Tuesday, April 23, 2013

ExxonMobil Starts Telok Gas Production

ExxonMobil Starts Telok Gas Production

ExxonMobil reported Monday that its Malaysian subsidiary has begun gas production from the Telok field, located offshore Malaysia in the South China Sea.

The Telok A platform marks the first phase of the Telok gas development project. It was developed under a gas production sharing contract between Exxon (the operator), Petronas Carigali (PCSB) and Petronas. ExxonMobil and PCSB each hold a 50-percent interest in the project.

The development of the Telok field has been advanced by these companies in order to meet increasing demand for natural gas in Peninsular Malaysia. It is one of several upstream investments announced under Malaysia's Economic Transformation Programme of 2011 – which will see ExxonMobil and PCSB invest more than $3.2 billion in new oil and gas assets to help ensure reliable and sustainable energy supplies for the country.

ExxonMobil Exploration and Production Malaysia President J. Hunter Farris commented in a company statement:

"The Telok project is another successful example of collaboration between ExxonMobil and PCSB in meeting Malaysia’s growing energy needs for the power and industrial sector.

"ExxonMobil is committed to ensuring reliable gas supplies to the nation and to using international best practices to enhance our operations in Malaysia."

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Lundin Strikes Oil Offshore Malaysia

Lundin Petroleum, through its wholly owned subsidiary Lundin Malaysia BV, announced Monday that it has discovered oil in the Ara-1 well that was drilled in Block PM308A, offshore Peninsular Malaysia.

Ara-1 was drilled to a total depth of 13,221 feet (4,030 meters) by the jackup West Courageous (350' ILC) in 246 feet (75 meters) water depth. The objective of the well was to target the extension of the Paleogene intra-rift oil sands that had been encountered in the Janglau-1 well drilled by Lundin in 2011.

Ara-1 encountered 9 thin oil-bearing sands in a high-pressured intra-rift section extending over a vertical interval of 2,624 feet (800 meters).

The well confirmed the extension of the new intra-rift oil play across a very large structural complex in the northeast of PM308A below a major regional seal. The well also found effective sand reservoirs at depths below 11,482 feet (3,500 meters). The oil pay zones intersected by Ara-1 were however individually thinner than pre drill expectation.

Ara-1 was plugged and abandoned as an oil discovery well after completion of the well evaluation programme. Work has commenced to estimate the range of resources discovered.

Lundin intends to incorporate the well results into the recently extended regional 3D seismic data set to identify areas where local sand reservoir sources may be better developed and can high grade future drilling prospects.

The West Courageous jackup rig will be demobilized following completion of Ara-1, the final well of Lundin's 2012 drilling campaign.

The PM308A production sharing contract (PSC) is operated by Lundin Malaysia BV with 35 percent equity interest. Partners are JX Nippon Oil & Gas Exploration (Peninsular Malaysia) Limited with 40 percent and PETRONAS Carigali with 25 percent.

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Saipem Wins $1.1B in North, West Africa E&C Contracts

Saipem has been awarded new E&C Offshore contracts in North and West Africa for a total value of approximately $1.1 billion.

In Egypt, Saipem has been awarded by Burullus Gas Company a contract for the development of the West Delta Deep Marine Phase IXa Project about 56 miles (90 kilometers) off the Mediterranean Coast of Egypt.

The scope of work encompasses engineering, procurement, installation, pre-commissioning and commissioning support of subsea facilities in the West Delta Deep Marine Concession, where Saipem already successfully performed earlier subsea development phases.

New facilities include rigid and flexible flowlines, umbilicals and other related subsea structures, to be installed in water depths up to 2,788 feet (850 meters).

Marine activities will be carried out between the second and the fourth quarter of 2014.

Furthermore, in Angola, Saipem has been awarded an EPCI [engineeringf, procurement, construction and installation] contract for subsea facilities. The scope of work includes engineering, procurement, fabrication and installation of production and water injection pipelines and flowlines, rigid jumpers and other related subsea structures.

Offshore activities will be performed between the second quarter of 2014 and the second quarter of 2015, in a water depth ranging from 2,296 feet to 4,757 feet (700 to 1,450 meters).

The fabrication activities will be fully carried out in Angola at Saipem yards in Soyo and Ambriz.

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Total Resumes Elgin/Franklin Production

Total Resumes Elgin/Franklin Production

Total announced Monday that it restarted production on its Elgin/Franklin fields in the North Sea on March 9, almost a year after the major gas leak at the Elgin platform that forced the shutdown of the fields.

Rigzone reported Friday that Total intended to restart production within "a very few days" now that it had received approval of the safety case for restarted production from the UK Health and Safety Executive (HSE). Monday saw the firm confirm that production is resuming "gradually" and should soon reach 70,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) – 50 percent of the production potential from the fields.

Total added that for Elgin/Franklin to achieve the production level that existed before the Elgin incident – some 140,000 boepd – a redevelopment project involving the drilling of new infill wells on the fields is currently underway. Meanwhile, the firm also reported that the West Franklin Phase II development project remains ongoing, with production start-up scheduled for 2014.

At the time of the leak incident in March last year, the Elgin and Franklin fields were producing around nine percent of total UK gas production. At their peak, the two fields can produce up to 280,000 boepd, according to Total.

Total Upstream President Yves-Louis Darricarrère commented in a company statement Monday:

"Managing this industrial incident securely for our personnel and with limited impact on the environment was our priority. The causes of the incident are now known and all necessary measures have been taken to enable us to resume production and carry out future exploitation of the fields from the Elgin/Franklin area in the best safety conditions.

"Lessons learnt have been shared with the UK authorities and will also be shared with the wider industry."

Total shut down and evacuated non-essential personnel from the Elgin March 25, 2012 after a sheen of gas was reported within the vicinity of the platform.

The firm soon performed a "dynamic kill" well-intervention operation – using the West Phoenix (UDW semisub) rig – that involved pumping heavy mud into the well that had leaked, which was achieved in May. A lengthier process to seal the well with cement was completed in autumn.

Total stated in August last year that the overall environmental impact of the gas leak incident at Elgin was "minimal", with 3,096 tons of natural gas and 3,076 tons of condensate being lost because of the leak. Most of this evaporated in the atmosphere, the firm said, while the sheen – representing some 407 tons of condensate – dispersed naturally into the sea.

A former engineer, Jon is an award-winning editor who has covered the technology, engineering and energy sectors since the mid-1990s. Email Jon at jmainwaring@rigzone.com.

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Petroleum Safety Authority Appoints New Director General

Norway's Petroleum Safety Authority announced Monday that Anne Næss Myhrvold has been appointed to serve as its director general for a term of six years.

Myhrvold is currently at BP Norge, which she joined in 2002. She has served as its head of health, safety and the environment since 2009. Earlier in her career, Myhrvold worked in safety at the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

The PSA said that Myhrvold will take over the role of director general on May 1, 2013.

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Total Resumes Elgin/Franklin Production

Total Resumes Elgin/Franklin Production

Total announced Monday that it restarted production on its Elgin/Franklin fields in the North Sea on March 9, almost a year after the major gas leak at the Elgin platform that forced the shutdown of the fields.

Rigzone reported Friday that Total intended to restart production within "a very few days" now that it had received approval of the safety case for restarted production from the UK Health and Safety Executive (HSE). Monday saw the firm confirm that production is resuming "gradually" and should soon reach 70,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) – 50 percent of the production potential from the fields.

Total added that for Elgin/Franklin to achieve the production level that existed before the Elgin incident – some 140,000 boepd – a redevelopment project involving the drilling of new infill wells on the fields is currently underway. Meanwhile, the firm also reported that the West Franklin Phase II development project remains ongoing, with production start-up scheduled for 2014.

At the time of the leak incident in March last year, the Elgin and Franklin fields were producing around nine percent of total UK gas production. At their peak, the two fields can produce up to 280,000 boepd, according to Total.

Total Upstream President Yves-Louis Darricarrère commented in a company statement Monday:

"Managing this industrial incident securely for our personnel and with limited impact on the environment was our priority. The causes of the incident are now known and all necessary measures have been taken to enable us to resume production and carry out future exploitation of the fields from the Elgin/Franklin area in the best safety conditions.

"Lessons learnt have been shared with the UK authorities and will also be shared with the wider industry."

Total shut down and evacuated non-essential personnel from the Elgin March 25, 2012 after a sheen of gas was reported within the vicinity of the platform.

The firm soon performed a "dynamic kill" well-intervention operation – using the West Phoenix (UDW semisub) rig – that involved pumping heavy mud into the well that had leaked, which was achieved in May. A lengthier process to seal the well with cement was completed in autumn.

Total stated in August last year that the overall environmental impact of the gas leak incident at Elgin was "minimal", with 3,096 tons of natural gas and 3,076 tons of condensate being lost because of the leak. Most of this evaporated in the atmosphere, the firm said, while the sheen – representing some 407 tons of condensate – dispersed naturally into the sea.

A former engineer, Jon is an award-winning editor who has covered the technology, engineering and energy sectors since the mid-1990s. Email Jon at jmainwaring@rigzone.com.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.
For More Information on the Offshore Rig Fleet:
RigLogix can provide the information that you need about the offshore rig fleet, whether you need utilization and industry trends or detailed reports on future rig contracts. Subscribing to RigLogix will allow you to access dozens of prebuilt reports and build your own custom reports using hundreds of available data columns. For more information about a RigLogix subscription, visit http://www.riglogix.com/.

View the original article here

Petrofac Wins Deepwater Contract, Offshore Mexico

Petrofac announced Monday that it has been awarded a project management contract by Petróleos Mexicanos (PEMEX) for the Lakach project, offshore Mexico.

The contract, which Petrofac's Engineering & Consulting Services business won in partnership with Doris Engineering of Houston, covers specialized technical assistance and supervision for the construction, installation, commissioning, testing and start-up of deep-water subsea wells and infrastructure for the project. The scope also involves drilling activities and tie-ins to existing onshore facilities.

Initially involving around 25 engineers, based in Mexico and Houston, the project is scheduled to complete towards the end of 2015.

Petrofac ECS Managing Director Craig Muir commented in company statement:

"I am delighted that Petrofac's Engineering & Consulting Services business has been selected to support such a significant project for PEMEX with this its first major deepwater development. PEMEX will benefit from the full breadth of Petrofac's specialist subsea pipeline consulting and engineering services in addition to our well management capabilities. We look forward to working closely with PEMEX on this significant project and further building Petrofac's presence in Mexico."

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Anadarko Executive Chairman James Hackett to Attend Harvard Divinity School

James Hackett, executive chairman and former chief executive of Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC), plans to attend Harvard Divinity School later this year.

Last year, he handed over the CEO role to President Al Walker. Mr. Hackett will hold the title of executive chairman until June.

Mr. Hackett, 59, is credited by analysts with turning Anadarko into one of the best-performing independent oil-and-gas producers during his eight-year tenure as CEO, with stakes in a number of attractive onshore and offshore oil-and-gas fields around the world.

"Jim Hackett will be attending Harvard Divinity School to become better prepared to write, speak and teach about faith and leadership, which has been a long-held interest of Jim's and one of the key reasons he is retiring from Anadarko," Anadarko spokesman John Christiansen said.

The Anadarko executive chairman declined an interview through a spokesman.

Mr. Hackett and his wife, Maureen O'Gara Hackett, have been long-time supporters of The University of St. Thomas, a Catholic liberal-arts university in Houston, as well as a number of other institutions.

"He was at the helm during the company's transformation from one that had a history of falling short of production targets to one with a reputation for being one of the stronger explorers in the industry," said Phil Weiss, an analyst with Argus Research Co.

Mr. Hackett was formerly the president and CEO of Devon Energy Corp. (DVN) following its merger with Ocean Energy, where he served as chairman, president and CEO. He has also worked at Duke Energy Corp. (DUK), NGC Corp., Burlington Resources and Amoco Oil Co.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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ExxonMobil Starts Telok Gas Production

ExxonMobil Starts Telok Gas Production

ExxonMobil reported Monday that its Malaysian subsidiary has begun gas production from the Telok field, located offshore Malaysia in the South China Sea.

The Telok A platform marks the first phase of the Telok gas development project. It was developed under a gas production sharing contract between Exxon (the operator), Petronas Carigali (PCSB) and Petronas. ExxonMobil and PCSB each hold a 50-percent interest in the project.

The development of the Telok field has been advanced by these companies in order to meet increasing demand for natural gas in Peninsular Malaysia. It is one of several upstream investments announced under Malaysia's Economic Transformation Programme of 2011 – which will see ExxonMobil and PCSB invest more than $3.2 billion in new oil and gas assets to help ensure reliable and sustainable energy supplies for the country.

ExxonMobil Exploration and Production Malaysia President J. Hunter Farris commented in a company statement:

"The Telok project is another successful example of collaboration between ExxonMobil and PCSB in meeting Malaysia’s growing energy needs for the power and industrial sector.

"ExxonMobil is committed to ensuring reliable gas supplies to the nation and to using international best practices to enhance our operations in Malaysia."

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here

Petroleum Safety Authority Appoints New Director General

Norway's Petroleum Safety Authority announced Monday that Anne Næss Myhrvold has been appointed to serve as its director general for a term of six years.

Myhrvold is currently at BP Norge, which she joined in 2002. She has served as its head of health, safety and the environment since 2009. Earlier in her career, Myhrvold worked in safety at the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

The PSA said that Myhrvold will take over the role of director general on May 1, 2013.

Generated by readers, the comments included herein do not reflect the views and opinions of Rigzone. All comments are subject to editorial review. Off-topic, inappropriate or insulting comments will be removed.

View the original article here