Foinaven oilfield

Foinaven oilfield
Foinaven oilfield is located in Scotland
Foinaven oilfield
Location of Foinaven oilfield
CountryScotland, United Kingdom
RegionWest of Shetland
Blocks204/19
204/24a
Offshore/onshoreOffshore
Coordinates60°15′N 4°30′W / 60.250°N 4.500°W / 60.250; -4.500
Partners
  • BP (72%)
  • RockRose Energy (28%)
Field history
DiscoveryOctober 1990
Start of development1994
Start of production1997
Production
Current production of oil12,000 barrels per day (~6.0×10^5 t/a)
Recoverable oil200 million barrels (~2.7×10^7 t)

Foinaven oilfield is a deep-water oil development approximately 190 kilometres (120 mi) west of the Shetland Islands. Together with Schiehallion, Loyal, Solan, Clair and Lancaster fields it forms the area generally termed as the West of Shetland.

Field description

Foinaven oil field was discovered in 1992. It is located at a water depth of 400–600 metres (1,300–2,000 ft),[1] and was the first development made beyond the United Kingdom Continental Shelf.[2] It is named after a mountain in the North West Highlands.[3] Recoverable oil reserves of Foinaven are estimated to be between 250 and 600 million barrels (40,000,000 and 95,000,000 m3).[2]

Production

The Foinaven field is operated by BP in partnership with RockRose Energy.[4] The development of the field was sanctioned in 1994 and the oil production in Foinaven started in November 1997. The phase 1 with 21 wells was completed in 2000. It had a designed oil production capacity of 85,000 barrels per day (13,500 m3/d) of oil.[2]

Oil was produced by subsea wells via a manifold, which passed through rigid flowlines and then flexible risers into a Floating Production Storage and Offloading system (FPSO).[2]

The FPSO, Petrojarl Foinaven, which was operated by Teekay Petrojarl, had an overall length of 240 metres (790 ft) and an oil storage capacity of 300,000 barrels (48,000 m3). Surface process facilities consisted of two parallel oil separation and gas compression trains with a combined liquid handling capacity of 145,000 barrels per day (23,100 m3/d) of crude oil and 114 million cubic feet per day (3.2×10^6 m3/d) of associated gas. It was permanently stationed in the field and the crude oil was exported by shuttle tankers. Oil was exported primarily to the Flotta oil terminal in Orkney with smaller amounts going to Tranmere Oil Terminal on Merseyside.

Approximately half of the produced associated gas was used for enhanced oil recovery in the field. The remainder was exported through the West of Shetland pipeline to the Sullom Voe Terminal. Some of the exported gas was used as fuel in the Fortum operated Sullom Voe power station. The remainder was enriched with liquefied petroleum gas and exported to the Magnus platform for enhanced oil recovery in the Magnus field.[5]

According to BP, to date, 390 million barrels of oil have been recovered from the Foinaven area.

Suspension of Production

In April 2021, BP suspended production from the Foinaven field as the long-serving FPSO Petrojarl Foinaven through which the fields were producing oil was nearing the end of its 25-year design life.[6] It was removed in 2022 to be scrapped at Frederikshavn in Denmark.[7] BP and its partners have begun evaluating options to develop the estimated remaining resources of up to a possible 200 million barrels from the Foinaven field and surrounding area.

References

  1. ^ Carruth, A. G. (2003). "The Foinaven Field, Blocks 204/19 and 204/24a, UK North Sea". Geological Society, London, Memoirs. 20 (1): 121–130. doi:10.1144/GSL.MEM.2003.020.01.10. S2CID 128681361. Retrieved 13 February 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d "Foinaven BP Oil Field, Shetland Islands". Hydrocarbons Technology. Retrieved 13 February 2008.
  3. ^ "Oil and Gas field names in the North Sea" (PDF).
  4. ^ "RockRose completes acquisition of Marathon Oil's UK business". Energy Voice. 2 July 2019. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  5. ^ "Magnus EOR". Offshore Technology. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
  6. ^ "BP Suspends Output from Foinaven Fields as Long-Serving FPSO Petrojarl Foinaven Nears End of Life". Offshore Engineer Magazine. 15 April 2021. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  7. ^ "[Norway] Petrojarl Foinaven (Scrapped)". Oil and Gas World. 30 October 2022.