Valaris' Semi-Sub Reaches Santos' Barossa Gas Field

Bartolomej Tomic
Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Offshore drilling firm Valaris said Tuesday that its Valaris MS-1 semi-submersible drilling rig had reached Santos' Barossa gas field offshore Australia.

"On July 16, the VALARIS MS-1 completed the tow from Dampier to the Barossa Field offshore the Northern Territory of Australia to commence work for Santos Ltd. Congratulations to the team that made this possible!," Valaris said in a social media post.

"This significant drilling project has been in the planning for many months. I thank all those involved for their safe work in getting the rig ready, including our business partners involved in the project upgrades. Looking forward to a safe and successful operation for the Santos Barossa campaign,” said Alistair Mcdonald, Rig Manager.

Valaris also shared photos taken during the tow. They can be seen here.

The MS-1, a 2011-built F&G ExD Millennium-design rig, was recently used by Western Gas to drill the closely watched Sasanof-1 exploration well off Western Australia. The well found no hydrocarbons. Read more here.

According to Valaris' fleet status report, the MS-1 drilling rig (previously known as Atwood Osprey) is expected to stay on a contract with Santos from July 2022 until October 2023.

In March 2021, Santos announced a final investment decision (FID) had been taken to proceed with the US$3.6 billion Barossa gas and condensate project, located offshore the Northern Territory, Australia.

The Barossa development will comprise a BW Offshore supplied FPSO, subsea production wells, supporting subsea infrastructure, and a gas export pipeline tied into the existing Bayu-Undan to Darwin LNG pipeline. First gas production is targeted for the first half of 2025.

In March 2022, Australia's offshore safety regulator NOPSEMA, approved Santos' Barossa drilling and well completions campaign plans.

According to that plan, six subsea production wells will be drilled and completed around the future locations of three subsea production manifolds, with two wellheads adjacent to each manifold. If required, up to two contingency production wells could be drilled and completed at any manifold (eight wells in total).

 

Barossa field location map - Credit: NOPSEMA

Categories: Drilling Industry News Activity Australia/NZ Drilling Rigs

Related Stories

Velesto Completes Removal of Wrecked Naga 7 Jack-Up Rig Off Malaysia

Beam’s AI-Driven AUV to Hit Offshore Wind Market in 2025

CRC Evans Secures Work at Qatar’s Largest Offshore Oil Field

Impending Shortage of Jackups within Ageing Asia Pacific Fleet

Eni Strengthens LNG Ties with Japan

ABS Gives Its Blessing to SHI’s Ammonia FPSO Design

Joint Venture Partners Ink Commercial Deals to Develop Gas Reserves at Azerbaijan’s ACG Field

TotalEnergies Extends LNG Supply Agreement with CNOOC Until 2034

Shelf Drilling to Consolidate Jack-Up Fleet and Resolve Funding Gaps via Triangular Merger

ADES Buys Two Jack-Ups from Vantage Drilling in $190M Deal

Current News

Flare Gas Recovery Meets the Future

Pharos Energy Extends Licenses for Two Vietnamese Gas Fields

Offshore Drilling 2025: 3 Things to Watch During a Year of Market Corrections

Subsea Redesign Underway for Floating Offshore Wind

The Five Trends Driving Offshore Oil & Gas in 2025

China’s CNOOC Brings Bohai Sea Oil Field On Stream

Offshore Service Vessels: What’s in Store in 2025

ABS Approves Hanwha Ocean’s FPSO Design

AI & Offshore Energy: The Higher the Stakes, the More Value AI Creates

Floating LNG Conversion Job Slips Out of Seatrium’s Hands

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