Hibernia Oil Field

                                Hibernia Platform

 

 



Hibernia owner companies

helicopter and platform

The Hibernia offshore oil field is owned jointly by ExxonMobil Canada (33.125%), Chevron Canada Resources (26.875%), Petro-Canada (20%), Canada Hibernia Holding Corporation (8.5%), Murphy Oil (6.5%) and Norsk Hydro (5%).

The Hibernia Platform

The Hibernia platform has three separate components:

Topsides
Gravity Base Structure (GBS)
Offshore Loading System (OLS)

The completed platform was towed to the Hibernia oil field and positioned on the ocean floor in June of 1997 and began producing oil on November 17, 1997. The platform stands 224
meters high, which is half the height of New York's Empire State Building (449 meters) and 33 meters taller than the Calgary Tower (191 meters).



Topsides
The Topsides facilities accommodate all drilling, producing and utility equipment on the Hibernia platform, and provide living quarters for the steady-state crew of approximately 185 people. The Topsides facilities have a design capacity of 200,000 barrels of crude oil production per day. During plateau production, an average of 135,000 to 150,000 barrels of oil will be produced daily.


The Topsides is composed of five super modules:


M10 Process
Gas and water are separated from the produced oil, and gas is then compressed for reinjection into the reservoir. Produced water is treated and discharged into the ocean.


M20 Wellhead
Drilling operations occur within the Wellhead Module, upon which two mobile drilling derricks are mounted. The platform is designed to drill two wells at a time.


M30 Mud
Drilling mud's are pumped down the drill pipe and through holes in the drill bit to cool the bit, prevent the hole from collapsing and wash the cuttings away from the bottom of the hole. The mud's are produced in the Mud Module.


M40 Utilities
The Utilities Module contains various equipment required for power generation, heating, ventilation and air conditioning, water distribution, and so on.


M50 Accommodations
The Accommodations Module houses the eating and sleeping quarters for people working offshore, as well as offices and meeting areas. It is equipped with TV lounges, an exercise room (including sauna) and a fully equipped recreation area (including computers, ping pong tables, pool tables, and other amenities). The Accommodations Module also contains the temporary safe refuge (TSR) in the event of an emergency. The TSR provides emergency power, radio communications and medical facilities. Also located here is the main lifeboat station, helideck and Selantic Skyscape evacuation system.

Recreation
The recreation area of the Accommodations Module is equipped with numerous amenities, including two pool tables.


Gravity Base Structure
The Topsides is supported by a massive concrete pedestal called the Gravity Base Structure (GBS) which was constructed in Bull Arm, Newfoundland. The GBS, which sits on the ocean floor, is 111 meters high and has storage capacity for 1.3 million barrels of crude oil in its 85 meter high caisson. The GBS is specially designed to withstand the impact of sea ice and icebergs to allow for year-round production.

 

Topsides back to About Hibernia
In addition to the five super modules,
there are seven structures mounted on the Topsides:
  • Helideck
  • Flareboom
  • Main and auxiliary lifeboat stations
  • Piperack
  • Two drilling modules (M71 and M72)

Architectural Structure
An intriguing architectural study of the Topsides, as seen from the North end.


One of the five super modules, the wellhead module, was built at the Bull Arm construction site in Newfoundland. The other four super modules were constructed outside Canada (two in Italy and two in Korea) and shipped to Bull Arm in May and June of 1995 where they were welded together to form one integrated unit.


On February 27, 1997, the 37,000 tonne Topsides was transferred from its assembly pier on two massive barges and towed across the waters of Bull Arm where, on February 28, it was mated with the Gravity Base Structure.


Gravity Base Structure
The GBS was constructed using high strength concrete reinforced with steel rods (rebar). Slipforming, a continuous process of placing rebar and pouring concrete, was utilized during construction of the GBS.


It contains four shafts inside its strengthened external ice wall; the Utility Shaft, Riser Shaft and two Drill Shafts. These shafts are each 17 metres in diameter and extend a total of 111 metres from the base slab through the GBS roof to support the Topsides.



Concrete Teeth of the GBS
The concrete teeth of the GBS are awash in sea water in this dramatic shot, which was taken on the M50 lifeboat deck.

Utility Shaft
The Utility Shaft houses the mechanical outfitting required to operate the platform, including pipework, heating and air conditioning and electrical controls.


Riser Shaft
The Riser Shaft contains four crude oil risers to export oil from the GBS to the Offshore Loading System, access stairs from top to bottom and fire water pumps.


Drill Shafts
The two Drill Shafts each house 32 drill slots to accommodate the wells which will reach depths of more than 3,700 metres below sea level into the oil reservoirs and up to 9,000 metres in measured length.


Although there are currently more than 30 GBS platforms operating in the North Sea, none are designed to resist the impact of sea ice and icebergs. The Hibernia platform is unique because it has an ice belt that is 15 metres thick, including the external ice wall which is 1.4 metres thick.


The 16 sharp points of the GBS ice wall, called teeth, are intended to distribute the force of an iceberg over the entire structure. Hibernia has a comprehensive Ice Management Strategy in place to prevent any such encounters.


Prior to towout, the Hibernia platform weighed almost 600,000 tonnes. More than 400,000 tonnes of dry ballast were added after the platform was installed offshore.


Offshore Loading System
Oil is transferred from the platform to shuttle tankers via an Offshore Loading System (OLS). The OLS consists of subsea pipelines, a sub-surface buoy and flexible loading hoses. A second, completely redundant system has been installed as a back-up, in the event that the first system should ever require repairs.

Kometik

Once crude oil passes through the loading buoy into the tankers, it becomes the responsibility of the individual owners. The owners use three 127,000 dead-weight tonne tankers ("Kometik","Vinland" and "Mattea") with a cargo capacity of 850,000 barrels each to ship crude either directly to market or to a transshipment terminal located in Whiffen Head, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. The vessels are all equipped with two propellers driven by separate diesel engines, two high performance rudders and two bow thrusters. As an added safety measure, the tanker loading point is located 2 kilometres from the platform.


The tankers are custom built for the North Atlantic operating environment. The shuttle tankers are 275m long, double hull and double bottom vessels with additional strengthening, especially at the water line. They have bow loading capability with the option of quick release from the OLS, if needed.


Platform support
Maersk Company Canada provides marine support to the platform through the use of multi-purpose platform support vessels. These vessels are certified by the Canadian Coast Guard as platform standby vessels and are equipped with firefighting capabilities. In addition, they have oil spill containment and recovery equipment mounted on board. One vessel is on standby at the platform at all times.


A third vessel provides platform resupply and ice management support. It is equipped for iceberg towing operations.



Platform location: 46 degrees 45' 1.5722" north, 48 degrees, 46'58.5427" west

Temperatures in the winter range from -8 degrees Celsius to 7 degrees above. Temperatures in the summer range can go as high as 20 degrees Celsius

The ocean surface temperature varies from -3 degrees Celcius in winter to greater than 15 degrees Celsius in the summer

Wind speeds average 37 km per hour in the winter and 22 km per hour in the summer.

The Guinness World Book of Records calls the Grand Banks the foggiest place on earth. During winter, there is 40% coverage by fog and up to 84% during June and July.

            

Pictures and info used from http://www.hibernia.ca/html/about_hibernia/index.html