Statfjord Late Life Sanctioned
25 Fevereiro 2005 - 9:37AM
PR Newswire (US)
Statfjord Late Life Sanctioned STAVANGER, Norway, Feb. 25
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The Statfjord licensees have resolved to
implement a late-life development on this North Sea field at a cost
of NOK 14.5 billion, plus NOK 1.5 billion in the associated Tampen
Link gas pipeline. These plans will ensure that the
Statoil-operated field remains on stream until 2020. A modified
plan for development and operation (PDO) of Statfjord and the plan
for installation and operation (PIO) of Tampen Link were submitted
to the government today, 25 February. The idea is to convert
installations on the field from producing oil with associated gas
to recovering gas with associated oil. That involves changing the
drainage strategy to low-pressure production in order to recover
the remaining gas in the reservoir. Additional recoverable volumes
associated with Statfjord late life are estimated at 32 billion
cubic metres of gas, 25 million barrels of oil and 60 million
barrels of condensate. These quantities alone correspond to a
medium- sized discovery on the Norwegian continental shelf. "With
the late life project, Statfjord will reach a recovery factor of
close to 70 per cent for oil and 75 per cent for gas," says Oivind
Reinertsen, senior vice president for Tampen. "That's absolutely at
the top of the tree for recovery in world terms," he adds, and
notes that gas recovery without the project would be only 53 per
cent. This development ensures that Statfjord - which celebrated 25
years on steam in November 2004 - will continue producing until
2018 or later. It has already yielded four billion barrels of oil
and generated over NOK 1,000 billion in revenues during its first
quarter-century. "More than a decade of extra output is also hugely
important for those working on and with the field, for the supplies
industry, and for the Norwegian community," says Mr Reinertsen. The
scope of the modification work is put at roughly three million
working hours offshore and three million engineering hours on land
in addition to some prefabrication. According to the impact
assessment for the project, the employment effect will be about
80,000 work-years in the 2005-26 period. "This will be demanding,
both in scope and investment, and presents the organisation with
major future challenges," acknowledges Mr Reinertsen. "Work on the
field will take at least four years, while full production is
maintained. That demands great flexibility in the execution phase.
In addition comes managing reservoir development with a pressure
blowdown." Plans call for the modification work to begin this
autumn, with the blowdown and consequent gas exports scheduled for
the autumn of 2007. Final contracts for platform modifications and
drilling facilities are set to be awarded during the spring. The
Tampen Link will tie Statfjord into the existing Flags gas
transport system on the UK continental shelf, which runs to St
Fergus in Scotland. Pipelaying is planned for the autumn of 2006.
In addition to Statoil, with 44.33 per cent, licensees in the
Statfjord Unit are ExxonMobil Norge with 21.36 per cent, Norske
ConocoPhillips with 10.32, Norske Shell with 8.54, ConocoPhillips
(UK) with 4.84 per cent, BP Petroleum Development with 4.84,
Centrica Resource with 4.84 and Enterprise Oil Norge with 0.89. The
partners in Tampen Link are Statoil with 43.9 per cent, ExxonMobil
with 18.2, Norske Shell with 12.2, Hydro with 10.5, ConocoPhillips
with 8.2 and Petoro with seven. Contacts: Kjersti Tvedt Morstol,
public affairs manager, +47 91 78 28 14 (mobile), +47 51 99 26 71
(office) Herlaug Louise Barkli, senior consultant investor
relations, + 47 48 08 02 21 (mobile), +47 51 99 21 38 (office)
DATASOURCE: Statoil ASA CONTACT: Kjersti Tvedt Morstol, public
affairs manager, +47-91-78-28-14 (mobile), or +47-51-99-26-71
(office), or Herlaug Louise Barkli, senior consultant investor
relations, +47-48-08-02-21 (mobile), +47-51-99-21-38 (office) Web
site: http://www.statoil.com/
Copyright