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词条 Single steel drilling caisson
释义

  1. Description

  2. History

      1971–1982    1982–2006    Current status  

  3. See also

  4. References

infobox caption=display title=
}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=Ship image size=Ship caption=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=Ship name=Ujigawa Maru (1972–1977){{br}}World Saga (1977–1982)Ship owner=Fawley Tankers Ltd (1977–1982)Ship operator=Ship registry= Monrovia, {{LBR}}Ship ordered=Ship builder=Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Sakaide, JapanShip original cost=Ship yard number=1164Ship laid down=21 July 1971Ship launched=24 January 1972Ship sponsor=Ship completed=20 April 19727206471}}Ship fate=Converted to drilling unitShip notes=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=Ship name=SSDC (1982–1997){{br}}SDC (1997–)Ship owner=Canadian Marine Drilling Ltd. (1982–1997){{br}}Seatankers Ltd (1997–2002){{br}}SDC Drilling Inc (2003–)Ship operator=Ship registry={{CAN}} (1982–1997){{br}}Majuro, {{MHL}} (1997–2003){{br}}Monrovia, {{LBR}} (2003–)Ship ordered=Ship awarded=Ship builder=Hitachi Zosen, Sakai, JapanShip original cost=Ship yard number=Ship laid down=Ship launched=Ship completed=19828755481}}Ship status=Cold stackedShip notes=Ship badge=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=(tanker)[1]Ship type=Crude oil tanker105,334}}{{br}}{{NetT|89,198}}{{br}}{{DWT|232,134}}319.3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}53|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}19.53|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}Ship propulsion=Double reduction steam turbine{{br}}Single shaft; fixed pitch propeller16|kn}}Ship notes=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=(SSDC)Ship type=Drill barge76260}}{{br}}{{NetT|22,878}}{{br}}{{DWT|39,189}}Ship displacement=162|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}53|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}Ship height=Ship draught=25.3|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}Ship ice class=Ship power=6{{nbsp}}×{{nbsp}}Caterpillar D399 (6{{nbsp}}×{{nbsp}}1,000{{nbsp}}hp)Ship propulsion=NoneShip endurance=Ship capacity=Ship crew=Accommodation for 90Ship notes=
}}

Single steel drilling caisson is a drill barge that was built for year-round oil exploration in shallow ice-covered waters in the Beaufort Sea. The unit, initially named SSDC and later shortened to SDC, was converted from an old oil tanker (Ujigawa Maru, later World Saga) in the early 1980s. It has been used to drill a total of eight oil wells on both Canadian and U.S. continental shelves, the most recent in 2006.

Description

The hull of the single steel drilling caisson, which consists of the forward two thirds of the hull of a very large crude carrier, is {{convert|162|m|ft}} long and {{convert|53|m|ft}} wide, and measures {{convert|25.3|m|ft}} from keel to main deck.[2] The original 80,000-tonne[3] drilling unit sits on top of a 35,000-tonne {{convert|168|by|110|m|ft}} submersible barge that acts as an artificial steel berm when the unit is lowered to the seafloor using water ballast.[4] While on location, a {{convert|2|m|ft|adj=on}} box-type skirt prevents it from sliding sideways and an air injection system helps to overcome the suction effect during de-ballasting. The unit has six Caterpillar D399 diesel generators rated at 1,000{{nbsp}}hp each for onboard power generation, but since it has no propulsion of its own, it has to be towed to location.[5]

On the topside, the single steel drilling caisson has a standard 20,000 square feet land rig. The drilling mast and substructure have a rated capacity of 1,300,000{{nbsp}}lbs and can be skidded to drill a well to the maximum depth of {{convert|25000|ft|m}} through any of the four moon pools. Internally, the drilling unit can hold enough supplies to drill three to five wells depending on the well depth.[6] In addition to drilling equipment, the topside includes two cranes, a helicopter platform, and accommodation for 90 workers.[3]

History

1971–1982

Ujigawa Maru, the oil tanker that would one day be converted into an Arctic drilling unit, was built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in Sakaide, Japan. The ship was laid down on 21 July 1971, launched on 24 January 1972 and completed on 20 April 1972. At 232,134 tons deadweight, the single-hulled Ujigawa Maru was classified as a very large crude carrier (VLCC) with an overall length of {{convert|319.3|m|ft|0}} and a beam of {{convert|53|m|ft|0}}. The ship was propelled by a single fixed pitch propeller driven by a {{convert|36000|hp|kW|abbr=on}} double-reduction steam turbine, giving it a service speed of {{convert|16|kn}}.[1]

In 1977, Ujigawa Maru was acquired by Fawley Tankers Ltd (today part of BW Group) and renamed World Saga.[1]

1982–2006

In the early 1980s, Canadian Marine Drilling (Canmar), the drilling subsidiary of Dome Petroleum, purchased World Saga with the intention of converting the oil tanker to an ice-resistant mobile offshore drilling unit that could continue exploratory drilling operations in the Beaufort Sea beyond the short open-water season. Previously, the company had utilized drillships that had been winterized for arctic conditions, but existing mooring and dynamic positioning systems could not keep the vessel in place in moving first-year ice. This limited station-keeping ability shortened the drilling season in the Beaufort Sea to about 100 days which was not sufficient to drill and test a typical well within one summer season. An alternative approach was to use artificial islands, either dredged islands with gradually sloping sides or sand-filled concrete structures resting on a subsea gravel berm. While caisson-retained islands were considered to be the most appropriate and cost-effective way to extend the drilling season in the Beaufort Sea, relocating them was time-consuming and expensive as the structure had to be completely reconstructed every time it was moved to a new drilling location. The new drilling unit was intended to overcome these limitations.[4]

World Saga was taken to Hitachi Zosen shipyard in Sakai, Japan, where all but the forward two-thirds of the tanker's hull were scrapped.[5] The remaining section was reinforced with 7,000 tonnes of additional steel and strengthened against ice with 13,000 tonnes of concrete that formed a {{convert|1|m|ft|adj=on}} thick inner hull. A new 4,000-ton topside with drilling derrick, cranes, helipad and accommodation block was installed on top of the ice-strengthened hull.[6] The drilling unit was given the name SSDC, short for single steel drilling caisson.

After the conversion was complete, SSDC was towed to the Bering Sea. In October 1982, the drilling unit arrived to Dome Petroleum's Uviluk P-66 site and was lowered onto a man-made submerged berm in {{convert|31|m|ft}} of water.[5] The drilling began on 10 November and was completed on 21 May 1983.[7] By January 1983, a grounded ice rubble pile had formed around the SSDC, protecting it from direct ice contact.[8]

During the winter of 1983–1984, SSDC was used to drill an exploratory well at the Kogyuk N-67 site for Gulf Canada Resources Ltd. in {{convert|28|m|ft}} of water. On 25 September 1983, before the drilling had begun, the unit was impacted by a multi-year ice floe with an estimated diameter of {{convert|1.7|km|mi}} and thickness of {{convert|3|to|4|m|ft}}. While the impact was clearly felt on the rig, no structural damage or movement relative to the seafloor was detected.[8] The drilling of the well began on 28 October 1983 and was completed on 30 January 1984.[7] On 25 June 1984, during the ice break-up, SSDC was impacted again by a large second-year ice floe, estimated to be {{convert|24|by|13|km}} in size and {{convert|1.5|to|2|m|ft}} in thickness. During the winter, a grounded rubble field had again formed around the unit, shielding it from the colliding ice floe.[8]

{{Location map many | Canada
| width = 500
| float = right
| caption = Wells drilled by SSDC in the Beaufort Sea.[19][9][10][11]
| label = Fireweed
| marksize = 8
| pos = left
| lat_deg = 71 | lat_min = 05
| lon_deg = -152 | lon_min = -36
| label2 = Phoenix
| mark2size = 8
| pos2 = left
| lat2_deg = 70 | lat2_min = 43
| lon2_deg = -150 | lon2_min = -25
| label3 = Cabot
| mark3size = 8
| pos3 = left
| lat3_deg = 71 | lat3_min = 19
| lon3_deg = -155 | lon3_min = -12
| label4 = Aurora
| mark4size = 8
| pos4 = left
| lat4_deg = 70 | lat4_min = 06
| lon4_deg = -142 | lon4_min = -47
| label5 = McCovey
| mark5size = 8
| pos5 = left
| lat5_deg = 70 | lat5_min = 31
| lon5_deg = -148 | lon5_min = -10
| label6 = Uviluk P-66
| mark6size = 8
| pos6 = right
| lat6_deg = 70.2633
| lon6_deg = -132.312
| label7 = Kogyuk N-67
| mark7size = 8
| pos7 = bottom
| lat7_deg = 70.1139
| lon7_deg = -133.33
| label8 = Paktoa C-60
| mark8size = 8
| pos8 = left
| lat8_deg = 69 | lat8_min = 39
| lon8_deg = -136 | lon8_min = -29
}}

After the first two seasons, it was found out that constructing a perfectly flat underwater gravel berm at every drilling location was very time-consuming. In August 1986, before being deployed in the American part of the Beaufort Sea, SSDC was mated with a submersible barge named MAT built by Hitachi Zosen.[12] This artificial steel berm removed the need to prepare the seafloor for drilling operations and made the unit capable of operating year-round in water depths between {{convert|7|and|24|m|ft}} and in a wide variety of soil conditions.[8] Upon deployment, high density polyurethane foam was injected between the two units to ensure an even contact.[13] SSDC and MAT have not been separated since.

In September 1986, SSDC was deployed at the Phoenix site in Harrison Bay, Alaska. The water depth was {{convert|17.5|m|ft}} and the top of the MAT was {{convert|4|m|ft}} below surface.[8] Drilling of the well for Tenneco Oil Exploration Company began on 23 September and ended on 19 December 1986. In the following year, the rig was moved to the Aurora site, where it drilled another well for Tenneco in {{convert|21|m|ft}} of water between 2 November 1987 and 30 August 1988.[8][14] Afterwards, SSDC was towed back to Canadian waters and stored in the sheltered waters of Thetis Bay near Herschel Island for two winters.[15]

In 1990, SSDC returned to the Alaska and began drilling a well for ARCO Alaska at the Fireweed site in {{convert|50|ft|m|disp=flip}} of water on 19 October 1990. The well was finished on 25 December 1990 and already on 11 January 1991 a second well for ARCO Alaska was spud at the Cabot site in {{convert|55|ft|m|disp=flip}} of water. After the well was completed on 26 February 1992,[14] SSDC was placed in long-term storage ("cold stacked") at Port Clarence, Alaska, where it would not be trapped in Beaufort Sea ice if work could be found elsewhere.[16] The Cabot well was also the last one drilled by SSDC under Canadian ownership. In 1997, Amoco sold Canmar's former fleet of drilling units and offshore icebreakers to an international consortium of shipping companies.[17][18] The drilling unit was re-registered to Marshall Islands and its name was shortened to SDC. The submersible barge MAT was also renamed SDC II.[19][12]

Ten years later, SDC was recommissioned to drill an exploratory well for Encana Oil & Gas at the McCovey prospect off Alaska.[20] After a month and a half of preparations,[16] the rig was towed back to the Beaufort Sea in July 2002 by two icebreakers, Arctic Kalvik and Kigoria, which completed the {{convert|600|nmi|adj=on}} tow from Port Clarence in just 12 days.[21][22] The preparations for the winter were stopped on 15 August for about two months to avoid disturbing the bowhead whaling season.[23] Drilling of the well, located in only {{convert|35|ft|m|disp=flip}} of water, began on 6 December 2002 and was completed on 27 January 2003.[14] With no immediate drilling work available for SDC, the rig was towed to Thetis Bay where it had previously been stored for two winters.[15] In 2003, the ownership of the drilling unit was passed to a Liberian-registered company, SDC Drilling Inc, and both SDC and SDC II were reflagged to Liberia.[19]

Few years later, Devon Canada chose SDC over artificial islands to drill the first wildcat well in the Canadian Beaufort Sea in 17 years.[24][25] However, the last remaining vessels of the original Beaufort Sea offshore fleet had been sold overseas few years earlier, and the company had to charter the Russian icebreaker Vladimir Ignatyuk (the former Arctic Kalvik) all the way from Murmansk to complete the one-day tow from Thetis Bay anchorage to the Paktoa C-60 site.[26][27] Initially, the plan was to drill one well in during the winter of 2005–2006 and, depending on the results, continue with three more wells during the next three winters.[28] However, despite encouraging results, the well drilled between 5 December 2005 and 19 March 2006 in {{convert|13|m|ft}} of water[7] did not strike the multi-trillion-cubic-foot gas reservoir Devon was looking for, and the subsequent wells were cancelled.[29] SDC was towed back to its anchorage at Thetis Bay.

Current status

Since 2006, SDC has been cold stacked off Herschel Island, Canada.[30] The rig can be seen in satellite photographs at approximately {{Coord|69.411600|N|138.897287|W|display=inline}}.

{{asof|2018}}, the mothballed single steel drilling caisson SDC is the last remaining complete drilling unit built for oil exploration in the Beaufort sea in the 1980s. The two other bottom-founded units, the concrete island drilling system (CIDS) Glomar Beaufort Sea 1 and the mobile arctic caisson (MAC) Molikpaq, have been converted to production platforms in Sakhalin, Russia, and the floating conical drilling unit (CDU) Kulluk was sold for scrap after drifting aground off Sitkalidak Island in the Gulf of Alaska in 2012. Furthermore, in 2017 ConocoPhillips completed the removal of the Tarsiut caissons which had been stored in Thetis Bay since 1984.[31][32] The empty steel caisson of Esso's caisson-retained island (CRI) is also still in Tuktoyaktuk.[33]

See also

  • History of the petroleum industry in Canada (frontier exploration and development)
  • Petroleum exploration in the Arctic

References

1. ^{{csr|register=SEAWEB|id=7206471|shipname=World Saga|accessdate=2015-10-25}}
2. ^{{csr|register=ABS|id=7221419|shipname=SDC|accessdate=2015-10-25}}
3. ^Arctic thaw. New Technology Magazine, December 2005. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
4. ^Hippman, A. and Kelly, W. (1985): [https://www.onepetro.org/journal-paper/SPE-12000-PA The Single Steel Drilling Caisson: A New Arctic Drilling Unit]. Journal of Petroleum Technology, Volume 37, Issue 12. Society of Petroleum Engineers.
5. ^[https://books.google.fi/books?id=hS4RAAAAYAAJ Proposed Diapir Field Lease Offering, June 1984: Final Environmental Impact Statement, Volume 1]. U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service, Alaska OCS Region. March 1984. Page IV-25.
6. ^Fitzpatrick, J. (1983): [https://www.onepetro.org/conference-paper/SPE-11999-MS The Single Steel Drilling Caisson: A Novel Approach to Bottom-Founded Structures in Arctic Waters]. SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition, 5-8 October, San Francisco, California. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 1983.
7. ^Callow, L. (2012): Oil and Gas Exploration & Development Activity Forecast, Canadian Beaufort Sea 2012 – 2027. LTLC Consulting in association with Salmo Consulting Inc. April 2012.
8. ^Timco, G.W. and Johnston, M.E. (2002): Caisson Structures in the Beaufort Sea 1982–1990: Characteristics, Instrumentation and Ice Loads. Technical Report CHC-TR-003. November 2002.
9. ^[https://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1100100037207/1100100037230 Northern Oil and Gas Annual Report 2006]. Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
10. ^Log: GULF KOGYUK N-67. Canadian Stratigraphic Services Ltd. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
11. ^Log: DOME UVILUK P-66. Canadian Stratigraphic Services Ltd. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
12. ^{{csr|register=ABS|id=8601280|shipname=SDC II|accessdate=2015-11-02}}
13. ^{{Citation|last=Clark|first=Karin|last2=Hetherington|first2=Cory|last3=O'Neill|first3=Chris|last4=Zavitz|first4=Jana|year=1997|title=Breaking Ice With Finesse: Oil & Gas Exploration in the Canadian Arctic| publisher =The Arctic Institute of North America|isbn =978-0919034945}}
14. ^[https://www.boem.gov/Exploration-Wells-Beaufort-Sea/ Beaufort Sea Exploration Wells]. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-02}}
15. ^Rig set for Herschel Island. Northern News Services. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-02}}
16. ^SDC drill ship returns to Beaufort Sea. Petroleum News, December 2001, page 5. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
17. ^Barker, A. and Timco, G. (2012): Overwintering of Barges in the Beaufort - Assessing Ice Issues and Damage Potential. Technical Report OCRE-TR-2012-008. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
18. ^Return to the Beaufort. New Technology Magazine, December 2005. {{retrieved|accessdate=2018-11-17}}
19. ^{{csr|register=SEAWEB|id=8755481|shipname=SDC|accessdate=2015-10-25}}
20. ^SDC Management and Mobilization {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151104011143/http://www.solstenxp.com/experience/drilling-rig-services.html |date=2015-11-04 }}. SoltenXP. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-03}}
21. ^An Arctic Tow by ITC. Maritime Journal, 1 January 2003. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
22. ^The SDC makes 600 mile journey to McCovey prospect in 12 days. Petroleum News, August 2002. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-03}}
23. ^SDC at McCovey; will be cold-stacked by Aug. 15. Petroleum News, 31 July 2002. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
24. ^[https://higherlogicdownload.s3.amazonaws.com/SNAME/3383113f-3070-4ddd-acd4-504418eb35a9/UploadedImages/Files/2005/Jun2005-IanFreelandPresentation.pdf Beaufort Sea: Exploration To Production]. Devon Canada, 2005.
25. ^Apex Says Beaufort Sea Wildcat Well to be Tested. Rigzone, 29 March 2006. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
26. ^Forging a Legacy. Graham Chandler, Far North Oil & Gas, Spring 2006. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-02}}
27. ^Devon returns to the Beaufort. New Technology Magazine. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
28. ^All systems go for Canadian Beaufort well. Petroleum News, April 2005. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-04}}
29. ^Devon takes next year off. Northern News Services, 26 June 2006. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-11-02}}
30. ^Rig Data: SDC. Rigzone.com. {{retrieved|accessdate=2015-10-25}}
31. ^[https://www.marinelink.com/news/international-brokering346914 Marcon International Brokering Tarsiut Island Caissons in Arctic]. MarineLink, 13 August 2012. {{retrieved|accessdate=2018-03-19}}
32. ^Beaufort Caissons. ConocoPhillips. {{retrieved|accessdate=2018-03-18}}
33. ^[https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Esso-CRI-overwintering-in-Tuktoyaktuk-Harbour-2012_fig4_309208077 Figure 4: Esso CRI overwintering in Tuktoyaktuk Harbour, 2012]. ResearchGate. {{retrieved|accessdate=2018-03-18}}

2 : 1972 ships|Drillships

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