The project is Chevron’s first operated development in the West of Shetland basin.
Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) announced that its U.K. subsidiary has entered front-end engineering and design (FEED) on the Rosebank oil and gas project in the West of Shetland region. "The Rosebank project is another important step forward in our strategy to grow profitably in core areas of our upstream business," said George Kirkland, Chevron's vice chairman. "Chevron has extensive deepwater capabilities, and the Rosebank project fits well in our portfolio."
The Chevron-operated Rosebank project is located approximately 80 miles (130 kilometers) northwest of the Shetland Islands, in water depths of approximately 3,700 feet (1,100 meters). The project will include a floating production, storage and offloading vessel, production and water injection wells, subsea facilities, and a gas export pipeline.
The Rosebank Field, discovered in 2004, is estimated to contain total potentially recoverable oil-equivalent resources of 240 million barrels. The Rosebank development is a joint venture between Chevron's subsidiary Chevron North Sea Limited with a 40 percent equity interest; Statoil (U.K.) Limited (30 percent); OMV (U.K.) Limited (20 percent) and DONG Exploration & Production (UK) Limited (10 percent).
Air Max
Technip has been awarded by Dubai Petroleum an engineering, procurement, installation and commissioning (EPIC) contract for the South West Fatah and Falah fields, located 90 kilometers offshore Dubai, United Arab Emirates, at a water depth up to 53 meters. The contract scope includes the replacement of a 12-inch gas pipeline and six 18-inch water injection pipelines.
The BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2012 - the 61st annual report launched two days ago - highlights disruptions to supplies and ever-increasing demand as the two big energy stories of 2011.
Analysis by ARC Advisory Group: The economic growth that had started in 2010 continued in 2011. While demand for automation remained strong for PLCs and PLC-based PACs during the first half of 2011, the pace of growth slowed as the year progressed, caused by the escalating sovereign debt crisis in a number of industrialized countries as well as specific concerns about some of the economies in southern Europe. Despite the looming financial crisis in Europe and instability in the Middle East, there are crucial factors that will continue to drive the use of automation, fueling PLC and PLC-based PAC market growth.