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Viking gas field

Group of natural gas and associated condensate fields under the North Sea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Viking gas field is a group of natural gas and associated condensate fields located under the southern North Sea about 85 miles (136 km) from the Lincolnshire coast. The field was in production from 1972 to 2018.

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The field

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The Viking gas field is a group of natural gas accumulations under the UK North Sea. The field is named after the area of the North Sea beneath which the field is located.[1] The gas reservoir is a Rotliegendes sandstone of Lower to Middle Permian age, at a depth of 9,100–10,200 feet (2,773–3,110 m) with a thickness of 200–500 feet (61–150 m).[2] The Viking structures run north-west to south-east and extend over Blocks 49/12, 49/16 and 49/17.[1] The field was discovered in 1965 and production started in 1972. The original gas in place amounted to 79.3 billion cubic metres.[1] Gas and associated condensate from Viking A and Viking B were both exported via the Viking A field through a 28-inch diameter pipeline to the Viking gas terminal[2] (renamed the Theddlethorpe gas terminal in 1988), Lincolnshire.

The Victor, Victoria and Vixen fields are adjacent to Viking and production from these fields is routed through the Viking offshore facilities.[2]

The Viking and Victor gas compositions and properties are as follows.[2]

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Ownership

The field was originally licensed to Conoco UK Ltd, later ConocoPhillips. In 2019 Chrysaor assumed the ownership of Conoco-Phillips North Sea Assets.[3] In March 2021 Chrysaor Holdings merged with Premier Oil to form Harbour Energy.[4]

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Development

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The Viking field was developed through a number of offshore installations. These are summarized in the following tables.[1][2][5]

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ConocoPhillips Viking B offshore platforms
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ConocoPhillips Viking BA North Sea offshore platform
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Satellite fields

The satellite fields which exported gas via the Viking B complex were:[5]

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Production

The annual gas production from the Viking field (in millions of standard cubic feet) was:[2]

Export from the Viking B field was originally routed to the shore terminal via Viking AR. From 2009 export was re-routed to shore via the LOGGS installation.[5]

Decommissioning

The Viking A field (Viking North) was decommissioned as uneconomical in 1991. The A field platforms (except AR) were removed in 1993–4.[5]

Viking CD, DD, ED, GD & HD ceased production in 2011–15, and were removed in 2017–18.[5]

Theddlethorpe gas terminal was permanently shut-down in August 2018. Production from all connected fields ceased.[5]

See also

References

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