Chevron has started crude oil and natural gas output from the Jack and St Malo fields in the deepwater US Gulf of Mexico.
Output from the first development stage is expected to ramp up over the next several years to a total rate of 94,000 b/d of crude and 21mn cf/d of natural gas, it said. Recovery may increase substantially in coming years with the use of enhanced technologies. Chevron is the operator of both fields.
With a planned production life of more than 30 years, current technologies are anticipated to recover in excess of 500mn bl of oil equivalent (boe) from the fields. The Jack and St Malo fields are among the largest in the Gulf of Mexico and were discovered in 2004 and 2003, respectively.
The Jack and St Malo fields are located within 25 miles of each other in about 7,000ft (2134m) of water in the Walker Ridge area, about 280 miles south of New Orleans, Louisiana.
The fields were co-developed with subsea pipelines flowing back to a single semi-submersible floating unit located between the fields. The facility is the largest of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico and has an output capacity of 170,000 b/d of oil and 42mn cf/d of natural gas.
Chevron has a 50pc interest in the Jack field, with co-owners Statoil and Maersk Oil holding 25pc each. Chevron holds a 51pc interest in the St Malo field, with Petrobras holding 25pc, Statoil 21.5pc, ExxonMobil and Eni holding 1.25pc each.
Crude oil from the facility will be piped about 140 miles to the Green Canyon 19 platform via the Jack/St Malo oil export pipeline, and then to Gulf coast refineries.
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