occurring Sources –New Mexico, Arizona  Anthropogenic Sources –Refineries –Separation from Conventional Gas Reservoirs, LaBarge –Power Plants, CO 2 Fired –Chemical Plants –Synthetic Fuel Sources ►The Sources are Available  Cost of Recovery?  Cost of Distribution?

22 22 Questions or Comments


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