Stories tagged with offshore
Riders on the Storm: Stopping and Restarting Offshore Oil and Gas
Posted by JoulesBurn on September 8, 2008 - 7:15am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: gulf of mexico, hurricane dennis, hurricane gustav, hurricane ike, hurricane katrina, hurricanes, offshore, original, production platforms, thunder horse [list all tags]
It has been five days since Hurricane Gustav blew through town, and industry is still working to restore the flow of oil and gas from offshore production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico:
Meanwhile, about 47 percent of more than 700 stationary offshore platforms in the Gulf of Mexico remained evacuated Friday, according to the Minerals Management Service in New Orleans. The agency also said that 34 of 121 oil rigs remained unmanned.
Under the fold the latest from the industry on the LOOP, Port Fourchon, and other infrastructural concerns.
Nigeria – The Significance of the Bonga Offshore Oil Platform Attack
Posted by jeffvail on June 24, 2008 - 8:45am
Topic: Policy/Politics
Tags: bonga, geopolitical feedback loops, geopolitics, mend, militants, nigeria, offshore, original, shell [list all tags]
| On the heels of this weekend's Saudi Oil summit, Nigerian production has dropped to the lowest level in 25 years. This was in part because militant attacks shut in as much as 345,000 barrels per day of Nigerian production in the past few days. The Nigerian militant group MEND (Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta) has demonstrated a continuing ability to interrupt production from Nigeria's mature, onshore fields. However, the future promise of Nigerian oil is not onshore. Rather, it is the 1.25 million barrels per day of offshore production scheduled to come on line in the next 6 years. Analysts previously believed these offshore facilities were out of MEND's reach. |
This assumption--that far offshore facilities are beyond the reach of militants--must now be reconsidered. The week's most successful attack, shutting in 225,000 barrels per day, came against Shell's Bonga facility. At 120 km offshore, the Bonga attack demonstrated a new militant capability in the offshore environment. As Nigeria is one of the few states with the geological potential to significantly increase oil production and exports, the Bonga attack may prove to be an extremely important development.
Shell’s $3.6 billion “Bonga” Floating Production, Storage, and Offloading vessel (FPSO), 120km from shore in 1000m deep water, was recently attacked by MEND militants.
Clarification on Carioca (reported discovery in Santos Basin)
Posted by Luis de Sousa on April 16, 2008 - 12:30am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Geology/Exploration
Tags: carioca, exploration, offshore, petrobras, pre-salt, santos basin, tupi [list all tags]
[Update: The Brasilian press is reporting wide criticism to Haroldo Lima who at the moment is denying he announced the find: “I haven't announced anything, nor did I used that word [anoucement] at any moment.” (hat tip Carolus Obscurus).]
Reuters reported yesterday:
Haroldo Lima told reporters the find, known as Carioca, could contain 33 billion barrels of oil equivalent, five times the recent giant Tupi discovery. That would further boost Brazil's prospects as an important world oil province and the source of new crude in the Americas.
"It could be the world's biggest discovery in the past 30 years, and the world's third-biggest currently active field," Lima, head of the government's oil and fuel market regulator, told reporters at an industry event in Rio de Janeiro.
Tupi, the new kid in town
Posted by Luis de Sousa on November 22, 2007 - 10:00am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Geology/Exploration
Tags: exploration, jack 2, offshore, petrobras, pre-salt, tupi [list all tags]
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On the morning of November 12th a friend called me saying that the largest oil field in the world had just been found off Brasil. I then explained to him what the largest oil field in the world was like, and how implausible that information was. In fact since the late hours of the previous day the media was reporting “the largest world oil find in the last 20 years". Once again our energy problems were over, goodbye 90 dollar oil and so on. Déja vu? Didn't this all happen last year with the Jack field in the Gulf of Mexico? |
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