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Substructure
Pipeline
Substructure Types
In general, substructure can be divided into :
Welded tubular space frame with near vertical legs with bracing system between
legs. Piles will be inserted inside legs, hence the tubular frame will act like a jacket
covering piles. Jacket can have 3 up to 12 legs, but majority is 4 legs. Jacket is the
most common offshore substructure. The deepest jacket is Shell Bullwinkle at 412
m water depth on US Gulf of Mexico / GoM.
Fixed Substructure - Compliant
Flexible (compliant) tubular space frame with flexible elements to mitigate natural
forces. This tower can be free standing or supported by guy wires. The deepest
installation is Chevron Petronius (US GoM) at 623 m below sea level.
Fixed Substructure Jack Up
Movable floating hull and three or more legs, which can be moved up and down
relative to hull. For operational mode, legs must be lowered to the seabed, then
raising the hull to the required elevation. Water depth for jack up installation depends
on the legs length, but normally below 100 m. Jack up can be easily moved and is
normally used on a marginal / small field with short production life (below 5 years),
sometimes also called MOPU (Mobile Offshore Production Unit).
Fixed Substructure Gravity Based
Fixed structures that are held-in-place by its own weight plus any contained ballast,
majority constructed from steel-reinforced concrete, normally called CONDEEP
(concrete deep water structure), majority installed in Norway. The deepest structure
is Statoil Troll-A (Norway North Sea) at 303 m water depth.
Floating Structure Monohull
Monohull is a type of vessel with only one hull. The hull may be in the form of normal
vessel (ship-shaped) or cylindrical (circular like a bowl) secured by sets of moorings
and anchors. It can have a liquid storage, hydrocarbon processing, and liquid
transfer to tanker capability, hence called FPSO (Floating Production Storage
Offloading). If no processing facility, it is called FSO (Floating Storage Offloading).
The deepest one is FPSO Stones (US GoM) at 2896 m water depth.
Floating Structure Semi Sub
Semi submersible is floating structures with several columns (vertical hull) and
pontoons (horizontal hull) which can be controlled in such a way that pontoons
become fully submerged and column partially submerged, while the topside remains
above the water line, and secured with spread moorings and anchors. This will
increase the stability and station keeping. Semi sub platform sometimes called sFPS
(semi-sub Floating Production Station), FPS, or FPU (Floating Production Unit). The
deepest FPS is Chevron Jack/St. Malo (US GoM) at 2134 m water depth.
Floating Structure Tension Leg Platform
SPAR is floating platform with a deep-draft (most of the section is submerged) large
vertical cylinder hull, completed with heavy ballast on the bottom to ensure center of
gravity is below center of buoyancy, secured with spread moorings and anchors. The
deep-draft design makes it very stable and suitable for surface wellhead. SPAR can
also store liquid. The deepest SPAR is Shell Perdido (US GoM) at 2450 water depth.
Summary of Substructure Types
Surface Facilities Function
Surface facilities function can be described as :
Extraction : Facilities to extract oil & gas from the reservoir
into surface in a safe and controlled manner.
Processing : Facilities to process raw oil & gas / well
stream into treated crude oil and/or natural gas as per
customer requirement.
Exporting : Facilities to export treated/processed oil and/or
gas to customer receiving point.
In offshore platforms, those functions are done by :
Extraction : Wellhead Platform (WHP)
Processing : Central Processing Platform (CPP)
Exporting : Pipeline, F(P)SO, FLNG
In addition, Living Quarter is provided to accommodate
operation & maintenance crew 24/7.
Wellhead Function
Wellhead : A termination point of a well (a series of tubular
steel running from the surface up to certain target on the
reservoir, referred as the bottom hole) on the surface that
provides the structural and pressure-containing interface
for the drilling and production equipment.
During drilling, surface pressure control is provided by a
Blow Out Preventer (BOP).
Once drilling completed, surface pressure control is
replaced by a Christmas Tree installed on top of the
wellhead, with isolation and choke valves to control the
flow of well fluids during production.
Normally, wellhead & Christmas tree is located on the
platform and can be easily operated by man, called surface
wellhead or dry tree.
However, for deep water or when platform installation is
considered not cost-effective, wellhead & Christmas tree
may be located on the seabed, called subsea wellhead or
wet tree.
WHP, surface wellhead, & dry tree
Surface
wellhead &
Christmas tree
Subsea wellhead & wet tree
Processing Function
Not like many people think that oil & gas reservoir contains
only oil and/or gas, actually it always contain oil, gas, water, and
sometimes other contaminants like nitrogen (N2), carbon dioxide
(CO2), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), mercury (Hg), and salt.
Oil & gas molecules are actually constructed from the same
elements, Hydrogen (H) and Carbon (C), hence referred as
Hydrocarbon. Oil is hydrocarbon mixtures which form liquid at
room temperature (25oC), whereas gas is hydrocarbon mixtures
which form gas at room temperature.
Well fluids coming from the reservoir are actually a mixture of all
above fluids in a high pressure and temperature.
Meanwhile, the customers (downstream industry) require
separate treated oil (crude oil) & gas (natural gas) for further
processing.
Processing function is to separate oil, gas, and water, then treat
oil and gas to meet customer specification, and treat water for
overboard discharge (release to the sea) or re-inject to the
reservoir.
Processing Block Diagram
Process System
It is defined as all the system required to process well stream into crude oil and
natural gas.
In general, it consists of :
Separation : to separate well stream into oil, gas, and water
Gas Dehydration : to further remove water from gas
Gas Treatment : to remove contaminants from gas
Gas Conditioning : to regulate gas condition like temperature & dew point
Gas Compression : to compress (increase pressure & reduce volume) gas so
it can travel in a long distance to customer receiving point
Gas Metering : to measure the volume of gas export as a basis of company
revenue
Oil Dehydration : to further remove water from oil
Oil Stabilization : to further remove gas from oil
Oil Desalting : to remove salt content from oil
Oil Pumping : to pump (increase pressure only without reducing volume) oil so
it can travel in a long distance to customer receiving point
Oil Metering : to measure the volume of oil export
Produced Water Treatment : to remove oil, gas, and other contaminants from
produced water until meeting certain criteria for disposal to the sea
Utility System
It is defined as all the system required to support process system. It is as important as
process system itself, since system malfunction may reduce, stop, or even endanger
the production. In general, it consists of :
Power generation & distribution : to generate & distribute electrical power to the
electrical equipment
Instrumentation : to measure and monitor process and utility parameters & provide
input to the control system
Control : to regulate process and non-process system as per requirement
Heating : to provide heat to hydrocarbon, i.e. crude oil heating for easier flow
Cooling : to remove heat from hydrocarbon, i.e. gas cooling after compression
Instrument Air : to compress air and distribute it for instrumentation & control purpose
Utility Air : to compress air and distribute it for general purpose, i.e. for compressed
air powered hand tool
Gas Fuel : to condition natural gas for gas powered engine, i.e. Gas Turbine
Generator
Diesel Fuel : to store and distribute diesel fuel for diesel powered engine, i.e.
Emergency Diesel Generator
Utility System - continued
Drain : to collect and store any excess process and non-process liquid
Fresh & Potable Water : to treat sea water into fresh (plain but not drinkable) and
potable (drinkable) water
Fire & Gas : to detect fire & gas leakage and provide warning and input to control
system
Fire Water System : to provide fire water for fire extinguishing
Emergency Shutdown : to provide facilities to safely stop the process (shutdown) in
case of any emergency
Flare : to provide a safe way to remove and burn excess gas
Vent : to provide a safe way to remove excess gas without burning it
HVAC (Heating Ventilation and Air Conditioning) : to provide conditioned air to
enclosed room, i.e. control room
Telecommunication : to provide telecommunication and remote control/monitoring of
remote facilities
Crane and Mechanical Handling : to lift and move heavy equipment within platform or
from/to boat
Marine (only for floating structure) : to control stability and movement of floating
structure
Living Quarter (LQ)
In general, accommodation or LQ has facilities :
Bedroom : number of beds defines maximum number of people can stay
Galley : also called dining room where people gather for meal and rest
Kitchen : for safety reason, only electric stoves allowed in offshore platform
Meeting Room : teleconference capability with onshore office is a must
Office : normally, only Offshore Installation Manager (OIM) has dedicated room
Bathroom : normally shared male bathroom, only OIM and VIP guest room have
own-bathroom inside the bedroom
Clinic : sufficient medication and facility to manage emergencies
Multi Purpose Room : can be used for sport, recreation, and praying
Helideck : for helicopter/chopper take off and landing, with/out refueling facility
Boat Landing : for boat/vessel landing to transfer personnel or light
equipment/material
Emergency Life Boat : for emergency escape if platform damage due to fire or other
disaster
Radio Room : for telecommunication equipment installation
Material Storage : to store spare equipment, spare parts, and consumables
Control Room : to remotely control and monitor process parameters
Maintenance Workshop : to maintain and repair equipment, but normally only minor
repair due to limited facility
CPP-only side view illustration
CPP with drilling & LQ illustration
Exporting Function
Crude oil and natural gas will be evacuated from offshore
platform to onshore receiving facility (ORF) through a
pipeline.
Pipeline is a long pipe for conveying fluids (oil and/or gas) .
Offshore pipeline will be placed on the seabed.
Offshore pipeline may be insulated to keep fluids warm and
coated with concrete to add stability and protection.
If oil pipeline is considered too expensive or no available
ORF, offshore storage may be considered using FSO,
FPSO, or subsea storage, then stored oil exported to oil
shuttle tanker.
Same case for gas, offshore gas storage may be
considered using Floating Liquefied Natural Gas (FLNG),
then stored liquefied gas exported to LNG shuttle tanker.
Surface Facilities Selection
Selection will be based on several factor, mainly :
Number and type of wells
Production capacity and field life
Water depth and seabed condition
Nearby and onshore receiving facilities
Oil & gas evacuation strategy
Health Safety Environment philosophy
Operation & Maintenance philosophy
Contractor capability
Local regulation
Cost and schedule
Technology availability and maturity
Concept selection will be conducted during
development stage and the result will be part of FDP.
Separate bridge-linked jacket
Integrated WHP-CPP-LQ in single jacket
Separate bridge-linked jacket with FSO
FPSO with wet tree
Semi submersible with wet tree
Tension Leg Platform with dry tree
Have you ever imagine???
Troll A, the largest and tallest object ever moved by mankind. Overall height is
472 m (20 m taller than Petronas Twin Towers) and the weight is 683,600 tons
Have you ever imagine (again)???
Katie Melua, a
British female
singer, performed
a concert at the
bottom of Troll A
platform at 303 m
below sea level
as a celebration
of 10 years
operation by
Statoil in 2006,
break another
record for the
deepest
underwater
concert on the
earth.
About the Author
Puput Aryanto Risanto had more than 12
years experience in oil & gas industry.
Currently he is working for Premier Oil Natuna
Sea B.V. in Jakarta, Indonesia. Previously he
worked for Petronas Carigali Sdn. Bhd. in KL,
Premier Oil Natuna Sea B.V. in Jakarta and
Total E&P Indonesie in Balikpapan, Indonesia.