
HOUSTON, April 30, 2012 - Wood Group Mustang has been awarded the topsides
detailed engineering and procurement support for the semi-submersible central
processing facility (CPF) in the Ichthys field development. The contract was
awarded by Samsung Heavy Industries Co. Ltd., the EPC contractor for the CPF.
The project, located off the northwest coast of Australia, in 250 meters of
water, will be operated by INPEX.
The topsides facility will weigh approximately 70,000 (60,000 dry) tonnes with
a topside deck footprint of 156m x 132m (514ft x 434ft), making it the world's
largest semi-submersible CPF. It will be designed for a peak gas export rate of
1,657MMscfd as well as liquids transfer to the floating production storage and
offloading (FPSO) vessel for condensate production of approximately 85,000 bpd.
The semi-submersible platform is a core component of the Ichthys liquefied
natural gas (LNG) project. The Ichthys LNG Project is a joint venture between
INPEX (76%, the operator) and Total (24%). Gas from the Ichthys Field, in the
Browse Basin approximately 200 kilometres offshore of Western Australia, will
undergo preliminary processing offshore to remove water and extract condensate.
The gas will then be exported to onshore processing facilities in Darwin via an
889km subsea pipeline. The Ichthys LNG Project is expected to produce 8.4
million tonnes of LNG and 1.6 million tonnes of LPG per annum, along with
approximately 100,000 barrels of condensate per day at peak.
Wood Group Mustang also provided the topsides engineering and design for the
Thunder Horse production and drilling platform, which is currently the world's
largest semi-submersible production facility.
"We are thrilled to be participating in this record-setting project," said
Steve Knowles, Mustang president. "Our expertise in topsides design is
unparalleled and we appreciate the opportunity to demonstrate our capabilities
on this challenging design."
Detailed engineering is scheduled to be completed in the 3rd quarter of 2013
and first production is expected by the end of 2016.