North Sea Gudrun delivers first production
Statoil and partners GDF Suez and OMV have started production from the Gudrun oil and gas field in the Norwegian North Sea.
Gudrun is the first new Statoil-operated platform onstream offshore Norway since 2005. The company expects to produce 184 MMboe over the field’s life.
Statoil submitted the plan for development and operation in 2010. “We have delivered the Gudrun field on time and below the cost estimate in the PDO,” said Margareth Øvrum, head of the company’s Technology, Projects and Drilling business area.
Gudrun, discovered in 1975, is a high-pressure/high-temperature field. Development was only possible when suitable drilling technology and capacity in facilities and pipelines in the area became available.
Produced oil and gas is sent to the Sleipner complex for processing, with the resultant crude sent to Kårstø in western Norway, and the gas through the Norwegian trunkline system to mainland Europe.
The project entailed modifications on Sleipner and at Kårstø.
Cowan Petróleo e Gás, oil industry arm of Minas Gerais-based builder Cowan, plans to diversify its areas of exploration to dilute its business risk. Cowan Petróleo director Guilherme Santana says this strategy has led to the sale of a stake in two blocks that the company has in Namibia. Cowan in March completed the transfer of a 65% share in the 2613A and 2613B blocks to American company Murphy Oil and to Austria’s OMV.
The Brazilian company will keep 25% of the blocks, while Murphy will be the operator with 40% and OMV will hold 25%. State-owned Namibia Namcor will also maintain a stake in the operations. The transaction value was not disclosed.