Thursday, October 31, 2013

Business: O&G – Offshore. Region: Africa. Country: Ghana. Technip in $1.23bn offshore project in Ghana

(Source: http://www.pipelineme.com/news/international-news/2013/10/technip-in-$123bn-offshore-project-in-ghana/).

Technip, leader of a consortium with Subsea7, has been awarded by Tullow Ghana Limited two contracts for the TEN Project, located offshore Ghana with a combined worth of US$1.23 billion, with Technip’s share of the project amounting to $730 million.
The TEN Field is located in the Deepwater Tano Contract Area, 60 Km off the coast of Ghana and approximately 30 Km west of the Tullow Operated Jubilee Field. The TEN field has a water depth reaching up to 2,000m.
Frédéric Delormel, executive vice president and chief operating officer Subsea, commented: “While the oil and gas market is rapidly growing in Ghana, we are proud to continue to contribute to the development of this country. Today, this new award demonstrates our ability to mobilise worldwide resources to bring strong know-how and technological innovation meeting the challenges of projects in ultra-deepwater.”
Jean-Marc Aubry, senior vice president at Technip for Western Europe, Africa, India and Pakistan,said: “We have been operating in Ghana for over four years, when we were awarded the Jubilee project, the first deep water field ever developed in this country. These new awards correspond to a significant milestone for our presence in Ghana.”
Technip’s scope of work includes the engineering, fabrication and installation of nine flexible risers, 3 flexible flowlines and 12 flexible spools totaling 48 Km.
The French engineering giant will also provide engineering, fabrication and installation services for 33 Km of water injection and gas injection rigid flowlines and install about 63 Km of static and dynamic umbilicals. It will engineer, pre-fabricate and provide final assembly and installation of 10 well rigid jumpers and delivery of a further six prefabricated rigid jumpers.
Technip said that the major ultra-deepwater project would require its full global expertise. The company’s operating centre in Paris will execute this project with the support of the group’s offices in Accra, Ghana. The flexible pipes will be fabricated at Technip’s Flexi France facility in Le Trait, France and the rigid flowlines at the Group’s spoolbase in Evanton, UK.
The offshore installation is scheduled to be completed in the second half of 2016.
Tullow Ghana Limited (a subsidiary of Tullow Oil plc) is Operator of the Deepwater Tano Contract Area with an interest of 47.175 per cent. Other partner interests are Kosmos Energy (17 per cent), Anadarko Petroleum (17 per cent), Sabre Oil & Gas Holdings Ltd, a subsidiary of Petro SA (3.825 per cent), and the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (15 per cent).

The TEN field (source: http://www.tullowoil.com/ghana/index.asp?pageid=12).
In March 2009, the Tweneboa-1 exploration well, in the Deep Water Tano licence, 25 km from Jubilee, discovered a highly pressured light hydrocarbon accumulation.
The well encountered 21 metres of net pay on the edge of a giant 200 sq km fan system related to the Jubilee play. Intriguingly, the well also encountered a four metre over-pressured oil-bearing sand and an over-pressured zone at total depth.

Tullow planned to carry out appraisal drilling to test core areas of the structure where thicker reservoir sections are mapped. The second well, Tweneboa-2 began drilling towards the end of 2009. In January 2010, Tullow announced that the well had encountered two separate hydrocarbon columns containing oil and gas-condensate legs. In total, 32 metres of net pay were encountered.
In July 2010, the Owo-1 exploration well encountered 53m of light oil pay. This was followed by a sidetrack well which encountered an additional 16 metres of net oil pay in the lower part of the same channel system. Pressure data indicates that this oil pay is in communication with the reservoirs penetrated in the Owo-1 well and confirms at least 69 metres of total net oil pay in a substantial gross oil column of 200 metres. Drilling further ahead, two gas/gas-condensate legs were also encountered totalling a further 19 metres of net pay.
During 2011, significant progress was made in the programme of appraisal drilling and flow testing of the Tweneboa, Enyenra and Ntomme fields, collectively known as TEN. Tullow anticipates developing the three accumulations in an integrated subsea cluster development scheme using a single FPSO.
2011 accelerated appraisal
The appraisal programme commenced in January 2011 with the drilling of the Tweneboa-3 well comprising two deviated exploratory boreholes drilled into the Ntomme prospect which was proven to be a material and separate gas-condensate accumulation.  
Further appraisal drilling on the Enyenra field has continued during 2011 including the re-drill of the Owo-1 discovery well in December 2011, to allow testing and coring. To determine the level of reservoir connectivity and well deliverability, the well was flow tested.  The lower channel was tested at a rate of approximately 10,000 bopd, and a commingled rate for the two upper channels was approximately 12,000 bopd. The pressure response will be monitored by pressure gauges deployed in the Enyenra-2A and Enyenra-3A wells, located to the south and north respectively.
Continued appraisal success in 2012
In the first half of 2012, the appraisal drilling and well testing for the TEN project made good progress with three wells drilled in support of the Plan of Development (PoD).  The Owo-1RA well was drilled and successfully tested in February 2012 at combined rates of 20,000 bopd. Enyenra-4A was drilled in March 2012, intersecting 32 metres of oil pay. Water injection tests on this down-dip well were carried out in April 2012 with results proving that the Enyenra channel sands are suitable for water injection to support oil production.
 
The Ntomme-2A well was drilled in May 2012 and found oil down dip of the Tweneboa-3ST gas discovery (the Ntomme discovery well). The well was production tested at combined flow rates of around 20,000 bopd confirming excellent quality reservoir.  As part of the overall appraisal programme pressure gauges were installed in a number of the wells and gauge readings have confirmed reservoir continuity across each of the individual Tweneboa, Enyenra and Ntomme fields.
 
The data from the appraisal activity in the first half of 2012 has enabled the subsurface models for the TEN fields to be updated and the combined resources range is 200 to 600 mmboe with most likely resources of 360 mmboe of which 70% is oil.
Plan of Development

In the second half of 2012, the TEN project made good progress and Tullow and partners submitted the Plan of Development (PoD) to the Minister of Energy in early November 2012. On 29 May 2013, the Government of Ghana formally approved the TEN PoD. The approval paves the way for Tullow and its partners to proceed with the development of these discoveries and to define the final schedule and capital programme to deliver first oil in 2016 and a steady ramp up to a capacity production rate of 80,000 bopd. Development of the TEN Project will require the drilling and completion of up to 24 development wells which will be connected through subsea infrastructure to a Floating, Production, Storage and Offloading vessel (FPSO), moored in approximately 1,500 metres of water. Contracts for the FPSO and subsea tenders will be awarded over the coming weeks and rig capacity for the drilling and completion of the development wells has already been secured.

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