Rhum gasfield

The Rhum Gas Field (Persian: میدان گازی رام) is located 240 miles (390 km) north-east of Aberdeen in 109 metres (350 ft) of water. Gas production and export began on 20 December 2005.[1]

Rhum Gas field
Location of Rhum Gas field
CountryScotland, United Kingdom
LocationCentral North Sea
Block3/29
Offshore/onshoreOffshore
Coordinates
OperatorBP
PartnersBP
National Iranian Oil Company
Field history
Discovery1977
Start of production2005

Development of the ()Rhum project was circa £350 million. Prior to the start of production, Rhum was the largest remaining undeveloped gas reservoir in the UK Continental Shelf. The partners in the Rhum field are BP (Operator) 50% and Iranian Oil Company (U.K.) Limited (A subsidiary of the National Iranian Oil Company) 50%. The Rhum field is a high-temperature, high-pressure reservoir, experiencing down-hole temperatures of 150 °C and pressures of 12,700 psi. By comparison, the Bruce gas field, records temperatures of 99 °C and pressures of 6,000 psi.[2]

Rhum, which lies in block 3/29, was discovered in 1977 by well 3/29a-2. An earlier well (3/29-1) which was drilled in 1973, was abandoned due to the high pressure gas. With the combination of a high pressure, high temperature (HPHT) gas reservoir developed using a long distance subsea tie-back, exploitation of Rhum is regarded by BP as a world first.[3]

Plateau production of 300 million standard cubic feet per day is expected from the field. Rhum is expected to access recoverable reserves of 800 billion cubic feet of gas (23 billion cubic metres).

The field is tied back to the BP-operated Bruce platform via a 28-mile (44 km) export line which involves a 22-inch (560 mm) High Integrity Pipeline Protection System (HIPPS) protected pipe-in-pipe main pipeline. New gas processing facilities were installed on the existing Bruce Compression Reception Centre (CR) platform to process gas from Rhum. Gas is exported onwards from Bruce via the Frigg pipeline system to St Fergus and associated condensate will be piped via Bruce into the Forties Pipeline System.[4]

References

  1. "BP Halts Production From U.K. Rhum North Sea Gas Field". www.bloomberg.com. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  2. "Gas field deal closer despite Iran delay". BBC News. 2018-10-09. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  3. "Gas production starts at UK Rhum field". www.ogj.com. Retrieved 2020-04-19.
  4. "Rhum to restart soon". sysla.no (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2020-04-19.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.