BP
Starts Up Galapagos Development
June 12, 2012 -- Today BP announced that on June 3, 2012
it began the initial start-up of the Galapagos development in the deepwater U.S.
Gulf of Mexico, one of a series of new major upstream projects that the company
expects to bring into production this year.
“The start-up of this project in the Gulf of Mexico is
one of BP’s key operational milestones for 2012, one of six high-margin
projects we expect to come on stream this year,” said Bob Dudley, BP group
chief executive. “I expect that the operational progress we are now making
will deliver increasing financial momentum for BP as we move into 2013 and
2014.”
The Galapagos development includes three deepwater
fields and increases the capability of a key offshore production hub for BP. The
fields - Isabela,
Santiago
and
Santa Cruz
- are being produced using subsea equipment on the floor of the Gulf. A new
production flowline loop has been added to carry output to the nearby Na Kika
host facility, a BP-operated platform located roughly 140 miles southeast of
New Orleans
in 6,500 feet of water.
The Na Kika facility, with a production capacity of
130,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day, has been modified to handle output
from the three fields. Full ramp-up of the project is expected around the end of
June.
“The Galapagos development marks another significant
step forward for BP in the
Gulf of Mexico
, and reflects the potential we continue to see in this world-class basin, now
and in the future,” said James Dupree, Regional President of BP’s U.S. Gulf
of Mexico business.
BP’s overall interest in the three-block area that
includes the fields comprising the Galapagos project is about 56 per cent. Noble
Energy, Inc., Red Willow Offshore, LLC, and Houston Energy, L.P., are co-owners.
BP is the operator of the Isabela field, while Noble Energy operates the
Santiago
and
Santa Cruz
fields.
The Galapagos development required the installation of
new subsea infrastructure, production risers, topsides as well as other
modifications.
BP expects to invest at least $4 billion a year on oil
and gas development in the
Gulf of Mexico
over the next 10 years, following its strategy of focusing investment and
future growth around the company’s strengths, including deepwater exploration
and development.
“BP’s continuing investment in the Gulf of Mexico is
yet another example of our commitment to the
U.S.
economy and energy security,”
Dudley
added. “This investment, along with our ongoing commitment to the
Gulf
Coast
region, demonstrates the importance of the
U.S.
to BP’s long term strategy.”
www.bp.com