Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

K13 gas fields

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

The K13 gas fields were major natural gas producing fields in the Netherlands sector of the North Sea, about 130 km west of Den Helder. The fields started producing gas in 1975 but are no longer operational except for one installation used as a riser platform.

Quick facts Country, Region ...
Remove ads

The fields

The K13 gas fields are located in the Southern North Sea. The K13 A field was discovered in 1972, followed by the B field in 1973, the E field in 1976 and the F field in 1977.[1] The gas reservoirs have the following properties:[1]

K13 field typical gas properties
K13–A K13–B K13–C K13–D
Producing horizon Middle Bunter sand (Triassic) Middle Bunter sand (Triassic) Rotliegendes sandstone (Permian) Rotliegendes sandstone (Permian)
Depth, metres 1,500 1,300 2,600 2,500
Remove ads

Development

Summarize
Perspective

The K13 reservoirs were developed by a number of offshore installations across the K13 Block. The K13-A complex was the hub of the field, it received gas from its bridge-linked riser platform and from K13 Block satellite platforms. The K13–C installation received gas from platform K10–B.[1]

More information Field, Coordinates ...


The K13-C complex also received gas from K10-B.

The pipelines in the field were:[1]

More information Start, End ...


The main 36” gas pipeline had a capacity of 39 million cubic metres per day.[1]

Remove ads

Production

The process plant on K13–A comprises 2 trains each with one 3-phase separator. Gas flows through a suction scrubber to a 4,500 horse power compressor then via a filter separator to a gas/glycol contact tower. Condensate is pumped into the gas pipeline, water is discharged to the sea.[1]

The process plant on K13–C comprises 2 trains each with one 3-phase separator. Gas flows through a suction scrubber to a 4,500 horse power compressor then via a filter separator to a gas/glycol contact tower. Condensate is pumped into the gas pipeline, water is discharged to the sea.[1]

Peak production from the field was as follows (million standard cubic feet per day) in 1979:[1]

More information Field, Production MMSCFD ...

In 1986 the K13 field produced 824.2 million cubic metres of gas.[2]

Since 1992 gas production from the Markham gas field has been routed via K13.[3][4]

Decommissioning

In 1988 the five wells on production platform K13-D were plugged and abandoned. The same year, the topside of K13-D was moved to a new location in Netherland sector L8 becoming production platform L8-H.[5]

The K13B jacket was lifted out of the field in 1997.[6]

There is no longer any production from the original field or its satellite platforms.[7] but K13–A is used as a bypass platform to treat and transport gas from the J6-A production platform (Centrica) and the K5-A production platform (Total) via the WestGas Transport gas pipeline to Den Helder. Since 2019, K13-A is a normally unmanned platform.[5]

Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads