Interoil Exploration & Production ASA: Production update June 2010

The average production in June 2010, compared to the average production in May 2010,
was:

Production* June 2010 May 2010
Peru 3’197 3’392
Colombia 1’861 2’100
Total 5’058 5’492

*The production is average daily production (bopd) and is working interest before
royalty

The production in Colombia in May includes test production from Altair-1. Juni
production does not include any production from Altair.

Oil has been sold at average sales price of USD 73.47 in Peru and USD 68.89 in Colombia
per barrel during May.

For more information please contact:

Fredrik von Zernichow

Investor Relation Manager

Tel: +47 6751 8661

Mob: +47 9927 3843

Fax: +47 6751 8660

E-mail: f.zernichow@interoil.no mailto:f.zernichow@interoil.no

www.interoil.no

***************************

InterOil Exploration & Production ASA is a Norwegian based exploration and production
company – listed on the Oslo Stock Exchange – with focus on Latin-America. The company
is operator of several production and exploration assets in Peru and Colombia, and is an
active license partner in Angola and Ghana. InterOil currently employs approximately 250
people and is headquartered in Oslo.

This information is subject of the disclosure requirements acc. to §5-12 vphl (Norwegian
Securities Trading Act)

100 missing after motorboat sinks in Amazon river

Lima, May 26 — At least 100 people went missing on Wednesday in Peru after the motorboat they were travelling in sank in the Amazon river, Peruvian radio station RPP reported. According to RPP, some 80 survivors had been rescued, and two bodies had also been recovered.

The motorboat Camila, which had a capacity for 160 passengers and according to survivors was carrying at least 200 at the time of the accident, sank as it travelled through the village of Santa Rosa, near the Colombian border. It reportedly had a hole in its hull.

The accident happened around 2 am, when most of the passengers were asleep. The authorities took a long time to reach this remote area, and preliminary rescue efforts were carried out by locals

Deadly landslide buries village

At least 28 people are dead and scores more are missing and injured after a mudslide triggered by heavy rainfall in Peru’s Huanuco region.

Officials say the massive avalanche completely engulfed the small town of Porvenir and isolated nearby villages.

Emergency workers are providing food and shelter for hundreds of people forced to abandon their homes.

Other reports put the number of missing in the village of Ambo in the hundreds.

“An entire village, some 400 people, has completely vanished,” Jorge Espinoza, a senior official in the Huanuco region, earlier told N television.

“Some will be saved, but it appears the majority were buried.”

It was unclear how many people were in the village late Thursday when heavy rains sparked the disaster.

The civil defence chief of the Huanuco region, Hipolito Cruchaga, told reporters a rockslide left 120 homes in the area damaged or destroyed.

He says rescue crews, firefighters, military and police are all working the disaster site in search of survivors.

The bodies of some victims have been plucked from the swollen Huallaga River downstream from the village of Ambo, while others have had to be dug out of the mud, local media reported.

Mr Cruchaga says emergency aid for hundreds of people who evacuated their homes has begun to arrive in Ambo, including tents, blankets and food supplies.

Peru has had one of its heaviest rainy seasons in decades, and officials say the rock and mudslide was triggered by a small lake higher up a mountain which overflowed into a ravine.

It is the second deadly mudslide in as many days, with five people killed in a similar incident in the town of Cancejos yesterday.

Just this week the country’s main tourist site, Machu Picchu, was re-opened after severe mudslides devastated the area two months ago.

Haitian children rescued from traffickers

Authorities in Bolivia have rescued 19 children and teenagers thought to have been kidnapped in Haiti by human trafficking gangs.

A state prosecutor says the children are now being looked after by the Bolivian government and a search is continuing for at least eight others.

The 19 children who are now being looked after in a safe house in Santa Cruz were in a party of 88 Haitians who entered Bolivia from Peru on tourist visas in January.

It is not clear when they left Haiti, but one report indicates they set off on their journey – which took them through the Dominican Republic, Panama and Peru – two days before the earthquake which devastated large parts of Haiti on January 12.

Prosecuting authorities in Bolivia suspect the children were being trafficked for sexual exploitation and three people have been arrested – two Haitians and a Bolivian.

Delhi Police arrest three Peruvian nationals for alleged theft

New Delhi, March 10 (ANI): Delhi Police arrested three Peruvian nationals, including a woman, on Wednesday for their alleged involvement in stealing foreigners” belongings from star rated hotels in the national capital.

The three accused, two men and a woman, were arrested after the police received complaints of a couple of thefts from prime hotels in the capital.

The arrested men were identified as Vicnta Montotyo Chipana and Francisco Cordoya Jaime while the woman”s name is Falicita Infs Iparraguirre Aliaga.

“There have been several incidents of bag lifting at five star hotels reported in the recent past. We have arrested some foreign nationals from Peru. Two men and a woman have been arrested. The men belonged to the age group of 71 and 45 respectively whereas the woman is aged 51. They primarily attempted theft at the Taj Man Singh and Park Hotels but more incidents have been reported from other hotels. That will depend on the recoveries. It is quite sure that they have been doing this for the past 15 to 17 days as they arrived in India on 20 February. And these incidents happened after 25 February,” said Additional Commissioner of Police, New Delhi district, Shankar Dash.

He also gave details of the stolen articles recovered from them.

“Mobile phones, laptops, I-pods and some cash have been recovered from them. Their targets were always the foreigners. An Indonesian lady was victimised from Taj Man Singh Hotel whereas a Malaysian lady was victimised from Park Hotel. Now they have been arrested hopefully, such incidents don”t happen in future,” added Shankar Dash.

The arrest could be possible during scrutiny of people through the CCTV footage after a couple of persons identified them as the suspects.

Their photographs had been circulated to the security wings of various star rated hotels in the national capital. (ANI)

EU in trade deal with Colombia, Peru – sources

BRUSSELS, March 1 (Reuters) – The European Union has reached a free trade agreement with Colombia and Peru, sources close to the negotiations said on Monday.

The European Commission, the EU executive in charge of trade policy in the 27-nation bloc, held the ninth round of negotiations with the two Latin American countries over the past week.

“Yes, there has been a deal (reached) with both countries, Colombia and Peru,” one of the sources said, adding that details would be announced later on Monday. (Reporting by Bate Felix, editing by Dale Hudson)

Pre Inca citadel found in Zana River’s upper basin in Peru

Lima (Peru), September 11 (ANI): Peruvian archaeologist Walter Alva has confirmed that a pre-Inca citadel has been found in Zana river’s upper basin, between the departments of Lambayeque and Cajamarca in Peru.

According to a report in ‘Living in Peru’, it would be an archaeological complex belonging to the Cajamarca culture, from the early Christian era.

Alva, who discovered the royal tombs of the Lord of Sipan, said that so far, there are only remains of stone buildings in the vegetation.

“An expedition will return to the scene in November, to investigate more. This culture is poorly studied by the moment, but will surely generate many archaeological projects,” said Alva.

A group of researchers and archaeologists, biologists traveled through Zana River Upper Basin a few weeks ago, during the eight days, and are now warning that regional cultural richnesses are being threatened by deforestation and mining. (ANI)

Song birds have to deal with cover artists too

Washington, Sep 9 (ANI): Just like great singers among humans, birds too have to deal with cover artists who copy songs.

A new research has revealed that some bird species have evolved to sing the same tune as their rivals, in order to compete effectively.

Led by Dr. Joseph Tobias and Dr Nathalie Seddon from the Edward Grey Institute, University of Oxford, the research team analysed the calls and songs of two antbird species that were living side-by-side in the Amazon rainforest- the Peruvian warbling-antbird and the yellow-breasted warbling-antbird.

The study was aimed at investigating their similar songs, and, in particular, at testing the theory that the birds’ songs could become increasingly similar to enable effective communication between competing species.

The above notion has attracted controversy as many scientists have argued that convergence in territorial or mating signals results in needless confrontation or crossbreeding and the creation of hybrids.

“Biologists have long been fascinated by convergence in ecological traits as it offers tangible evidence of evolution and the forces of selection by which it operates, but until now there is no clear evidence that social competition between animal species can produce convergent signals. We examined this idea by analysing the structure and function of songs in two birds which we knew to be strong social competitors,” said Tobias.

The researchers studied the species in Peru and Bolivia at one site where they lived together, and two sites where they lived in isolation.

Firstly, they recorded three sets of signals-songs, calls, and plumage colour of both species (including a total of 504 songs from 150 individuals).

Later, they played them back to individuals of each species to test the significance of songs of both types.

The results showed that territorial songs of both species were extremely similar particularly where they lived together, such that territorial birds treated songs of both species as equally threatening.

In the meantime, they discovered that non-territorial signals like calls and plumage were highly divergent.

“In effect, the territorial songs of these birds are more or less interchangeable in design and function. Given that they last shared a common ancestor more than 3 million years ago, it is almost equivalent to humans and chimpanzees – which diverged around 5 million years ago – using the same language to settle disputes over resources” said Tobias.

“Our results provide the first compelling evidence that social interaction can cause convergent evolution in species competing for space and resources.

They also suggest that while competition drives convergence in territorial songs, this is offset by divergence in non-competitive signals such as plumage colour to promote species recognition and reduce the chance of interbreeding,” he added.

The study has been published in Evolution.(ANI)

15th century Peruvians sacrificed humans to appease El Nino

Caracas (Venezuela), July 16 (ANI): Archaeologists have found evidence that a woman from the Chimu culture was buried alive in the 15th century at the Chan Chan archaeological complex in Peru to ameliorate the various effects of what we today call the El Nino weather phenomenon.

“This is the first time that evidence has been found that some people from the epoch were buried alive to prevent, in this case, the actions of El Nino from having effects on the city of mud,” said Cristobal Campana from Peru’s National Institute of Culture (INC).

According to a report in Latin American Herald Tribune, the skeletal remains of the woman, who was in her early 20s, were found during work to restructure the western perimeter wall of the Nain An (House of the birds) palace, which is part of the Chan Chan mud citadel.

The archaeological complex is recognized by the United Nations as a World Heritage Site, but it is also on the list of imperiled sites because of the fragility of its structures due to the effect of the rains and intense heat in the region.

Chan Chan is one of the most important ceremonial centers in northern Peru.

The skeletal remains are of a woman who stood 1.55 meters (5 feet) tall, who was strangled and buried alive, from the position of her arms and jaw, which reflect her final desperate struggle to free herself from the fabric tied around her throat, according to Campana.

In addition, the victim had had both feet amputated in the same manner that the Chimu did with other sacrificial victims at another palace in the same region.

According to Campana, the remains will be removed this week from inside a structure that is protecting them from sun and rain, and they will be taken for further study to the INC laboratory in the province of La Libertad, where Chan Chan is located. (ANI)

Maize agriculture may have fueled ancient Andean civilization

Washington, July 9 (ANI): In a new study, a skeleton found at a roughly 1,000-year-old site in Peru’s Andes mountains has yielded chemical evidence of substantial maize consumption, which suggests that the farming of the crop led to the rise of the ancient Andean civilization.

Prehistoric communities in one part of Peru’s Andes Mountains may have gone from maize to amazingly complex.

Bioarchaeologist Brian Finucane’s analyses of human skeletons excavated in this region indicate that people living there 2,800 years ago regularly ate maize.

“This is the earliest evidence for maize as a staple food in the rugged terrain of highland Peru,” he said.

According to Finucane, maize agriculture stimulated ancient population growth in the Andes and allowed a complex society, the Wari, to develop.

Wari society included a central government and other elements of modern states. It lasted from around 1,300 to 950 years ago and predated other Andes civilizations, including the Inca.

Previous work has shown that prehistoric societies in the lowland areas of Central and North America depended on maize to grow large enough in numbers to develop state institutions, a pattern that Finucane sees paralleled in the Andes Mountains.

“These new findings indicate that intensive maize agriculture was the economic foundation for the development of the Wari state,” said Finucane.ew evidence for maize as a dietary staple among prehistoric inhabitants of the Andes mountains included chemical data from several skeletons previously excavated from a set of tombs at the capital of the Wari state.

The new data convincingly demonstrate that highland residents relied on maize shortly before the rise of the Wari state, according to archaeologist Daniel Sandweiss of the University of Maine in Orono.

He suggested that a warmer, wetter climate during the Wari period and the spread of terraced cultivation areas might also have spurred maize farming.

“Chemical signatures of substantial maize consumption appeared in the bones of individuals from every Ayacucho site, including three from Formative period sites,” Finucane said.

Only a relatively small part of the Andean valley contains soil suitable for maize cultivation.

Competition for cropland may account for evidence of considerable warfare during the Huarpa and Wari periods, speculated Finucane. (ANI)

Success of Inca civilization a result of global warming that lasted for 400 years

Lima (Peru), July 2 (ANI): In a new study, a team of scientists have determined that the success of the Inca was boosted by a period of global warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The new study is called “Putting the Rise of the Inca within a Climatic and Land Management Context” and was prepared by Alex Chepstow-Lusty, an English paleo-biologist working for the French Institute of Andean Studies, in Lima, Peru.

The Inca Empire was the largest empire in pre-Columbian America. It began as a support group in the Cuzco area, where the legendary first Sapa Inca, Manco Capac founded the Kingdom of Cuzco around 1200.

According to a report in Living in Peru, a team of English and US scientists has analyzed pollen, seeds and isotopes in core samples taken from the deep mud of a small lake not far from Machu Picchu to determine that the success of the Inca was underpinned by a period of warming that lasted more than four centuries.

The four centuries coincided directly with the rise of this startling, hyper-productive culture that at its zenith was bigger than the Ming Dynasty China and the Ottoman Empire, the two most powerful contemporaries of the Inca.

“This period of increased temperatures allowed the Inca and their predecessors to expand, from AD 1150 onwards, their agricultural zones by moving up the mountains to build a massive system of terraces fed frequently by glacial water, as well as planting trees to reduce erosion and increase soil fertility,” said the scientists.

“They re-created the landscape and produced the huge surpluses of maize, potatoes, quinua and other crops that freed a rapidly growing population to build roads, scores of palaces like Machu Picchu and in particular the development of a large standing army,” they added.

According to Alex, the report “raises the question of whether today’s global warming may be another opportunity for the Andes.” (ANI)

Nirupama Rao – Nirupama Rao set to become India’s next foreign secretary

Nirupama Rao – Nirupama Rao set to become India’s next foreign secretary

NEW DELHI – Nirupama Rao, India’s ambassador to China, is set to succeed Shivshankar Menon as India’s next foreign secretary.

Rao’s name has been sent for approval to the Cabinet Committee on Appointments, reliable sources told IANS. A formal announcement is expected to be made soon.

In her decades-long diplomatic career, Rao has served as India’s ambassador to Sri Lanka and Peru, deputy chief of mission in Moscow and spokesperson of the external affairs ministry.

Facedown burials in ancient times was a way to humiliate the dead

Washington, June 24 (ANI): A new research has suggested that burying the dead facedown in ancient times wasn’t unusual or accidental, but a widely used way to humiliate the dead.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the first global study on the facedown burials suggests that it was a custom used across societies to disrespect or humiliate the dead.

Lead study author Caroline Arcini of Sweden’s National Heritage Board detected a common thread in the burials she studied, “that society sanctioned this apparently negative treatment of the dead.”

The unnerving burials often appear to signify “behavior that is out of the norm-it is not accepted, what (the dead) have done,” she said.

Shaming the dead “is most probably a deep-rooted behavior in humankind,” she added.

Arcini searched existing literature to make the first ever catalog of facedown burials from around the world.

She found descriptions of more than 600 bodies from 215 grave sites, from Peru to South Korea.

Dating from 26,000 years ago all the way up to World War I, these so-called prone burials include men, women, and children, though the majority were men.

Facedown burials occurred in all sorts of graves, including single graves, double graves, and mass graves.

In locations with several prone burials, the dead were often buried in shallow graves toward the edge of the cemetery, most of them without coffins.

According to Arcini, the phenomenon has various possible explanations.

Some people had their hands and feet tied together, suggesting they had been criminals or prisoners of war.

Other burials indicate the practice was linked to social status, as in the case of 80 bodies found in a Mexican cemetery that dates to between 1150 and 850 B.C.

There, 6 men are sitting in their graves, while the other 74 are in a prone position, Arcini noted.

“It might be that the people (buried in a sitting position) are high priests, and the others are in a lower social position,” she said.

The archaeologist highlights religious and cultural conflict as another potential factor.

“The highest frequency of facedown burials in Sweden, for instance, dates to the period of the Viking age when Christianity arrived in the region,” Arcini said.

“Pagan Vikings may not have accepted those who converted to Christianity and may have buried the bodies in a way that reflected their dislike,” she explained.

“Rule-breaking nuns and convicted witches were also buried in prone positions,” she added. (ANI)

Bollywood actor promotes anti-tobacco awareness

New Delhi, May 30 (ANI): Debutant Bollywood actor Jackie Bhagnani is promoting anti-tobacco awareness ahead of ‘World No Tobacco Day’ in New Delhi.

Jackie who makes his acting debut with the film ‘Kal Kisne Dekha’ said that the celebrities should promote this cause.

“Realistically speaking to eradicate it (smoking) we need one hundred years but we can reduce it and it can happen if the people from the film industry or the sports field who are known if they appeal to the people. The affect will be much more than any other normal person saying it. So you can always try nothing is impossible slowly and slowly it can get less. We know in the cities people are not allowed to smoke in public places and I’m seeing lot of people following it,” said Bhagnani.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has chosen ‘Tobacco Health Warnings’ as this year’s theme for World No Tobacco Day to be observed on May 31 with an emphasis on the picture warnings at making people aware of the health risks of tobacco use and convincing them to quit.

More than 20 countries, including Britain, Iran, Peru and Malaysia, already use visual warnings on their tobacco products.

The WHO, which requires its entire staff to be non-smokers or to agree to try to quit, has been campaigning for more than two decades to discourage smoking and fight efforts by big companies such as Philip Morris International, Imperial Tobacco, Japan Tobacco and British American Tobacco to attract new customers.

Tobacco is the world’s leading preventable cause of death. According to WHO, tobacco has been claiming killing more than five million lives every year.

Around 80 percent of smokers live in developing countries, where smoking rates have risen sharply in recent years alongside a ramping-up of tobacco marketing and production in poorer states.

The WHO supports bans on tobacco marketing and sponsorship, prohibitions of smoking in public buildings, and high taxes on tobacco products. (ANI)

Peruvian footballers decline national duty to press for changes

Peruvian footballers decline national duty to press for changesLima – Peruvian footballers will decline national team duty from July, in an effort to press for “radical” structural changes in the Andean country’s football, the footballers’ union said Wednesday.

“The (current) crisis is the consequence of a series of management mistakes, which is reflected not only in the awful results of our national teams, but also in the low level in our professional and amateur tournaments,” said union leader Francesco Manassero, who cited many other factors.

Manassero noted that the Peruvian Football Federation (FPF) was informed of players’ demands in a letter.

Peru is set to play Ecuador and Colombia in June in South America’s qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, and it stands last in the qualifiers table.

Media reports noted that national team coach Jose Guillermo del Solar would resign rather than play official international games with junior players.(dpa)

Lessons suspended in 18 schools in Lima over flu

Lessons suspended in 18 schools in Lima over flu Lima – Eighteen schools in Lima suspended lessons for students in their senior year, due to the new influenza virus A(H1N1), the authorities said Friday.

Thirteen of Peru’s 16 cases of the so-called swine flu are linked to high school seniors who travelled to the Dominican Republic. Eleven of the people infected are teenagers who travelled, while the other two are relatives of students.

The authorities determined that 635 students from middle- and high-class schools in Lima travelled to the Dominican beaches at Punta Cana this year for the traditional journey to mark the end of their school years.

Within South America, only Chile has more new flu infections than Peru, with a total of 24.

Peruvian Health Ministry Oscar Ugarte noted Friday that infections in Peru are all “imported,” since the three sick people without ties to the Dominican Republic were infected in the United States, in two cases, or in Argentina. (dpa)

Noel Gallagher is against gigs in car-parking areas

London, May 15 (ANI): Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher has expressed his anger on promoters who book huge car parking areas as location for their gigs.

Noel, who recently performed in Argentina, Chile and Peru, revealed that he would like to perform in huge stadiums instead of car parks.

He further emphasized that his fans are forced to come to remote areas to see their gigs, which are organized in huge car parking areas.

“Why not just do 2 big, f**k off gigs in Rio and Sao Paolo? If everyone in Argentina is willing to travel to Buenos Aires to be part of one of the greatest nights of all time (I’m not kidding, you should’ve been there!), then I don’t see what the difference is in Brazil,” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

“It’s the kids who lose out, if you ask me. Someone throwing up a make-shift stage in some car park can never compare with the noise and colour of a stadium. Still, the gigs themselves are great. Could be better though,” he added. (ANI)

Inca stone with 41 angles discovered in Peru

Lima (Peru), May 14 (ANI): An Inca stone of 41 angles was found during the archaeological excavations that are being carried out these days by the National Institute of Culture (INC) in Torontoy, in the area of the Sanctuary of Machu Picchu in Peru.

According to information received, the finding was confirmed by the president of the project, Omar Spanish Gutierrez, who referred that the stone measures are 6 meters high and 2,50 meters wide, and also said that it has the form of a flame.

The archaeologist Mario Febran Gomez, said that the stone is located in the religious precinct Nro. 9 of the sector of Torontoy (kilometer 91,500 of the way Cusco-Machu Picchu). (ANI)

4,000 yr old tenon heads discovered in Peru

Lima (Peru), May 11 (ANI): Authorities in the Peruvian department of Ancash have announced the discovery of a number of tenon heads believed to be some 4,000 years old.

According to the Mayor of Huaylas district, Jose Espinoza Caballero, these ancient stone carvings were found in the Chupacoto town and would be older than the famous tenon heads of Chavin de Huantar Archaeological Complex.

He noted that the discovery shows the district’s great tourist and scientific potential, as it is considered as “the centre of the Huaylas Culture.”

In addition, Espinoza stressed the need to study and protect other local archaeological remains which have not yet been brought to light or recognized.

Meanwhile, archaeologist Daniel Chumpitaz said this discovery revealed that the Chavin Culture may have originated in Chupacoto. (ANI)

Peru investigates suspected case of swine flu

Lima – Peruvian authorities were Monday investigating a suspected case of swine flu – a traveller who arrived in the country from Mexico, Peruvian Health Minister Oscar Ugarte said. Ugarte told Peruvian radio station RPP that the patient – whose identity and gender was withheld – was taken to a special wing of the Daniel Alcides Carrion Hospital in Callao, near Lima, and was under observation.

The minister said the person was feeling ill and had a high fever.

At least 149 people have died of the flu in recent weeks in Mexico. Of these, 26 cases have been confirmed as swine flu virus, while the others are suspected cases that are still pending confirmation.(dpa)