BP awards Schlumberger contract for Mad Dog 2 project
Published by David Bizley,
Senior Editor
Oilfield Technology,
OneSubsea, a Schlumberger company, has announced the award by BP of an engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract to supply the subsea production system for the Mad Dog 2 development in the Gulf of Mexico.
The scope of this supplier-led solution includes subsea manifolds, trees, control system, single and multi-phase meters, water analysis sensors, intervention tooling and test equipment for producer and water injection wells associated with the project. In addition, Subsea 7, which collaborates with OneSubsea through the Subsea Integration Alliance, was awarded an engineering, procurement, construction and installation (EPCI) contract for subsea controls, flexible risers, pipeline systems, umbilicals and associated subsea architecture.
“Our collaborative working relationship with Subsea 7 empowers our organisations to deliver to BP an integrated EPCI capital-efficient solution, which is substantially lower than the original estimated project cost,” said Mike Garding, president, OneSubsea, Schlumberger. “Our equipment reliability is a key factor in mitigating project risk and this project will benefit from the supplier-led approach of using standardised equipment designs and specifications.”
Project management, including engineering, fabrication, installation support and life of field activities will be managed by US-based resources and operations in both Houston, Texas, and Louisiana. Teams from both organisations will be co-located to better support project objectives.
Read the article online at: https://www.oilfieldtechnology.com/drilling-and-production/21032017/bp-awards-schlumberger-contract-for-mad-dog-2-project/
You might also like
Middle East disruption could cut global oil demand 20% and gas 10% by 2050 as energy security drives shift to independence
Wood Mackenzie report that prolonged disruption to Middle East energy supplies could accelerate a structural shift in global energy systems, halving oil and gas import dependence by 2050 and reducing oil demand by 20% and gas demand by 10% relative to the base case.