• Region: North America
  • Topics: Well Intervention
  • Date: Dec, 2024

Expro PA offshore wellsAs a reflection of the energy transition, the offshore industry is ushering in a new age of optimisation to hit production targets rather than chasing after new discoveries. 

Operators are hence increasingly looking at marginal fields or brownfield projects and collaborating with service providers to deploy the best digital advancements in the industry to boost production form these assets. The Director of Mature Assets Solutions at Baker Hughes, Guillaume Fauchille, notes that maximising production from existing assets have turned out to be cheaper than investing in new fields. The reason behind 70% of today's oil and gas production coming from mature fields is being attributed to faltering investment in greenfields, the Covid-19 hangover and geopolitical turmoil.

Baker Hughes has also found that as less as 1% boost of the recovery factor of mature assets can make a difference by unlocking access to two to three years of additional worldwide consumption.

Growth spearheaded by North America

As market experts predict around 4-6% growth of the global well intervention industry, most agree that this growth will be led by North America, a region that would be responsible for a large part of future expansion. Intervention activities in the Gulf of Mexico will be primarily driven by technological advancements such as automated systems, data analytics, and advanced downhole tools to name a few. 

Of the latest examples from the region, Subsea7 will be installing of a production flowline and related subsea infrastructure as part of engineering, procurement, construction, and installation (EPCI) contract for production optimisation from Shell's Phase 3 Silvertip Development

 

 

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