Well Disruption at Indonesia's Merakes Offshore Gas Field to Affect Output for 6 months

Bernadette Christina
Thursday, October 28, 2021

A disruption at a gas well in Indonesia's Merakes gas field is likely to affect the project's production for as long as six months, an official at the country's oil and gas regulator said on Thursday.

The disruption, caused by a sand blockage, had been going on since earlier this month and the facility is set to reopen in a day or two, said Julius Wirato, the deputy head of operations at the state's regulator SKK Migas.

"There's a subsurface issue with one of the wells in Merakes, we are working to fix it," Wirato told Reuters.

Wirato said 50% of production would be recovered soon, hopefully in the next few days.

"But for 100% recovery... will take quite some time, around six months," he added.

Indonesia's gas distribution is already compromised due to a separate disruption in Natuna that happened in July, impacting gas supplies and electricity prices in neighboring Singapore.

The Merakes project, operated by Italy's Eni, had only started gas production in April and guaranteed a production capacity of 450 million standard cubic feet per day.

Eni did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comments.

Wirato said that the Merakes issue has not impacted overall operations in the Bontang Liquefied Natural Gas where the project is located, but production may be slightly affected.

"Maybe it will drop a little, or we'll look for backup from other producers who can supply more," Wirato said.

 (Reporting by Bernadette Christina Munthe and Jessica Jaganathan; Writing by Fathin Ungku; Editing by Martin Petty)


Categories: Energy Activity Production Floating Production

Related Stories

New York Not Moving Forward With Three Offshore Wind Farms

Sea Machines Launches Its First Turnkey USV

COWI to Design Foundations for GW-Scale Irish Offshore Wind Project

Current News

US Offshore Wind: Outlook Strong Despite Construction Productivity Issues

Bourbon Orders Exail Tech to Streamline Subsea Fleet’s Services for Offshore Energy

Asso.subsea Wraps Up Subsea Cables Installation at French Floating Wind Pilot

Dayrates Rise - Will More Energy Companies Buy Offshore Rigs?

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News