Thursday, 25 May 2017

Gina Krog nears first oil


The NPD has today granted Statoil, the operator, to commence production at Gina Krog in June. The field was originally a gas discovery made in 1974 and had been considered for development on a number of occasions throughout history. In 2007, oil (and gas) was discovered in a nearby prospect and Gina Krog was subsequently reviewed again with a full appraisal and delineation programme taking place between 2008-2011 which confirmed substantial amounts of oil under the entire structure.

A Plan for Development and Operation was submitted in December 2012, with approval obtained in March 2013. The field will be developed using a fixed steel platform and FSO, with oil exported via shuttle tankers. The development is planned to utilise 10 production wells and 4 gas combined injection/production wells. The field is estimated to contain 225mmboe. Most of the gas will initially be re-injected for reservoir support with minimal sales gas during this first phase. This will be followed by a gas blow-down phase, expected to commence in the mid-2020s which will see gas exported to the Sleipner facilities for processing and onward sale.
The partners in the field are:
  • Statoil 58.7%, operator
  • KUFPEC 15%
  • Total 15%
  • PGNiG 8%
  • Aker BP 3.3%

Total has been offloading its stake in Gina Krog since 2014 in an attempt to reduce exposure to relatively high cost fields and development capex.

Total is aiming to move down the cost curve by divesting higher cost assets globally. Its near-term capex is 20% weighted to Norway post Gina Krog start-up, so any sale proceeds will be a welcome contribution to ongoing spend, including the Total operated Martin Linge development which is scheduled to produce first oil in early 2018.


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