Thunder Horse after hurricane damage
Atlantis
Matt Simmons, among others, have been predicting a labor and equipment shortage that may stall the energy industry offshore.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')P Delays Atlantis, Thunder Horse Platforms Again(Update2)
By Stephen Voss and Maher Chmaytelli
Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc, Europe's second-largest oil company, again delayed the start of production at the Atlantis and Thunder Horse platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, saying the postponements will crimp output this year and next. Atlantis will be running by the end of this year and Thunder Horse by the end of 2008, Chief Executive Officer-designate Tony Hayward told reporters today. Atlantis was originally scheduled to start last year and Thunder Horse in late 2005.
Competition for the skilled labor of oil service company workers is slowing the start-up, following earlier delays caused by storm damage and equipment failures. "The supply chain is stretched to breaking point,'' Hayward said at a press conference in London. "Thunder Horse will start up. It's just taking longer than we thought.'' The slowdowns will shave BP's 2007 production by 150,000 barrels a day and by 100,000 barrels a day a year later, Hayward said. The company today reported its lowest profit in two years because of declining output and falling energy prices. Before today, BP had said Atlantis would start in the second half of this year, with Thunder Horse beginning during the second half of 2008.
Atlantis, 44 percent owned by BHP Billiton Ltd., is planned to have the capacity to produce 200,000 barrels a day of oil and 170 million cubic feet a day of gas from 11 wells. Thunder Horse, designed to process 250,000 barrels of oil a day and 200 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, was originally damaged during Hurricane Dennis in July 2005, leaving it listing at a 20-degree angle. The platform is 25 percent owned by Exxon Mobil Corp.
Hayward named seven major projects that BP will start this year, including Atlantis and King Subsea in the Gulf of Mexico, Red Mango in Trinidad and the San Juan coal-bed methane expansion project in the U.S. The remaining three are in Angola; Greater Plutonio, Rosa and Kizomba A phase 2.
Last Updated: 6 Feb 2007