Egypt: Upstream Project BP Commences Gas Production from Second Stage of West Nile Delta Development
With this project, the company has established 21 new upstream major projects into production over a period of three years. The firm aims to deliver 900,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2021.
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Egypt – BP recently announced its first gas production from the second stage of its West Nile Delta development offshore Egypt. The project, which produces gas from the Giza and Fayoum fields, was developed as a deepwater, long-distance tie-back to an existing onshore plant.
The successful start up is the second in a string of new upstream major projects expected to be brought on line in 2019 for BP.
With the second stage of West Nile Delta now online, BP has now safely brought 21 new upstream major projects into production over the last three years, keeping it on track to deliver 900,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2021.
The West Nile Delta development includes a total of five gas fields across the North Alexandria and West Mediterranean Deepwater offshore concession blocks. It was originally planned as two separate projects, but BP and its partners realised the opportunity to deliver it in three stages, accelerating delivery of gas production commitments to Egypt.
Stage one of the project, which started producing in 2017, included gas production from the first two fields, Taurus and Libra. The Giza and Fayoum development, which includes eight wells, is currently producing around 400 million cubic feet of gas per day (mmscfd) and is expected to ramp up to a maximum rate of approximately 700 mmscfd.
The third stage of the West Nile Delta project will develop the Raven field. Production is expected in late 2019. When fully onstream in 2019, combined production from all three phases of the West Nile Delta project is expected to reach up to almost 1.4 billion cubic feet per day (bcf/d), equivalent to about 20 % of Egypt’s current gas production. All the gas produced will be fed into the national gas grid.
BP has an operating stake of 82.75 % in the development. The start-up announced recently in Egypt is the second major project for BP in 2019, following the Gulf of Mexico’s Constellation development, which BP has a 66.6 % non-operated stake in.
Separately, the Atoll Phase One project started-up in 2018. After almost one year of production, Atoll continues to produce 350 million cubic feet per day from three wells, feeding the country’s national grid. A fourth well will be drilled later in 2019 to underpin the deliver of the field’s recoverable resources.
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