From a milestone at Atlanta Phase 1 to new contracts, below is a compilation of the latest headlines in the E&P space.
Activity headlines
Atlanta Phase 1 Milestone Reached
Enauta Participações SA said Feb. 5 that it had reached milestones on its Atlanta Phase 1 project offshore Brazil in January.
The early system is fully producing, with three wells in operation averaging more than 21,000 boe/d.
On Jan. 21, the first subsea multiphase pumping system (MPP), manufactured by OneSubsea, was loaded in Norway bound for Brazil. The MPP will be installed to support Atlanta’s oil and gas production and its on-scheduled delivery highlighted one of the key challenges to reach the FPSO Atlanta’s first oil schedule by August 2024.
Contracts and company news
Saipem Reports Castarone Incident
Saipem reported an early morning Jan. 30 incident on the Castorone pipelay vessel off the waters of Australia during normal pipelay operations.
Saipem said there were no injuries. Saipem said the vessel didn’t sustain major damage but reported localized damage to the trunkline. Saipem said the damage will be remediated.
In a follow-up release, Saipem said a buckle occurred while laying pipeline. An initial investigation indicated a software anomaly could be the cause.
Titania Jackup Wins Work offshore Mexico
Paratus Energy Services Ltd. announced Feb. 1 that SeaMex Holdings Ltd. and related subsidiaries won a one-year contract for the Titania jackup in Mexico from an unnamed customer.
The new contract will contribute approximately $55 million in backlog and is expected to begin in mid-February 2024.
TGS, SLB for GoM OBN Acquisition
TGS, in collaboration with SLB, announced on Feb. 5 the Engagement 5 Ocean Bottom Node (OBN) multi-client acquisition in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico.
The seventh program within the seismic joint venture involves the acquisition of 157 Outer Continental Shelf blocks covering 3,650 sq km through a long offset, sparse OBN survey that will start in the first quarter of 2024.
The expansion of data coverage in the eastern region of Green Canyon will adjoin with prior phases, establishing a continuous coverage area spanning over 23,000 sq km from the Mississippi Canyon area in the east to the Garden Banks area in the west.
The project is supported by industry funding.
Recommended Reading
Liberty Energy CEO: NatGas is Here to Stay as Energy Transition Lags
2024-03-27 - The energy transition hasn’t really begun given record levels of global demand for oil, natural gas and coal, Liberty Energy Chairman and CEO Chris Wright said during the DUG GAS+ Conference and Expo.
CERAWeek: Tecpetrol CEO Touts Argentina Conventional, Unconventional Potential
2024-03-28 - Tecpetrol CEO Ricardo Markous touted Argentina’s conventional and unconventional potential saying the country’s oil production would nearly double by 2030 while LNG exports would likely evolve over three phases.
CERAWeek: Trinidad Energy Minister on LNG Restructuring, Venezuelan Gas Supply
2024-03-28 - Stuart Young, Trinidad and Tobago’s Minister of Energy, discussed with Hart Energy at CERAWeek by S&P Global, the restructuring of Atlantic LNG, the geopolitical noise around inking deals with U.S.-sanctioned Venezuela and plans to source gas from Venezuela and Suriname.
US Expected to Supply 30% of LNG Demand by 2030
2024-02-23 - Shell expects the U.S. to meet around 30% of total global LNG demand by 2030, although reliance on four key basins could create midstream constraints, the energy giant revealed in its “Shell LNG Outlook 2024.”
API Gulf Coast Head Touts Global Emissions Benefits of US LNG
2024-04-01 - The U.S. and Louisiana have the ability to change global emissions through the export of LNG, although new applications have been frozen by the Biden administration.