Tubular Bells topsides lift

Published

Hess shows the carefully staged choreography of 14 cranes as they hoisted the 1000-tonne Tubular Bells main deck 100ft in the air to set it into place atop the production and cellar decks at a Houma, Louisiana fabrication facility.

The Tubular Bells production facility is located in Tubular Bells field, in the Mississippi Canyon area in deepwater Gulf of Mexico.

Hess began production from the field where the Tubular Bells production facility is producing in the Miocene trend and has a production life of an estimated 25 years. The floating production facility is a classic spar hull with traditional three-level topsides and was the first classic spar to be built in the US.

Hess is the operator of the field with a 57.14% interest with partner Chevron (42.86%). 

The company announced this week that it is cutting its 2015 capital and exploration budget by 16%, compared to last year to US$4.7 billion. Hess says that 45% of the cash ($2.1 billion) will be spend on its unconventional shale resources, however, deepwater will remain a focus. 

Read more: 

Hess cuts budget but stays with deepwater

Hess hits first oil from Tubular Bells

Current News

Canada’s $4B Floating LNG Scheme Secures 12-Year Export Deal

Canada’s $4B Floating LNG Sche

Iberdrola Applies Spanish Coating Tech for German Offshore Wind Farm

Iberdrola Applies Spanish Coat

DeepOcean Set for Long-Term IMR Duty with Vår Energi

DeepOcean Set for Long-Term IM

Fugro Nets Mubadala Energy’s Deepwater Gas Job in Asia

Fugro Nets Mubadala Energy’s D

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News

 
Offshore Engineer Magazine