Fulmar Oil Field

The Fulmar Oilfield is situated 312 km east of Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom in block number 30/16 and 30/11b. It is operated by Repsol Sinopec who took over from the previous operator, Shell at the end of 2006. At this time Talisman also purchased the equity of the other partners ExxonMobil and Amerada Hess. The field was discovered in December 1975 by well 30/16-6 in a water depth of 82 metres. Estimated ultimate recovery is 544 million barrels (86.5×106 m3) of oil. It is named after the fulmar, a sea bird.

Fulmar Oil Field
Location of Fulmar Oil Field
CountryScotland, United Kingdom
RegionCentral North Sea
Block30/16, 30/11b
Offshore/onshoreoffshore
Coordinates56°29′00″N 2°8′00″E
OperatorRepsol Sinopec Resources UK Ltd.[1]
Field history
Discovery1975
Start of production1982
Production
Estimated oil in place73.42 million tonnes
(~ 85.56×10^6 m3 or 538.2 million bbl)[2]
Estimated gas in place4.09×10^9 m3 (144×10^9 cu ft)
Producing formationsUpper Jurassic Fulmar Sandstone

The oil reservoir is located at a depth of 3,050 metres.

The "Fulmar A platform" operates above the oilfield. Production started in February 1982 from the Fulmar 'A' platform. This platform is a steel, 8 legged jacket designed by McDermott Engineering and constructed at Nigg, Easter Ross, Scotland. This jacket weighs 12,400 tonnes and supports a topside weight of around 22,560 tonnes. The jacket and platform were installed in July 1979 and June 1980.[3]

The topsides facilities included capability to drill, produce, meter, pump oil and gas. It can also inject both gas and water. Production is exported via the Norpipe system to Teesside.

Associated natural gas from the reservoir is separated and used to power electrical generation with the excess being transported by the Fulmar Gas Pipeline to St. Fergus.

Previously oil was exported by using an oil tanker anchored to the sea bed. The Medora Floating Storage Offloading (FSO) vessel broke free on the evening of 24 December 1988 narrowly missing the BP operated Clyde platform in the process.[4]

At that time Fulmar Alpha was host to a BBC crew who, not only, reported on the event but later delivered a live watchnight service broadcast from the platform in memory of the Piper Alpha disaster.[5] Some of the same BBC crew having come directly from reporting on the Lockerbie disaster.[6]

See also

References

  1. DECC Fields Index Archived March 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  2. DTI Brown Book 2001 Archived 2001-11-14 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Department of Trade and Industry (1994). The Energy Report. London: HMSO. p. 141. ISBN 0115153802.
  4. "On This Day: Oilfields crippled after storage ship drifts". BBC News. 24 December 1988. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  5. "On This Day: Dozens feared dead in Piper Alpha oil blaze". BBC News. 6 July 1988. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  6. "On This Day : Jumbo jet crashes onto Lockerbie". BBC News. 21 December 1988. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
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