Monday, 19 March 2018

Corinth Secures Subsea 7 Contracts for Aker BP Subsea Tiebacks

Corinth Pipeworks has consented to arrangements with Subsea 7 to give steel funnels to two Aker BP-worked subsea tieback tasks to coasting creation, stockpiling, and offloading (FPSO) units in the Norwegian Sea, Skogul and Aerfugl.

The requests cover polypropylene-covered steel external funnels for pipe-in-pipe flowlines for the tiebacks. Corinth will supply 14-in. linepipe for the 18-km gas pipeline at Skogul and 16-in. linepipe for the 21-km Aerfugl gas pipeline. Skogul will attach back to the Alvheim FPSO, and Aerfugl binds back to the Skarv FPSO. The channels will be produced for the current year at Corinth's pipe process in Thisvi, Greece, and Subsea 7 intends to lead seaward establishment by reel-lay in 2019 and 2020.

Skogul is one of the littlest fields on the Norwegian rack, with a hold premise of roughly 9.4 million bbl of oil. It will be created with a two-branch all around bored from a subsea layout fixing in to the establishments on the Vilje field and associated by means of pipeline from Vilje to Alvheim. Add up to ventures are assessed to be NOK 1.5 billion, and generation is intended to begin in 1Q 2020.

Aerfugl is found west of the Skarv field, 200 km west of the town of Sandnessjøen, Norway. Gas holds are assessed at 35 Bcmbillion m3. The field will be produced in two stages. Stage One includes the southern piece of the Snadd store and is booked to fire up in October 2020; the second stage contains the northern piece of Snadd with startup in 3Q 2023. The two stages are being created with three free satellite wells that will be attached in to the Skarv FPSO for handling and transport.

Aker submitted Plans for Development and Operation for Skogul and Aerfugl on 15 December 2017. That week, Subsea 7 was granted two contracts for venture administration and designing of the two activities and in addition an extra Aker venture, Valhall Flank West, which is booked to be finished in 2019.

Sunday, 4 March 2018

Society of Petroleum Engineers to host symposium

The University of Texas of the Permian Basin understudy part of the Society of Petroleum Engineers is facilitating a symposium titled "Advance the Unconventional" from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday at the Center for Energy and Economic Diversity, 1310 North Farm to Market Road 1788.

This one day occasion will incorporate in excess of twelve Permian Basin oil and gas administrators who will make specialized introductions covering numerous parts of oil designing, a news discharge said.

Offbeat is a free term generally utilized as a part of the oil business to allude to hydrocarbons (oil/flammable gas) recuperated from source rocks and tight store shakes, the discharge said.

The introductions made amid the symposium speak to cutting edge systems with regards to unusual repositories activities. Understudies will have a chance to interface what they realize here at UTPB with what is completed in the field, the discharge said.