HeadlinesOil & Gas BP Starts Production at Clair Ridge By maritimemag November 26, 2018 ShareTweet 0 Clair Ridge is the first offshore deployment of BP’s enhanced oil recovery technology, LoSal®, which has the potential to increase oil recovery from reservoirs by using reduced salinity water in water injection. This is expected to result in up to 40 million additional barrels being cost-effectively recovered over the lifetime of the development. The project is a partnership between BP and Shell, Chevron and ConocoPhillips and is the second phase of development of the Clair field, 75 kilometers West of Shetland. The field, which was discovered in 1977, has an estimated seven billion barrels of hydrocarbons. Two new, bridge-linked platforms and oil and gas export pipelines have been constructed as part of the Clair Ridge project. The new facilities, which required capital investment in excess of £4.5 billion ($5.8 billion), are designed for 40 years of production. The project has been designed to recover an estimated 640 million barrels of oil with production expected to ramp up to a peak at plateau level of 120,000 barrels of oil per day. In addition to the platforms, the Clair Ridge project included new pipeline infrastructure with the installation of a 5.5-kilometer, 22-inch oil export pipeline tying into the Clair Phase 1 export pipeline. Oil from Clair is exported to the Sullom Voe Terminal on Shetland. A new 14.6-kilometer, six-inch gas export pipeline tying Clair Ridge into the West of Shetland Pipeline Systems was also installed as part of the project. The pipeline transports gas from West of Shetland to the Sullom Voe Terminal. Clair Ridge also features an advanced drill rig which will deliver a drilling program over several years. There are 36 well slots, two of which are being used for the tieback of pre-drilled wells. The drilling program, which is likely to last more than 10 years, includes drilling and completing development wells from the remaining 34 well slots. The start of production of Clair Ridge follows the start-up earlier in 2018 of five other upstream major projects: Atoll Phase One, offshore Egypt, Shah Deniz 2 gas development in Azerbaijan, TAAS expansion project in Russia, Western Flank B offshore Western Australia and Thunderhorse Northwest Expansion in the Gulf of Mexico. This string of developments follows from 2017’s seven major project completions and is key to delivering the 900,000 barrels of oil equivalent new production that BP expects from new upstream major projects by 2021 © 2018, maritimemag. All rights reserved.
Headlines Dangote refinery can supply diesel, petrol needs of West Africa; African continent’s aviation fuel requirements — Dangote May 19, 2024936 views
Headlines Marine and Blue Economy Ministry to increase local fish production, reduce dependence on importation May 18, 2024834 views
Headlines No justification for epileptic electricity supply in Nigeria – Eminent Nigerians, and leaders May 18, 2024989 views
Dangote refinery can supply diesel, petrol needs of West Africa; African continent’s aviation fuel requirements — Dangote May 19, 2024
Marine and Blue Economy Ministry to increase local fish production, reduce dependence on importation May 18, 2024
No justification for epileptic electricity supply in Nigeria – Eminent Nigerians, and leaders May 18, 2024