Shell Gumusut-Kakap: Delivering deep-water energy - YouTube

Channel: Shell

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Gumusut-Kakap, a Shell megaproject located
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in the deep, oil-rich waters of Malaysia.
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Gumusut's going to change the landscape for Malaysia.
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24,000 tonnes of steel floats on the surface…
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…anchored to the ocean 1,200 metres below.
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As an engineer, you cannot be more excited
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to be involved with megaprojects, as we call it.
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It's a world class facility by any measures.
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Energy is vital to our daily lives,
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and as the world's thirst for energy continues to grow,
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the challenge is to find and develop new sources.
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This is the story of how Shell's Gumusut-Kakap field
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is helping to meet this energy challenge,
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with an expected capacity to produce up to 135,000 barrels of oil a day.
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It is producing much-needed energy for the region
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and boosting skills and jobs.
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So, how was the project brought to life?
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Shell has been in Malaysia for over 120 years.
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At the start, of course, the oil industry was very different.
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Over the years we have progressively gone deeper
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and into more complex and challenging environments.
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Shell, as a global company, has taken that knowledge
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and deployed it into Malaysia.
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Working offshore is never easy,
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but working in the dark, cold waters at a depth of 1,200 metres,
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presented the team with an immense challenge.
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Normally if you take shallow water as a reference,
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typically the structure stands on the sea bottom
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and things are accessible with divers.
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With deep-water you can't do that anymore,
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so you have to design things that you can only touch it
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with what they call remotely operated vehicles
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so like a robot that floats to turn valves 1,200 metres below.
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Drawing on its expertise in deep water,
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Shell decided to use a ‘Floating Production System’
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where an oil platform floats like a boat
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and is anchored to the ocean floor with steel tendons and anchor chains.
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It floats there, offshore.
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It's held in position by 12 big anchors all the way down,
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1,200 metres deep,
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and it processes the hydrocarbons.
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The oil gets sent to the beach via an export pump
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and a 200 kilometre pipeline,
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and gas and water get to be injected into the reservoir
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and that will help getting more hydrocarbons out of the ground
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at the end of the day as well.
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If you look at the Shell global portfolio of deep-water projects,
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this is probably one of the most complex ones.
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So it means that we have to bring in new technologies
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both from the subsurface and surface point of view.
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So it's really about proving that the technologies
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that we have had developed or applied somewhere else
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are actually working for Gumusut.
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It also ties into how we operate as a group
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where you tap into local expertise and local talent and local capability
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as much as possible,
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supplemented and supported by global processes
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and global expertise that exist elsewhere.
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The project led to many firsts
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- and not just for Malaysia.
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One of the records was definitely the superlift.
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In the yard we built the hull from the ground up
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and we built the topsides from the ground up,
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but at some stage it had to be mated
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and the way we went about it was to lift the topsides
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so we had about the weight of 23,000 tonnes
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that we had to pull up about 45 metres
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and that then allowed us to slide the hull under it
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and get it connected,
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so that was definitely the biggest lift in the world.
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Gumusut-Kakap is a remote facility 120 kilometres offshore
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and home to 140 people,
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so the highest standards of safety are strictly adhered to.
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Safety is clearly very important for our Gumusut operations,
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number one on everybody's agenda.
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It's not just safety; as well though, we have a community out there.
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We're also concerned about the welfare of the staff,
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that they're able to focus on their job
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and we know that they're able to go back to their families safely
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at the end of each tour of duty
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and are able to say 'I work in a safe environment.'
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Gumusut-Kakap is more than just
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Shell’s first deep-water project in Malaysia.
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It opens up the potential for the creation
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of a major deep-water hub in South East Asia,
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a hub that can help meet the world’s energy challenge.</p> </sync> </body>