Trio Petroleum secures producing oil assets in Saskatchewan’s heavy oil basin

Trio Petroleum Corporation has completed the acquisition of producing oil assets from Novacor Exploration in the prolific Lloydminster region of Canada, consolidating its strategic presence in North America's heavy oil sector.

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

US-based Trio Petroleum Corporation has finalised the acquisition of producing oil and gas assets located in the Lloydminster region of Saskatchewan, Canada. The assets, previously owned by Novacor Exploration Ltd, include two properties designated TWP47 and TWP48, both situated within one of North America’s leading heavy oil production zones. The transaction amounts to USD650,000, paid in cash in two tranches, and supplemented by the issuance of 526,536 common shares of Trio Petroleum.

Assets with immediate production

The acquired properties comprise seven currently producing wells, generating approximately 70 barrels of heavy crude oil per day from the McLaren/Sparky and Lloydminster formations. Production from these wells, operated by Novacor, is subject to Freehold Royalties ranging from 13.5% to 15% and a 2% Gross Overriding Royalty (GORR) on part of the site. The deal also includes two fully equipped sites and four additional wells ready for reactivation, each with the potential to yield up to 70 additional barrels per day.

Low-cost development potential

A reserve report prepared by Petrotech and Associates in August 2024 estimated total proved and probable reserves of 91,500 barrels for the currently producing wells. Novacor will remain the operator and foresees further development, including multi-lateral drilling opportunities targeting the Sparky GP formation. The assets’ lift cost, set at CAD10 per barrel, supports strong profitability even amid fluctuating oil prices.

Strategic expansion objective

This initial entry into Canada positions Trio Petroleum in a market dominated by major firms such as Cenovus Energy, Canadian Natural Resources and Baytex Energy. Robin Ross, Chief Executive Officer of Trio Petroleum, emphasised that the partnership with Novacor — a longstanding regional player — will be central to the company’s growth strategy. Trio plans to continue its expansion in the sector by leveraging controlled operating costs and the opportunity to acquire highly economic fields.

Hungary increases oil product exports to Serbia to offset the imminent shutdown of the NIS refinery, threatened by US sanctions over its Russian majority ownership.
Faced with falling oil production, Pemex is expanding local refining through Olmeca, aiming to reduce fuel imports and optimise its industrial capacity under fiscal pressure.
Brazil’s state oil company will reduce its capital spending by 2%, hit by falling crude prices, marking a strategic shift under Lula’s presidency.
TotalEnergies has finalised the sale of its 12.5% stake in Nigeria’s offshore Bonga oilfield for $510mn, boosting Shell and Eni’s positions in the strategic deepwater production site.
Serbia is preparing a budget law amendment to enable the takeover of NIS, a refinery under US sanctions and owned by Russian groups, to avoid an imminent energy shutdown.
Nigeria’s Dangote refinery selects US-based Honeywell to supply technology that will double its crude processing capacity and expand its petrochemical output.
Iraq secures production by bypassing US sanctions through local payments, energy-for-energy swaps, and targeted suspension of financial flows to Lukoil to protect West Qurna-2 exports.
Restarting Olympic Pipeline’s 16-inch line does not restore full supply to Oregon and Seattle-Tacoma airport, both still exposed to logistical risks and regional price tensions.
Faced with tightened sanctions from the United States and European Union, Indian refiners are drastically reducing their purchases of Russian crude from December, according to industry sources.
Serbia’s only refinery, operated by NIS, may be forced to halt production this week, weakened by US sanctions targeting its Russian shareholders.
Glencore's attributable production in Cameroon dropped by 31% over nine months, adding pressure on public revenues as Yaoundé revises its oil and budget forecasts amid field maturity and targeted investment shifts.
The profitability of speculative positioning strategies on Brent is declining, while contrarian approaches targeting extreme sentiment levels are proving more effective, marking a significant regime shift in oil trading.
Alaska is set to record its highest oil production increase in 40 years, driven by two key projects that extend the operational life of the TAPS pipeline and reinforce the United States' strategic presence in the Arctic.
TotalEnergies increases its stake to 90% in Nigeria’s offshore block OPL257 following an asset exchange deal with Conoil Producing Limited.
TotalEnergies and Chevron are seeking to acquire a 40% stake in the Mopane oil field in Namibia, owned by Galp, as part of a strategy to secure new resources in a high-potential offshore basin.
The reduction of Rosneft’s stake in Kurdistan Pipeline Company shifts control of the main Kurdish oil pipeline and recalibrates the balance between US sanctions, export financing and regional crude governance.
Russian group Lukoil seeks to sell its assets in Bulgaria after the state placed its refinery under special administration, amid heightened US sanctions against the Russian oil industry.
US authorities will hold a large offshore oil block sale in the Gulf of America in March, covering nearly 80 million acres under favourable fiscal terms.
Sonatrach awarded Chinese company Sinopec a contract to build a new hydrotreatment unit in Arzew, aimed at significantly increasing the country's gasoline production.
The American major could take over part of Lukoil’s non-Russian portfolio, under strict oversight from the U.S. administration, following the collapse of a deal with Swiss trader Gunvor.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.