Offshore staff
North Sydney, NSW — Worley is providing detailed engineering design services for the Kasawari carbon capture and storage (CCS) project in Malaysia.
The Kasawari development, set to be one of the world’s largest offshore CCS projects, aims to capture more than 3 million tons of CO2 per annum.
Under the contract, awarded by Malaysia Marine & Heavy Engineering, Worley is providing design and engineering services for the platform, jacket, bridge and subsea pipeline.
Worley previously provided screening and concept selection and successfully completed the project's FEED phase for the project, where the company said its custom design reduced work hours on the project by 20%.
Work for the project will be carried out by Ranhill Worley teams in Malaysia, with close support from wider Worley, Advisian and Intecsea teams in Australia and Singapore.
Designs will be enhanced using digitally driven systems and tools.
The first of its kind for Malaysia
The new CCS platform, the first of its kind in Malaysia, will be located next to the Kasawari Central Processing Facility and linked via a bridge. The CO2 will be compressed and transported by a 138-km pipeline to be injected into a depleted offshore gas reservoir at an existing wellhead platform.
05.08.2023