Johan Sverdrup: construction starts

Norwegian oil firm has marked the start of construction work on the Johan Sverdrup development project - labelled the biggest industrial project in Norway for decades to come.

Work started at Kværner in Verdal, Norway, today (Monday 29 June) when Kværner metal worker Stian Myrvold Green started up the machine that will cut the steel for the riser platform jacket on the Johan Sverdrup field. 

“This is a special day. We’ve been working thoroughly for a long time making the preparations for this exciting and complex project. It feels great now that we’ve started construction on one of the biggest industrial projects in Europe,” says senior vice president for the Johan Sverdrup development project, Kjetel Digre.

The steel jacket now being built at Kværner Verdal will weigh 26,500-tonne, making it the biggest steel jacket in Europe, according to Statoil.

“The steel jacket will also be one of the most complex ever built by the industry," Digre says. "Not only will we route the land-based power through the jacket, we’ll also be controlling the subsea water injection and exporting the field’s oil and gas from it. In addition, we’re also preparing to tie in future phases of the Johan Sverdrup field development to the riser platform. In building this jacket, we’re in fact making preparations to take in as many as 56 conduits,” Digre says. 

The steel jacket for the riser platform will be transported and installed on the Johan Sverdrup field in 2017. Due to its size, the jacket will be shipped out to the field on the biggest barge in the world for this type of transport, Heerema Marine Contractor's H-851. In order to receive the 260m-long barge, the quay at Kværner Verdal is being upgraded. 

The steel jacket is not the only Johan Sverdrup element currently under construction. The 246-tonne template for the wells, to be pre-drilled on the field from March 2016, is being produced at Vlissingen in The Netherlands. The well template will be installed on the field in the course of the summer/autumn 2015.

“We’ve got an ambitious plan to bring Johan Sverdrup on stream in late 2019 and in accordance with this plan, we’ve now started to produce first building bricks for the project,” says Digre. 

The Johan Sverdrup partnership consists of Statoil, Lundin Norway, Petoro, Det norske oljeselskap and Maersk Oil. The partnership has recommended that Statoil be operator for all the field’s phases.

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