Diamond Offshore Sues Beach Energy for Terminating Drilling Contract

Monday, April 27, 2020

Bankrupt Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc has sued Australian oil and gas producer Beach Energy Ltd for abruptly terminating a $65 million drilling contract.

Beach Energy ended the agreement, claiming Diamond Offshore missed a "contractual milestone to deliver the rig", the contract driller said in a lawsuit filed on Sunday with the Southern District of Texas, Houston.

Seeking the court to declare the termination notice invalid, the Houston-based company, which filed for bankruptcy protection on Sunday, said the delay was "largely of Beach's own making".

It alleged that Beach Energy's action pointed to an attempt to renegotiate the deal "for more favorable terms".

Beach on Tuesday denied the allegation and said it "will defend any claim that the contract was not validly terminated".

Under the drilling agreement, the rig would have been used to drill six wells over a year and Diamond Offshore stood to earn at least $65 million.

Diamond Offshore said it had spent more than $100 million to prepare and transport the deepwater rig to execute the drilling program in the Otway Basin off the southern coast of Australia to fulfill the contract.

Beach announced on April 20 it had exercised its right to terminate the contract as the Ocean Onyx rig had arrived in Victorian state waters in mid-April, which the company said was later than had been agreed.

It said last week it had "a good working relationship with Diamond" and on Tuesday said "despite the commencement of legal proceedings Beach is engaged in without prejudice discussions with regard to the future operations of the Ocean Onyx rig and the Victorian Otway Basin offshore drilling campaign."

Diamond Offshore sought bankruptcy protection in Texas after it skipped an interest payment and said it had retained restructuring advisers.

Loews Corp was Diamond Offshore's largest shareholder, with 53% as of April 3, according to Refinitiv data.

Prices and demand for oilfield services have worsened since the "price war" between Saudi Arabia and Russia and a steep cut in oil demand caused by the coronavirus pandemic.


(Reporting by Arathy S Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur and Sam Holmes)

Categories: Legal Drilling Industry News Australia/NZ Rigs

Related Stories

Australia and Timor-Leste Push to Advance Greater Sunrise Gas Field

Seadrill Firms Up Offshore Drilling Workload with Multi-Region Contract Awards

Woodside to Supply LNG to JERA During Japan's Winter Peak

Murphy Oil Appraisal Well Boosts Resource Outlook at Field off Vietnam

ADNOC Takes FID on SARB Deep Gas Project Offshore Abu Dhabi

Eni Makes Significant Gas Discovery Offshore Indonesia

ADES Nets $63M Contract for Compact Driller Jack-Up off Brunei

Pharos Energy Kicks Off Drilling Campaign Offshore Vietnam

Energy Drilling’s EDrill-2 Rig Starts Ops for PTTEP in Gulf of Thailand

Vietsovpetro Brings BK-24 Oil Platform Online Two Months Early

Current News

Japan's Mitsui in Advanced Talks for Stake in Qatar’s North Field LNG Project

Japan’s JERA Agrees Long-Term LNG Supply from Middle East

QatarEnergy, Petronas Ink 20-Year LNG Supply Agreement

Eni Enlists Shearwater for 3D Seismic Survey in Timor Sea

Conrad, Empyrean Agree Settlement Framework Over Duyung PSC Interests

Northern Offshore’s Energy Emerger Rig Up for Drilling Job off Oman

Petronas Plans Ramp-Up in Exploration, Production Over Three Years

Australia and Timor-Leste Push to Advance Greater Sunrise Gas Field

MODEC, Eld Energy Partnership Targets Low-Carbon FPSO Power

JERA Lifts First LNG Cargo From Barossa Gas Project in Australia

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com