Noble approved to drill Leviathan-7

Noble Energy has won approval to drill an additional well, Leviathan-7, at its giant Leviathan project offshore Israel, alongside the Leviathan-5 well, in a move that aims to streamline operations and reduce drilling costs, Noble's partner Delek Group announced today (14 March).

According to Delek, Noble will drill Leviathan-7, a development and production well, with the Atwood Advantage ultra-deepwater drillship.

Image from Delek.

Noble's plan is to drill Leviathan-7 “in a batch” with the Leviathan-5 well, to streamline and reduce the cost of the drilling of these two wells, Delek says.

The first stage of the drilling consists of the upper part of the Leviathan-7 well to be drilled to a depth of about 2900m below sea level.

At the second stage, the Atwood Advantage drilling rig will be moved to the Leviathan-5 well site, where it will drill the well to a final depth of some 5200m below sea level.

At the third stage, the drilling rig will be returned to the Leviathan-7 well site, where it will drill the lower part of this well to a final depth of approximately 5100m below sea level.

Leviathan-7 is in the I/14 Leviathan South and I/15 Leviathan North leases, some 120km west of Haifa at 1630m water depth. The well will target pay in the Oligo-Miocene layers.

The Atwood Advantage is currently working at the Tamar-8 development and production well, which is expected to be completed, including completion and connection to the production system, in the coming weeks. Drilling will begin at the Leviathan wells immediately following Tamar-8 completion activities. Delek says it should take approximately seven months to drill Leviathan-5 and 7, excluding completion and connection to the production system.

Noble has received the approvals required from the Israeli Commissioner and the Ministry of Environmental Protection, including for a drilling plan for the first stage for a piping permit, and for a pre-drilling environmental impact assessment survey.

Earlier this month, Noble cut first steel for Leviathan's platform in Houston.

Noble sanctioned the US$3.75 billion phase one of the Leviathan project in late-February. First gas is set for the end of 2019.

The field is estimated to hold 22 Tcf, and will be developed in phases. Stage 1A will have a capacity of 12 Bcm per annum (1.2 Bcf/d) and cost $3.5-4 billion. 

The development will be a subsea system that connects production wells to a fixed platform located offshore with tie-in onshore in the northern part of Israel. 

Noble Energy operates Leviathan with a 39.66% interest. Noble's partners are Delek Drilling (22.67%), Avner Oil Exploration (22.67%), and Ratio Oil Exploration (15%).

Read more:

Noble sanctions Leviathan

Leviathan first gas by 2019 

Leviathan partners agree development plan

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