Caspian is Key for Lukoil

By Olesya Astakhova
Monday, December 24, 2018

Alexander Oboronkov leapt at the chance to work on the Filanovsky platform after it was launched in 2016, keen to see Russia's largest Caspian Sea oilfield in action.

The Filanovsky oilfield, along with the nearby Korchagin and Rakushechnoye fields, are key to the growth plans at Lukoil, Russia's second biggest oil producer, where Oboronkov works as deputy head of the Filanovsky platform.

The company, controlled by executives Vagit Alekperov and Leonid Fedun, took its name from three oil towns in Lukoil's tradition exploration region of western Siberian: Langepas, Urai and Kogalym.

One of the ships that docks at the Filanovsky is named Langepas.

"The Langepas cargo ship which moves back and forward to the platform reminds me of my homeland - Siberia," said Oboronkov as he provided a tour of the platform. "One well here (by flow rate) is like 100 onshore," he noted.

The sea is about 10 meters deep around the Filanovsky platform, but to reach oil Lukoil needs to drill wells more than 2 km deep. The platform itself is fixed to the seabed by 60-meter-long concrete piles.

Production is expensive to begin with but promising once it is ramped up, Nikolay Lyashko, head of Lukoil Nizhnevolzhskneft, which is in charge of the Caspian projects, told Reuters.

Well site construction in the Caspian is 10 times more expensive than onshore, he said, but added that production costs are just a third of those in Russia's traditional oil region, western Siberia.

Production at the Filanovsky oilfield costs 650 roubles ($9.51) per tonne and the average well flow rate is 3,000 tonnes per day. That compares to over 2,000 roubles a tonne in western Siberia, where the average oil flow rate is around 40 tonnes a day.

"Last year we made a profit and now are starting to return the investment thanks to the wells' high flow performance," Lyashko told Reuters.

In total, Lukoil plans to build 25 offshore platforms in the Caspian Sea by 2030.

Lukoil also produces in shallow waters in the Baltic Sea near the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad but output is tiny compared to its current operations in the Caspian and its future plans.

By 2020, output from those shallow waters is expected to rise by more than a quarter from last year's levels to around 9 million tonnes, or 180,000 barrels per day - almost a tenth of Lukoil's current oil and gas production.

Lukoil's core oil production area remains western Siberia but it has its sights set on deepwater drilling.

But Russian authorities which granted an offshore exploration monopoly to state-controlled giants Gazprom and Rosneft in 2008 have not yet granted deepwater drilling rights to Lukoil.

In the meantime, Lukoil is involved in a deep water project in the Norwegian part of the Barents Sea among other international projects.

Alekperov said in October that Lukoil had the technology required to drill offshore wells in waters as deep as 2,800 meters.


($1 = 68.3825 roubles)

(Reporting by Olesya Astakhova; editing by Katya Golubkova and Jason Neely)

Categories: Offshore Energy Deepwater Drilling Russia Shallow Water Regulations

Related Stories

Argeo Inks Pact with CSI for Second HUGIN Superior AUV

Blackford Dolphin Scoops $154M Drilling Contract with Oil India

CNOOC Finds Oil in South China Sea Deepwater Field

Fugro Gets Marine Survey Job at Indonesia’s LNG and CCS Scheme

Quick Connect: OAL Subsea Pipeline Completed

Enhancing Environmental Accountability in Offshore Operations via Data Analytics

Valeura Buys Nong Yao Field’s FSO Aurora and Expands Wassana Drilling Campaign

China Puts First ‘Home-Made’ Subsea Xmas Tree Into Operation

Exxon's $36 Billion Profit Beats Estimates

Petronas Awards Seven New PSCs for Six Offshore Blocks in Malaysia

Current News

SOVs – Analyzing Current, Future Demand Drivers

Decarbonization Offshore O&G: Navigating the Path Forward

Subsea Vessel Market is Full Steam Ahead

China's Imports of Russian Oil Near Record High

TotalEnergies Inks $530M Deal to Acquire Malaysia’s SapuraOMV

Energy Storage on O&G Platforms - A Safety Boost, too?

Malampaya Gas Field Exceeds Export Capacity Amid Grid Demands in Philippines

Timor-Leste: Chuditch-2 Well to be Drilled at New Location Following Site Surveys

Akastor’s Subsidiary Wins $101M Case Against Seatrium's Jurong Shipyard

ONGC Hires Consortium to Deliver FEED Work for Bay of Bengal Oil Field

Subscribe for AOG Digital E‑News

AOG Digital E-News is the subsea industry's largest circulation and most authoritative ENews Service, delivered to your Email three times per week

https://accounts.newwavemedia.com