Another North Sea Oil Find

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

A small oil discovery has been made by StatoilHydro in the Titan prospect directly east of northern Visund in the Tampen area of the Norwegian North Sea. Made by exploration wells 34/8-13 A and 34/8-13 S, this strike is estimated to contain 5.6-12.5 million recoverable barrels of oil equivalent. A tie-in to Visund will be assessed.

Intended to prove petroleum in the Brent group, the discovery wells were drilled in a structurally complex area.

While 13 A found a small oil column in Upper Jurassic sands, the underlying Brent group proved to be an aquifer. Well 13 S, drilled 2.7 kilometres to the south-east, found oil in the Brent group.

The wells were drilled from Scarabeo 5, which has moved to PL 199 for a workover of production well 6406/2-S-4 H. (Photo: Trond Sigvaldsen)

The oil zones in the two wells are likely to be in communication, and both have been subject to extensive data gathering and coring.

“This find is the result of good collaboration between the Visund production team and our exploration specialists,” said Tom Dreyer, head of infrastructure-led exploration in the North Sea.

The water depth in the area is 381 metres. Both wells have now been permanently plugged and abandoned.

Operator StatoilHydro has 59.06% of production licence 120, where its partners are Petoro with 16.94%, ConocoPhillips 13% and Total E&P Norge 11%.

Categories: Offshore

Related Stories

Applied Acoustics Deploys Pyxis INS + USBL System for SEP Hydrographic

PortXchange Wins Award for EmissionInsider Port Decarbonization Platform

Dajin Forms Offshore Wind Alliance with German Port Terminal Operator

Current News

Applied Acoustics Deploys Pyxis INS + USBL System for SEP Hydrographic

800-Ton Goliath Crane Takes Shape in Port of Chioggia

Renewable Propane Delivers Clean Energy Without the Wait

Crewed Up, Not Crew Cut: How ARC Is Rethinking Retention at Sea

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News