SUT South of England Drinks Reception
31 July 2013 South of England Drinks Reception, HMS President
Chairman Bil Loth
31 July 2013 South of England Drinks Reception, HMS President
Chairman Bil Loth
13 June 2013 London Evening Meeting
Chairman Bob Allwood, SUT
FPSO Kwame Nkrumah: Revealing Ghana’s Jubilee Development
Roger Swaine, Group Projects and Engineering Manager, Tullow Oil
The Jubilee field straddles the Deepwater Tano and West Cape Three Points licenses some 60 km offshore Ghana & 130 km southwest of the port city Takoradi. This presentation outlined the successful delivery of this “ultra fast track” project which set records for the industry and which has now been in production for more than two years. The FPSO is named the Kwame Nkrumah after the first President of Ghana and is converted from an existing Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) 1991 single hull tanker by MODEC in the Jurong shipyard, Singapore.
Conversion work commenced in November 2008 and FPSO arrived in Ghanaian waters June 2010. Start-up November 2010.
The subsea architecture consists of 46 km of subsea flowlines supplied by Technip, 28 km of umbilicals supplied by Aker, 19 Subsea trees, 8 manifolds and 2 riser bases supplied by FMC. 14 vessels were directly involved in installation operated from the Takoradi-Sekondi port.
17 October 2013 London Evening Meeting
The need for intelligent data management for subsea pipeline projects has identified the importance of proper data management practices and the conservation of data integrity throughout the project life cycle. A Geographical Information System (GIS) has been used to store, manage and analyze the digital design, moving away from a paper centric to a more data centric environment.
The early implementation of a GIS system secures a rigid foundation for pipeline data throughout the project data life cycle and integrates data management systems using a widely adopted common platform. The leveraging of data access through third party management systems, such as the industry standard Pipeline Open Data Standard (PODS) model and Subsea Survey Data Model (SSDM), enables a fully functional platform to aid in greater decision support.
The use of GIS functionality and built in analysis tools, enables greater support for Asset Integrity Management (AIM), providing a greater degree of decision support to clients, through means of dynamic visual representation and bolt-on integrity tools. There is an increasing need in the Oil and Gas industry to ensure data is current, accurate and meaningful to ensure the integrity of assets through the full life of field.
9 October 2013 Aberdeen Evening Meeting
Chairman David Kaye, Aquamarine Power
Fast Reaction Bespoke Solutions for Subsea Repair
Paul Booth, Engineering Manager, Intervention and Autonomous Systems, Subsea 7
Despite all the pre-planning, engineering and stockpiled hardware, there are occasions where a high quality bespoke solution has to be engineered in the minimal possible time. This presentation looks at a number of bespoke, deep water pipeline repairs carried out over the past 18 months. The deep water application brings added complexity due to the need for ROV installation. The repairs were designed, tested and proceduralised by Subsea7 in conjunction with client/operator requirements, and with input from third parties where additional specialised fabrication or equipment was required.
Subsea Digital Radiography of a Blocked Pipeline
James McNab, Global Technology Manager, Oceaneering International Inspection
Subsea transmission pipelines periodically require internal operations with mechanical “pigs” and “plugs”. These pigs and plugs can become stuck inside the pipeline for various unexpected reasons. It is unusual for operators to track the pig or plug along the full length of the subsea pipeline due to cost and access and the only positioning information usually available is by estimates of the volume of fluid pumped. The difficulty in finding the pig or plug can be compounded if the pipeline is heavy-walled, buried or coated. This paper describes a successful operation for locating a stuck plug and confirming its exact position within a buried 30pipe-in-pipe system. The plug was located using a combination of pressurisation/depressurisation sequences to calculate the approximate distance to the blockage, cleaning pigs with acoustic transponders to refine the location, and finally computed radiography.
Reinstatement of Foinaven Riser-Pullhead Bolted Connection
Neil Stagg, BP Subsea and Pipelines Team, Subsea Projects
Often solutions to unique problems are driven by outside constraints such as availability of specialist vessels, replacement time for main system elements and maximising summer weather opportunities. presentation discusses execution of a concept that evolved through lateral thinking to solve a West of Shetland pipeline-riser bolted connection requirement – and without specialist construction spreads or long lead times. This opens up capabilities for a new approach to subsea bolted connections.
SUT+ Pre-Talk, Pipeline Inspection and Repair
David Kaye, Chief Engineer, Aquamarine Power
Offshore pipelines represent a significant investment and a critical part of an operator’s export infrastructure. A significant amount of effort and expenditure is spent each year in inspecting offshore pipelines, and occasionally, much more effort is spent on repairing damaged pipelines and bringing them back into service. This presentation gives a beginner’s guide to the different pipeline inspection techniques and approaches to pipeline repair.