Total cuts Nigerian gas flaring

OE Staff
Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Total has completed the flare out of the Ofon field on Oil Mining Lease (OML) 102 offshore Nigeria. The associated gas of the Ofon field is now being compressed, evacuated to shore and monetized via Nigeria LNG.

“The flare-out of the Ofon field illustrates our commitment to developing oil and gas resources around our existing hubs in Nigeria. This important milestone of the Phase 2 of the Ofon project was achieved in a context of high levels of local content,” commented Guy Maurice, Senior Vice President Africa at Total Exploration & Production.

“The flare-out on Ofon is also significant for Total’s environmental targets, representing a 10% reduction in the Group’s exploration and production flaring. This achievement is a clear demonstration of Total’s commitment to the Global Gas Flaring Reduction Partnership promoted by the World Bank.”

The Ofon field is 65km from Nigerian shores in 40m water depth. The field initially started production in 1997 and is currently producing about 25,000 boe/d.  This flare-out milestone will allow for the gradual increase of production towards the 90,000 boe/d production target through monetization of around 100 MMcf/d, followed later in 2015 by the drilling of additional wells. The execution of the project also involved significant local content, including the first living quarters platform to be fabricated in Nigeria. 

Total E&P Nigeria operates OML 102 with a 40% interest, alongside the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (60%).

Categories: Emissions Europe Natural Gas

Related Stories

First Turbine Stands Tall at Iberdrola’s 476MW Offshore Wind Farm

Van Oord’s Heavy-Lift Installation Vessel Gets Major Upgrade

Cyprus Seeks Improvements to Chevron-led Plans for Offshore Gas Field

Current News

Vard to Build Two CSOVs for Taiwanese Client

Noble Corporation Hooks $40M Contract for Noble Resolve Jack-Up

Over 150 Specialist Subsea Jobs Up for Grabs at Rovco and Vaarst

INPEX and JERA Team Up to Asses Australia-Japan CCS Value Chain

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News