ADNOC signs BGP for giant offshore/onshore seismic survey

July 20, 2018
Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. has awarded contracts worth $1.6 billion for what it claims will be the worldā€™s largest continuous 3D offshore and onshore seismic survey.

Offshore staff

ABU DHABI, UAE ā€“ Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (ADNOC) has awarded contracts worth $1.6 billion for what it claims will be the worldā€™s largest continuous 3D offshore and onshore seismic survey.

This will cover an area up to 53,000 sq km (20,463 sq mi), as the company seeks to identify new opportunities and maximize value from its hydrocarbon resources and fulfil its 2030 ā€˜smart growthā€™ strategy.

BGP, a subsidiary ofChina National Petroleum Co. (CNPC), will acquire up to 30,000 sq km (11,583 sq mi) offshore and 23,000 sq km (8,880 sq mi) onshore.

The agreement was signed on the eve of a state visit to the UAE by Chinaā€™s President Xi Jinping, and witnessed by Dr. Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, UAE Minister of State, who said:

ā€œThe scale of the project shows ADNOCā€™s commitment to upstream investment and to bolstering our oil and gas reserves and production for the long term.ā€

BGP will deploy industry-leading technologies, ADNOC said, to provide survey data density up to five times that of existing industry standards, capturing high-resolution 3D images of the complex subsurface structure, up to 25,000 ft (7,620 m) below the surface.

Use of advanced technologies and methodologies should improve efficiency and reduce operational time, ADNOC added, helping to mitigate against the impact on marine life, or other users of Abu Dhabi waters.

The survey will employ seismic streaming vessels and ocean bottom nodes to acquire the offshore data and vibrator trucks to survey the onshore desert areas and should be completed by 2024.

ADNOC recently announced Abu Dhabiā€™s first ever block licensing round with six geographical oil and gas blocks opened for bidding, and the seismic project will include areas within these blocks with the data made available at a fee to the successful bidders.

Geoscientists will use the resources of ADNOCā€™s Thamama Subsurface Collaboration Center to interpret the results and to characterize and model potential hydrocarbon reservoirs.

This will help ADNOC identify untapped reservoirs and future oil and gas development and production opportunities.

07/20/2018