Floating Production, Storage and Offloading (FPSO) Facilities
Presentation Content
History of Floating Production Systems Introduction to Field Layouts What is an FPSO..? Advantages of an FPSO Types of Processing Unit Major milestones affecting FPSO use Demand for FPSOs Examples of FPSO records; largest, smallest etc. Summary
History
Offshore locations have been producing oil since the late 1940s Originally all oil platforms sat on the seabed in shallow water and exported via tanker or pipeline As exploration moved to deeper waters in the 1970s Condeeps and Floating production systems came into use
Condeep Concrete Platforms
1975 Beryl A 3 shafts 120m Mobil Norway
1975 Brent B 3 shafts 140m Shell UK
1975 Brent D 3 shafts 140m Shell UK
1976 Frigg TCP2 2 shafts 104m Elf Norway
1977 Statfjord A 3 shafts 146m Mobil Norway
1981 Statfjord B 3 shafts 146m Mobil Norway
1984 Statfjord C 4 shafts 146m Mobil Norway
1986 Gulfaks A 4 shafts 135m Statoil Norway
1986 Gulfaks B 3 shafts 142m Statoil Norway
1988 Oseberg A 4 shafts 109m Norske Hydro Norway
1989 Gulfaks C 4 shafts 216m Statoil Norway
1993 Draugen 1 shaft 251m Shell Norway
1991/3 Sleipner A 4 shafts 82m Shell Norway
1995 Troll A 4 shafts, 303m Norske Shell, Norway
Example Field Layout
FPSO Support Vessel Shuttle Tanker Drill Rig
Anchor Chains
North Subsea Template: Production Line Production & Test Water Injection Gas Lift
Water injection Flexible Risers East Subsea Template: Production Line Production & Test Water Injection Gas Lift
West Subsea Template: Production Line Production & Test Water Injection Gas Lift
Flowlines Anchor Piles
Gas Disposal Line
Subsea Production Template
Emerald Field Layout
Insurance Disaster
Floating Production Facility Tripod Mooring System
2500m
Shuttle Tanker Floating Storage Unit
Riser Bases B C D
2000m
2000m
Satellite Choke 2000m Base
2000m
Central Control Riser Base
Control Line
2000m
What is an FPSO..?
A converted tanker or purpose built vessel
may be ship shaped, multi-hull production semi-submersible or a cylindrical shaped production spar / Mono Hull
Hydrocarbon processing facilities are installed on board Processes well stream fluids into Oil, LPG or LNG Units without processing facilities are referred to as an FSO or Floating Storage & Offload Unit
Xikomba offloading to shuttle
Sevan Voyageur Mono-Hull spar type Girassol Multi-hull semi-sub
What does an FPSO do..?
Processes hydrocarbons received from local production wells i.e. from a platform or subsea template Well stream is processed & stored on the vessel, offloaded to a shuttle tanker or exported via a pipeline
Why use an FPSO..?
Fixed platforms enable production to an average max depth of 1,400 feet (425m) FPSOs allow production far deeper than fixed platforms
FPSOs allow development of short-lived, marginal fields in remote locations where a fixed platform is impractical & uneconomical FPSOs can be relocated to new locations and reused
FPSO Mooring Systems
There are three main types;
Spread Mooring
FPSO is moored in a fixed position
Single Point Mooring (SPM) Systems
FPSO Weathervanes around a fixed point
Dynamic Positioning (DP)
Spread Mooring
Does not require anchor wires/chains or piled/seabed anchors. This system is the most accurate for station keeping but the most expensive to operate
Azimuth Thrusters for DP vessels Single Point Mooring
FPSO Advantages
They eliminate the need for costly long-distance pipelines to an onshore terminal Particularly effective in remote or deep water locations where seabed pipeline are not cost effective
In bad weather situations (cyclones, icebergs etc.) FPSOs release mooring/risers and steam to safety. On field depletion FPSOs can be relocated to a new field
Types of Processing Units
Process/Product Types OIL oil, gas & water from the well stream are separated. Gas & water may be injected into well to increase reservoir pressure or gas may be exported LPG has onboard liquid petroleum gas processing and export facilities LNG takes well stream and separates out the natural gas (primarily methane and ethane) and produces LNG
OIL
LPG
LNG
FPSO Milestones
First Oil FPSO built in Spain in 1977 Shell Castellon First Liquid Petroleum Gas (LPG) FPSO build completed 2005 Sanha, operates on the Chevron/Texaco Sanha Field in Angola First Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) FPSO was conversion of LNG Carrier Golar by Keppel in Singapore in 2007
Sanha LPG FPSO Angola
Golar FLNG
Growth in Demand
Global demand is expected to double this decade 127 of the planned 200 projects in next 8 years will use FPSOs Brazil is the fastest growing development area with 28 FPSOs in service and 41 currently in the tendering or planning phase Since Jan 2010 there have been 11 FPSO contracts awarded in Brazil Even in the mature region of the North Sea there remains an active FPSO market Harsh weather and proliferation of smaller, marginal fields lends itself to the use of FPSOs There are currently 22 FPSOs in operation with a further 28 planned projects, up from only 15 projects one year ago
FPS Facilities Installed
1999-2009 witnessed a 9% Compound annual growth rate in use of FPS facilities
300 225
150
75
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
0 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008
FPSOs
Production Semis
TLPs
SPARs
Data courtesy of Infield Data Analysts
Change in Demand
Historic Market
25% 31% 18% 24% 2%
2010-2014
30%
41%
14%
3% 12%
Small Independent Leased Operator NOC
Large Independent Major
Data courtesy of Infield Data Analysts
New FPSOs by Region
30
20
10
2005
0
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
2014
Africa Europe Australasia
Asia South America North America
Data courtesy of Infield Data Analysts
Deployment of FPSOs
Historic Market 2010-2014
10% 19%
?% future redeployment
14% 29%
57%
71%
Redeployment
Conversion
New Build
Data courtesy of Infield Data Analysts
Records Deepest Water
FPSO Pioneer
BW Offshore operated on behalf of Petrobras Americas Inc. 8,530 feet (2,600m) depth of water (DOW) in Gulf of Mexico 100,000bbl/d (16,000 m3/d) EPIC contract was awarded 2007 First oil Q3 2011 FPSO conversion at Keppel Shipyard in Singapore Vessel has disconnectable turret so it can disconnect for hurricanes and reconnect with minimal downtime
Records Shallowest Water
FPSO Armada Perkasa
Located in Okoro field in Nigeria, West Africa for Afren Energy 43 feet (13m) DOW in the Bass Strait between Australia and Tasmania Spread moored (fixed orientation) Uses 100mm, 150mm and 200mm bore DeepFlex non-steel flexible risers in a double lazy wave formation to offset extreme waves and currents
Records Biggest FPSO
FPSO Kizomba
Operated by Esso Exploration Angola (Exxon Mobil) 3,940 feet (1,200m) DOW in Atlantic Ocean off Angola 2.2 million barrels (350,000 m3) storage capacity Built by Hyundai Heavy Industry in Ulsan, Korea Weighs 81,000 tonnes 935 feet (285m) long, 207 feet (63m) wide and 105 feet (32m) high
Records Smallest FPSO
FPSO Crystal Ocean
Operated by AGR Asia Pacific on behalf of Roc Oil (Sydney based E&P company) 450 feet (137m) DOW in the Bass Strait between Australia and Tasmania 5,000 bbl/d (790 m3/d ) production
Records Longest FPSO
FPSO Girassol
Operated by TotalFinaElf Located of NNW Luanda, Angola - 1350m of water 300m Long x 59.6m Wide, 30.5m High Average draught 23m Displacement 396,288 tons
Records Most Advanced
FPSO Scarv
Developed & engineered by Aker Solutions for BP Norge Gas condensate and oil development Ties in 5 sub-sea templates with several smaller wells in future Handles 19 million cubic metres/day of gas 292m long, 50.6m wide & 29m deep Accommodates 100 people in single cabins
Scarv during construction in Korea
Records Largest Conversion
FSO Ailsa Craig
Largest FSO/FSU conversion when carried out Converted tanker with external turret Used on the Emerald Field, North Sea
View from forward to aft while under construction in Rotterdam
Records Largest FSU/FSO
FSO Khalij-E-Fars
Largest purpose built FSU/FSO Registered in Bushehr 335m long, 60m breadth, 33m deep & draft of 10m Built in China 2011 Due to sail from Dallian to Iran April 2012
Vessel nearing completion in STX Yard at Chang Xing island China
Records Largest Planned
Shell Prelude FLNG
Due on station 2017, North-western coast of Australia in 820 feet (250m) DOW (25 years permanently moored) Built by Samsung Heavy Industries (SHI) SHI & Technip consortium will engineer, procure, construct & install Capable of producing 5.3 million tons per annum (Mtpa) of liquids 3.6Mtpa of LNG, 1.3 Mtpa of condensate and 0.4 Mtpa of LPG
1,600 feet (488m) bow to stern (longer than four soccer fields 243 feet (74m) wide 600,000t when loaded, 260,000t of which will be steel Six times heavier than the worlds largest aircraft carrier Chills natural gas to -162oC shrinking the volume by 600 times Worlds largest floating offshore facility
Summary
Demand for FPSOs continues to rise at a healthy rate of approximately 9% compound annually Five year forecast shows capex for production floater orders is expected to total between $80 billion to $115 billion Between 24 and 35 units annually over the next five years, 80% of which will be FPSOs (120 to 175 FPSOs total) LNG and LPG FPSOs are increasing in numbers faster than ever Demand for FPSOs most prevalent in Brazil, Asia and West Africa Following the 2009 slump FPSO orders have recovered well
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