Conoco Building Offshore Gas Production Unit
Wednesday, May 10 2000 - 02:00 AM WIB
When Conoco needed flexibility to move fast to develop several large natural gas discoveries in the West Natuna Sea, it developed a completely new technology that provides considerable operational efficiencies and cost savings.
The solution to capture the clean-burning fuel is a technological marvel: a movable offshore gas production unit, or MOgPU, for use in Indonesia's Block B fields. Conoco will be able to relocate the unit at a relatively small cost as older reserves are depleted and new fields are brought on stream.
Construction on the MOgPU began in Korea earlier this year and production will begin in mid-2001.
The MOgPU was created after Conoco led negotiations to bring about the first export sale of pipelined gas from Indonesia to another country -- in this case Singapore. Last January, workers began laying a new, 300-mile subsea pipeline to Singapore, which when completed will be the longest natural gas supply and delivery system in Asia Pacific.
"Conoco plans to make Southeast Asia a major area of operations for our company by building a multi-billion dollar business in the region by 2003," said Archie Dunham, Conoco's chairman and CEO. "In 1999, Conoco made five discoveries offshore Indonesia that doubled our Indonesian gas reserves. We have produced oil in Indonesia since 1979, so we knew that to economically capture the gas and deliver it to the growing Asian market would require us to truly think creatively and develop new solutions."
"The biggest advantage of the MOgPU is mobility," said John Hopkins, Conoco vice president for exploration production technology. "Basically, we can pick it up off the seabed and quite easily move it to another location and ultimately it can be abandoned with minimal effort and cost."
"The MOgPU concept proves that once the market opens up, Conoco can move quickly to deliver energy to customers," said Rob McKee, Conoco executive vice president for worldwide exploration and production. "The West Natuna Group has signed a 22-year sales contract with Pertamina to sell gas to Singapore. Conoco is poised for similar growth in other Asian markets in the near future." (*)
