Aberdeen upstream news
SPE Offshore Europe 2022 postponed
A smaller, themed event may be staged later in 2022 if industry demand is sufficient.
Finalists announced for Subsea Expo awards
The prestigious awards ceremony, organised by the Global Underwater Hub, will take place on 23 February, 2022, at P&J Live in Aberdeen.
First Marine Solutions awarded contract by decom specialist
The £multi-million agreement will see Aberdeen-headquartered FMS provide Well-Safe Solutions with marine consultancy services, including provision of equipment, marine services, and survey and marine engineering.
Proserv and Trendsetter Engineering pen MoU to expand subsea hardware offering
Proserv and Trendsetter will develop solutions for their clients across both brownfield and greenfield projects.
Dana Petroleum awards PD&MS FPSO engineering contract
PD&MS will carry out a range of engineering modifications and execute offshore construction on Dana Petroleum’s Triton and Western Isles FPSO assets.
Net Zero Technology Centre launches well P&A collaboration initiative
The collaboration initiative will aim to enable faster, lower cost validation and qualification of new technologies to deliver future well P&A programmes or campaigns.
Aberdeen-based Prism Energy signs frame agreement with North Sea operator
The new agreement will see Prism Energy provide risk management systems and consultancy services which will be used across the production company’s decom projects, operational assets and new development projects.
NERA and Wood partner on AI inspection solution
The Augmented Machine Vision Solution is designed to inspect critical industrial equipment, particularly for subsea oil and gas infrastructure.
Repsol Sinopec contracts Well-Safe Solutions for decommissioning in Buchan and Hannay fields
The contract has been welcomed by OGUK and The Oil & Gas Authority as a strong example of collaboration, campaigning and innovation.
Ardyne awarded platform well abandonment services contract for 86-well full service fishing and milling campaign
The work, which is being managed out of Ardyne’s Aberdeen headquarters, has commenced and is expected to last up to four years across two assets in the North Sea.