Oil Drilling at World Record Depth in GofM

September 13, 2012

FPSO BW Pioneer: Photo credit Petrobas
FPSO BW Pioneer: Photo credit Petrobas

Petrobras's floating production, storage and offloading platform, FPSO BW Pioneer begins production from record depth.

FPSO BW Pioneer, moored some 250 kilometers off the coast of the State of Louisiana in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, is the first FPSO to produce oil and gas in the Gulf, with processing capacity of 80,000 barrels of oil and 500,000 cm3 gas per day, and storage facilities for 500,000 barrels of oil. It is moored at a world-record water depth of 2,500 meters.

The Chinook #4 production well was drilled and completed in Lower Tertiary reservoirs (formed between 23 and 65 million years ago), a promising offshore exploration frontier located at a depth of around 8,000 meters. The well is connected to the FPSO by a system incorporating subsea equipment and lines, in addition to free-standing risers (vertical production lines). Oil will be transported to shore on shuttle tankers, and gas through pipelines.

Petrobras is the first company to develop an oilfield in the Gulf of Mexico using these technologies, tried and tested with excellent results in Brazil.

The Cascade and Chinook development projects were deployed in full compliance with Petrobras' Safety, Environment, Energy Efficiency and Health guidelines, and these standards will be strictly maintained throughout this new production phase.


 

 

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