-
07-07-2008, 11:50 PM
#5021
Member
5.2m tonnes @ 7.5 barrels per tonne = 39 million barrels of oil (equivalent to 75% of current Tui estimate)
-
08-07-2008, 12:03 AM
#5022
http://www.crownminerals.govt.nz/cms...6f336a4a94b4bb
above link on crown minerals gives some very interesting detail about kupe
M
-
08-07-2008, 12:11 AM
#5023
Junior Member
Production data
Reply to an e-mail requesting more frequent posted information on Tui production Chris Roberts (Public Affairs Manager)
"What we are able to do is once or twice a week update our website with the approximate running production total."
After thanking him I have asked when this is likely to begin. Hopefully soon.
Cheers
Bbob
-
08-07-2008, 12:32 AM
#5024
some data from crown minerals re kupe 4 south and kupe 5 south - had to cull it a bit
their website is really good - just wish we understood all the terms.
M
Well Sample
________________________________________
print
save as text
search
refresh
show index
Showing 1 items of Total Count
Page 1 of 1
Well Name Like KUPE SOUTH-4
Well Name
Core
Unwashed Cuttings
Side Wall Core
Washed Cuttings
Oils Water
Others
KUPE SOUTH-4 4 CORES; 3053.5-3118.1m 180-575 (15m), 580-3800m 3 SETS; NZGS(1), P/C(2) 3 SETS; 1841-3772m 580-1820m (10m), 1820-2840m (5m), 2840-3800m (3m) 3 SETS; NZGS(1), P/C(2) CONDENSATE PALEO 2 SETS; NZGS(2) 220-1605m
Well Name Kupe South-5
Well Type appraisal
Well Operator TCPL RESOURCES LTD
Spud Date 20 Sep 1990
Completion Date 31 Oct 1990
Latitude -39.9135266726
Longitude 174.146590884
Datum WGS84
Confidential N
No of Wellbores 1
Online Well Logs 4
No of Archive Objects 119
Available Petroleum Reports
Well Name Report Number Report Title Report Type
Last edited by the machine; 08-07-2008 at 01:25 AM.
-
08-07-2008, 02:21 AM
#5025
Member
Fish,
Based on NZOG 2007 annual report – page 48 (Energy Values)
1,000 standard cubic ft of gas yields approximately 1 gigajoule of heat
1 petajoule (PJ) = 1,000,000 gigajoules (GJ) = approximately 1 billion cubic feet (bcf)
200 bcf = 200,000,000 GJ
1 barrel = 5,800 standard cubic ft of gas = ~5.8 gigajoule of heat (GJ)
200 bcf = ~34.5 million barrels of oil
Wish I'm right.
Cheers
-
08-07-2008, 03:28 AM
#5026
Member
Addition
1 PJ = ~1 bcf
1 PJ of Natural Gas = 172,000 barrels of oil equivalent
200 bcf = 172,000 barrels x 200 = ~34.4 million barrels of oil (same as the above)
Cheers
-
08-07-2008, 07:58 AM
#5027
Member
Originally Posted by Bixbite
200 bcf = ~34.5 million barrels of oil
Wish I'm right.
Cheers
Sounds encouraging, allright. But let's remember it's gas (well, probably gas & condensate, maybe oil yet to be found!!) and they haven't actually got 30m bbl of oil, just its energy equivalent.
Exciting times
-
08-07-2008, 10:01 AM
#5028
Member
Originally Posted by Unicorn
The weather has been pretty rough on a number of days lately. That will interfere with both production and offloading. It is winter. They are operating offshore in the Tasman.
"Modification of the FPSO to include an innovative swivel production turret, allowing the vessel to swivel for currents and weather whilst maintaining production output"
Be interesting to know the timing of this modification as it should improve output in a rough part of the world.
-
08-07-2008, 12:05 PM
#5029
Originally Posted by shephejame
Good spotting - Surely that must be wrong.Tui averaged 42,500 every day for 335 days. It seems wierd that it can be as low as 25,000 for the six days of July.
Anyone else got thoughts?
Wasnt the weather not too good a few days ago? 2 days of shut down might explain it. I dont think the workers will be operating in 100k plus winds
-
08-07-2008, 12:24 PM
#5030
Member
Originally Posted by Chalice
"Modification of the FPSO to include an innovative swivel production turret, allowing the vessel to swivel for currents and weather whilst maintaining production output"
Be interesting to know the timing of this modification as it should improve output in a rough part of the world.
That modification was made prior to delivery. It allows production to continue as the ship changes direction with the wind. It does not magically allow production, or offloading, to take place in strong winds and high seas.
Tags for this Thread
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks