--Forest Oil, Schlumberger to develop Forest's Eagle Ford Shale land in Texas

--Future drilling between companies to be on a 50/50 basis

--Shares of both companies lower

(Updates with analyst comments, additional background)

By Alison Sider and Ben Fox Rubin

Forest Oil Corp. (FST) inked a strategic partnership with oil-fields services giant Schlumberger Ltd. (SLB) to develop the energy producer's Eagle Ford Shale land in Gonzales County, Texas, allowing for accelerated production growth and improvement of the project's economics.

Schlumberger will pay a $90 million drilling carry in the form of future drilling and completion services and related development capital in order to earn a 50% working interest in Forest's Eagle Ford Shale acreage position. Forest and Schlumberger will then participate in future drilling on a 50/50 basis.

"We believe that our Eagle Ford position is a valuable oil asset and being aligned and working together cooperatively with a strategic partner such as Schlumberger will greatly enhance the value of this important asset," Forest Chief Executive Patrick R. McDonald said.

As natural gas prices have tumbled, Forest and other companies that focus on natural-gas production have seen revenue decline and have struggled to shift production toward oil production, which is more lucrative but also more costly.

The company has sold some of its noncore assets in an effort to improve its balance sheet. In January, the company sold properties in South Texas, excluding the Eagle Ford Shale, for about $307 million to raise cash to repay debt.

Last year Forest tried to find a joint venture partner for its oil-rich Eagle Ford acreage, but later said it would go it alone in the area, even at the costs of letting eases expire.

But with the agreement announced Friday, that won't be necessary, Mr. McDonald said during a conference call following the announcement. The company will be able to hold onto about 15,000 acres where its leases would have otherwise expired without extra cash needed to drill there.

The deal will allow Forest to drill more quickly in the Eagle Ford, and it will add two rigs by 2014 to the one to two it has working there. The company expects its production in the region to more than double by the end of 2014.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Scott Hanold said the price for Forest's acreage was unimpressive, and having a services company on the other end of the deal may indicate that Forest didn't have many options.

"Having a service provider step in as its partner implies a lack of interest by other E&Ps, private equity, or international oil companies that have typically partnered in these transactions," Mr. Hanold wrote Friday.

But Simmons & Co. International analyst Bill Herbert wrote in a client note that the deal solves Forest's capital problems and gives Schlumberger a chance to show off the "comprehensive breadth and depth" of the technology it offers to domestic oil and gas producers.

"And in order to do this, Schlumberger needed acreage and opportunity and Forest needed capital. Accordingly the match was made," Mr. Herbert wrote.

Shares of Forest Oil fell 1.8% Friday morning to $4.93. Shares of Schlumberger fell 1.7% to $75.82.

Write to Ben Fox Rubin at ben.rubin@dowjones.com

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