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13 October 2011 @BP
BP and Partners Investing £10 Billion in UK
Oil and Gas Projects
£1à120‰~
BP and its partners are developing four new oil and gas
projects that together will involve a total investment of almost £10
billion in the UKfs oil industry over the next five years and help to maintain
BPfs production from the North Sea for decades to come.
The UK Government today granted BP and its partners - Shell, ConocoPhillips and
Chevron - approval to proceed with the £4.5 billion Clair
Ridge project, the second phase of development of the giant Clair field,
west of the Shetland Islands.
The Clair co-venturers@@http://www.bp.com/genericarticle.do?categoryId=2012968&contentId=7071792
- BP Exploration Operating Co 27.6215%
- Britoil plc (BP) 0.98%
- ConocoPhillips (U.K.) Limited 24.0029%
- Chevron North Sea Limited 19.4225%
- Enterprise Oil Limited (Shell) 18.6831%
- Shell Clair UK Limited (Shell) 9.2900%
Commenting on the approval, UK Prime Minister David Cameron said: gI am delighted to give the go-ahead for this project; this investment is great news for Aberdeen and the country and provides a massive boost for jobs and growth. It shows the confidence that there is to invest in the North Sea - we have cutting edge technology, world class skills and expertise and a UK Government that is committed to do what we can to secure future investment.h
For BP - whose share of the total investment in the four projects will be around
£4 billion - this represents the highest level of annual investment the company
has ever made into the UK North Sea. Over the next few years, BP will be
bringing on stream more new major project developments in the UK than it has
ever done over a comparable time period.
gAlthough it began over forty years ago, the story of the North Sea oil industry
has a long way yet to run. BP has produced some five billion barrels of oil and
gas equivalent so far from the region and we believe we have the potential for
over three billion more,h said Bob Dudley, BPfs group chief executive, who will
be speaking in Aberdeen later today.
gAfter some years of decline, we now see the potential to maintain our
production from the North Sea at around 200,000-250,000 barrels of oil
equivalent a day until 2030. And we are working on projects that will take
production from some of our largest fields out towards 2050.h
The four BP-operated North Sea projects are part of a wave of new major oil and
gas projects around the world that BP expects to come on stream over the next
five years. gThe efficient management of giant fields such as Clair, using
state-of-the-art technology to manage complex reservoirs and increase oil
recovery, is an important element of BPfs strategy and one of the key drivers
that we see generating value in BPfs upstream business,h said Dudley.
Over half of the total investment in the projects is expected to be spent in the
UK. At their peak, taken together, the projects will provide some 3,000 UK oil
and gas supply chain jobs, and will play a major part in sustaining the more
than 3,500 jobs already existing in BPfs North Sea operations.
gThe oil industry directly employs around a quarter of a million people in the
UK, with a further 200,000 or so jobs either supported by the economic activity
of its employees, or created through the export of oilfield goods and services,h
Dudley said. gThese projects reflect BPfs confidence in our UK suppliers and
service providers, and in the fantastic people we have working for us in our
North Sea business.h
The Clair Ridge project, which will install two new
bridge-linked platforms with the capability to produce an estimated 640 million
barrels of oil, is planned to come on stream in 2016 and to extend production
from the greater Clair area to 2050. In addition to the 600 people already
working on the project, it will provide hundreds of UK engineering, drilling and
oilfield services jobs over the fieldfs life.
The Clair partners also today announced the successful appraisal of an extension
to the Clair field - South West Clair -- confirming
the overall Clair field complexfs status as the UKfs largest hydrocarbon
resource with over seven billion barrels of oil and gas initially in place. The
appraisal well also encountered a significant new hydrocarbon column in an
overlying reservoir horizon, which is expected to support further development of
the greater Clair field area in the future.
http://www.bp.com/genericarticle.do?categoryId=2012968&contentId=7071784
In the central North Sea, with partner RWE, BPfs £550 million development of the Devenick gas field recently passed a significant milestone when its 600 tonne module was successfully lifted onto Marathon Oilfs East Brae platform. At its peak the project has provided over a thousand design, engineering, construction and commissioning jobs and once it comes on stream in 2012 it is expected to supply up to three per cent of the UKfs gas needs.
BP owns 88.7% and RWE Dea UK the remaining 11.3%.
http://www.bp.com/genericarticle.do?categoryId=2012968&contentId=7071782
Earlier this year, BP and its partners also announced plans for the £3 billion redevelopment of the Schiehallion and Loyal fields, west of Shetland, and the £700 million development of the Kinnoull field in the central North Sea.
BP will have a 36.3 per cent ownership interest in the new FPSO, with other interests as follows:
Shell (36.3 per cent); Hess Ltd (12.90 per cent); Statoil (UK) Ltd (4.84 per cent); OMV (UK) Ltd. (4.84 per cent) and Murphy Petroleum (4.84 per cent).http://www.bp.com/genericarticle.do?categoryId=2012968&contentId=7069876
Together with development drilling and a
number of smaller projects, these four projects represent almost £10 billion of
new major project investment by BP and its partners into the UK continental
shelf over the next five years.
BP will use the latest technology to maximise recovery from the fields. Clair
Ridge will include the first offshore deployment of advanced LoSal low salinity
water reservoir injection capability and the partners are looking to employ
polymer flood technology on the Schiehallion and Loyal fields redevelopment to
improve the sweep of the reservoir and overall recovery of oil.
gSince the late 1960s approaching £300 billion has been invested in exploration
drilling and field developments on the UK continental shelf – and a similar
figure has been paid in corporate taxes. BP alone has invested around £35
billion into the UK North Sea, paying over £40 billion to the Government in
tax,h Dudley said.
gWe have a major presence in the North Sea today, operating around 40 oil and
gas fields, four onshore terminals and a network of pipelines that transport
almost half of the UKfs oil and gas production. And as demonstrated by todayfs
announcements, the region still offers competitive, attractive investment
opportunities which we will pursue.h
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