The Indefatigable gas field is a large natural gas and associated condensate field located under the North Sea 60 miles (98 km) off the Norfolk coast.
Indefatigable gas field | |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Region | Southern North Sea |
Location/blocks | 49/18, 49/19, 49/23, 49/24 |
Offshore/onshore | Offshore |
Coordinates | 53°19′19″N 2°34′30″E / 53.32194°N 2.57500°E |
Operators | Amoco, Perenco, Shell |
Field history | |
Discovery | 1966 |
Start of development | 1970 |
Start of production | 1971 |
Peak of production | 1976-1980 |
Production | |
Peak of production (gas) | 740 million cubic feet per day (21×10 6 m3/d) |
Producing formations | Rotliegendes sandstone |
The field
editThe Indefatigable gas field is a natural gas field located in the North Sea. The field is 67 miles (107 km) north-east of Great Yarmouth and is named after the Indefatigable Banks, a shallow sand bank beneath which it is situated.[1] The gas reservoir is a Rotliegendes sandstone 200–300 feet (61–91 m) thick at a depth of 8000–9000 feet (2440–2740 m).[2][3] It was discovered in June 1966 and extends over several blocks: 49/18, 49/19, 49/23 and 49/24. The original determination of the gas in place amounted to 126 billion cubic metres.[1] Blocks 49/18 and 49/23 were originally licensed to Amoco (since 2003 to Perenco UK Limited) and Block 49/19 and 49/24 to Shell. Production from the field began in September and October 1971. Gas and associated condensate are produced via the Leman gas field to the Bacton Gas terminal, Norfolk.
The Indefatigable gas composition and properties are as follows.[4]
Composition | % |
---|---|
Methane | 91.8 |
Ethane | 3.39 |
Propane | 0.85 |
i-butane | 0.16 |
n-butane | 0.20 |
i-pentane | 0.07 |
Hexanes | 0.06 |
Heptanes plus | 0.16 |
Nitrogen | 2.73 |
Carbon dioxide | 0.52 |
Hydrogen sulfide | Nil |
Gas gravity | 0.61 % |
Mean condensate content | 3.0 bbl/million cubic foot |
Btu rating | 1015 Btu/cubic foot |
Baird gas field
editThe Baird gas field is located in Block 49/23 and is licensed to Perenco (originally Amoco). It was discovered in September 1993 and has recoverable reserves of 1.82 billion cubic metres.[1] Gas is produced via a seabed well assembly and a pipeline to Inde 49/23 D. The peak production was 0.66 billion cubic metres per year.[1]
Development
editThe Indefatigable field has been developed through a number of offshore installations.[4]
The Inde installations developed by Amoco, now owned by Perenco, were:
Installation | Location Block | Platforms | Function | Type | Legs | Well slots | Installed | Production start | Production to |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Inde A Complex | 49/18 | Inde AD | Drilling | Steel jacket | 8 | 12 | July 1970 | September 1971 | Inde AT |
Inde AP | Production | Steel jacket | 8 | – | 1970 | September 1971 | |||
Inde B Complex | 49/18 | Inde BD | Drilling | Steel jacket | 8 | 12 | 1973 | June 1974 | Inde AT |
Inde BP | Production | Jackup | 4 | – | 1973 | June 1974 | |||
Inde C Complex | 49/23 | Inde CD | Drilling | Steel jacket | 8 | 12 | August 1976 | July 1977 | Inde AT |
Inde CP | Production | Steel jacket | 8 | – | 1976 | July 1977 | |||
Inde Compression | 49/23 | Inde AT | Pipeline terminal | Steel jacket | 6 | – | May 1971 | September 1971 | Leman 49/27B |
Inde AC | Compression | Steel jacket | 12 | – | Jacket June 1979, topsides Summer 1980 | November 1980 | – | ||
Inde AQ | Accommodation | Steel jacket | 4 | – | June 1979 | – | – | ||
Inde D | 29/23 | Inde D | Wellheads and production | Steel jacket | 4 | 4 | 1990 | 1990 | Inde C |
The Perenco Indefatigable 49/23A complex also receives gas from other fields and third parties:
- Bessemer (49/23E) installation and its satellite N.W. Bell (49/23-9) via a 14.5 km 16-inch pipeline.
- Wenlock (49/12A) installation owned by Alpha Petroleum via a 36.231 km 8-inch pipeline. A three well-slot installation was installed in the Wenlock field in 2006 with wells commissioned in 2007, 2008 and 2009. Production declined quickly and make the installation uneconomic and a Decommissioning Programme application was submitted to the Oil & Gas Authority in 2021.[5]
- Davy (49/30A) installation and its satellites Davy North (49/30A-7A) and Davy East (53/5B-7) via a 43 km 16-inch pipeline.
The Inde installations developed by Shell were:
Installation | Location Block | Platforms | Function | Type | Legs | Well slots | Installed | Production start | Production to |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Inde J Complex | 49/24 | Inde JD | Drilling/production | Steel jacket | 8 | 6 | June 1970, April 1971 | September 1971 | Inde AT |
Inde JP | Satellite (accommodation) | Steel jacket | 4 | – | April 1972 | – | – | ||
Inde K Platform | 49/24 | Inde K | Drilling/production/ accommodation | Steel jacket | 10 | 6 | July 1971, June 1972 | March 1973 | Inde AT |
Inde L Platform | 49/24 | Inde L | Drilling/production | Steel jacket | 6 | 6 | February 1977 | October 1978 | Inde K |
Inde M Platform | 49/19 | Inde M | Drilling/production | Steel jacket | 4 | 4 | Spring 1985 | October 1985 | Inde J |
Inde N Platform | Inde N | Drilling/production | Steel jacket | 4 | 4 | 1980's | Inde K |
Production from the Shell Inde field ceased in 2005, Inde J, K, L, M, and N were subsequently decommissioned and removed.[6]
Production
editThe annual gas production from the Shell Indefatigable field (in million standard cubic feet) was:[4]
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org. |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d Department of Trade and Industry (1994). The Energy Report. London: HMSO. pp. 29, 60, 61. ISBN 0115153802.
- ^ Tiratsoo, E. N. (1972). Natural Gas. Beaconsfield: Scientific Pres.
- ^ Geological Society London (2003). "The Indefatigable Field, Blocks 49/18, 49/19, 49/23, 49/24, UK North Sea". lyell. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
- ^ a b c Oilfield Publications (1985). The North Sea Platform Guide. Ledbury: Oilfield Publications Limited. pp. 339–359.
- ^ "Wenlock Decommissioning Programmes" (PDF). assets.publishing.service.gov.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
- ^ Shell (2014). "Indefatigable Field Platforms and Pipelines Decommissioning Programme Close Out Report" (PDF). gov.uk. Retrieved 25 September 2012.