Offshore staff
HOUSTON -- Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) has awarded ENGlobal an engineering, procurement, and commissioning services agreement relating to expansion of the Caspian oil export pipeline.
The three-phase award involves two contracts, one from the Russian Federation and one from the Republic of Kazakhstan, with a likely total value of around $86 million over four years.
The 900-mi (1,448-km) pipeline presently takes crude from western Kazakhstan to a terminal on the Russian Black Sea coast. Last December, the shareholders and governing bodies of CPC announced a $5.4-billion expansion scheme, designed to nearly double throughput to 1.4 MMb/d by 2015. This was ratified by shareholders in April.
Increasing the capacity will further development of the onshore Tengiz field, which has estimated oil reserves of 6-9 Bbbl.
CPC’s three largest CPC partners -- Transneft, KazMunaiGaz (KMG) and Chevron -- will co-manage the project, which will involve refurbishment of the existing five pump station, installation of 10 new pumping stations, six new storage tanks and the addition of a third offshore mooring point at the Black Sea terminal.
ENGlobal will probably manage engineering and procurement services in the U.S. on a lump sum basis.
05/31/2011