Title: Offshore Oil Formation
1Offshore Oil Formation
- The formation of oil takes a tremendously long
time. Millions of years ago plants and animals
of the oceans died settled on the ocean floor.
While large organisms contributed to the oil it
was often the mass of small and microscopic
organisms that contributed the bulk of the carbon
for OIL.
2- Over many thousands of years bacterial action and
extreme pressure from layers of sediment
converted the organic matter to oil gas. The
extreme pressure came form the continuous build
up of sediment. The pressure created tremendous
amounts of heat which helped the process along.
3- The oil moved within the soil and oil reserves
formed when non-porous rock lay above porous
rock. Oil seeps up through the porous rock is
trapped by the non-porous rock.
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5Sedimentary Basins of Canada
6- Western Canada Sedimentary Basin
- (our primary source of oil)
- 2. Hudson Bay Basin
- 3. Mackenzie and Banks Basins
- 4. Canadian Arctic Basin
- 5. Baffin Bay
- 6. Labrador Sea Shelves
- 7. Scotian Shelf
- 8. Grand Banks
- 9. Anticosti
- 10. Maritimes Basins.
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8Atlantic Sedimentary Basins
9Hibernia Cross Section
Oil (light-green lines and blobs) and gas (red
lines) in the Hibernia Formation (yellow) in
the Carson Basin, mainly in stratigraphic traps.
The brick colour underlying the oil and gas
stream lines represents the Egret type source
rock.
10Oil and Gas Traps
- All oil and gas traps have
- a nonporous rock cap and
- a porous rock source.
-
- The porous rock allows the oil to seep into the
cavity and the nonporous rock prevents the oil
from leaving.
11Oil Reserves
- Fold Trap the up fold or anticline in the layers
of the earth's crust form the reservoir.
12Oil Reserves
- Fault Trap the vertical movement of the earth's
crust forms a v-shaped reservoir.
13Oil Reserves
- Salt Dome Trap The salt dome forms an up-fold in
the earth's crust not unlike the anticline caused
by tectonic forces.
14Oil Reserves
- Stratigraphic trap has a former limestone reef
as its porous rock feeding the reservoir.
15Submersible Oil Rig
- Supported primarily on large pontoon-like
structures submerged below the surface. The
operating decks are elevated 100 or more feet 30
m above the pontoons on large steel columns. - Once on the desired location, this type of
structure is slowly flooded until it rests on the
seafloor. After the well is completed, the water
is pumped out of the buoyancy tanks, the vessel
refloated and towed to the next location. - Submersible rigs are normally limited to ocean
depths of 20 m.
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17Semi Submersible
- Float on the ocean
- This floating drilling unit has pontoons and
columns that, when flooded with seawater, cause
the pontoons to submerge to a predetermined
depth. Although it is moved by wave action, it
sits low with a large part of its structure under
water. This, combined with eight huge mooring
anchors, make it a very stable installation - 200 m for anchored and 2000 m for dynamically
positioned
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19Ocean Ranger (semi submersible)
- Valentine's Day, 1982 a terrible storm rages off
the coast of Newfoundland. On the Grand Banks,
the Ocean Ranger, the world's mightiest drilling
rig, is pounded by waves more than 20 metres
high. At the height of the storm, the
"indestructible" rig begins to tip over, then
capsizes. All 84 men on board 56 of them from
Newfoundland perish. - http//archives.cbc.ca/environment/extreme_weather
/topics/349/ - http//archives.cbc.ca/environment/extreme_weather
/topics/349-1874/ - http//www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?P
gNmTCEParamsA1ARTA0005876
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21Jack-up Oil Rig
- Instead of floating over its drilling location
the Jackup has long leg structures, which it
lowers to and into the sea bed raising the rig
out of the water. (100 m)
22Gravity Based Oil Rigs
- The Hibernia GBS sits on the ocean floor
approximately 200 metres in depth with its
topsides extending approximately 50 metres out of
the water. The platform acts as a small concrete
island with serrated outer edges designed to
counter ice bergs. - http//www.hibernia.ca
- http//www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?P
gNmTCEParamsM1ARTM0011173
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25FPSO
- A Floating Production, Storage and Offloading
Vessel
26Once the field is depleted, the FPSO can be moved
to a new location. In areas of the world subject
to cyclones (NW Australia) or icebergs (Canada),
some FPSOs are able to release their
mooring/riser turret and steam away to safety in
an emergency.