it is a familiar sight at the harbour in aberdeen. supply ships like these have kept oil platforms stocked for half a century. for the next generation, the changes ahead bring some challenge. obviously it is exciting with the renewables sector, and it is a welcome and needed change, but i think oil and gas will be around for a long time. aberdeen harbour has been the beating heart of the oil and gas industry for many decades now, but even it is changing to make room for these new industries, not least the growing number of wind farms that are cropping up along the east coast. change is on the horizon here, but it is still an oil town and that is by far the biggest source of employment, although the numbers are gradually declining. the head of bp s operation here tells me that the biggest change will come in the next eight years. we will be about 60 110 by 2030 in those two pillars. infavourof.? we will have a 40% reduction from today in the oil and gas
FLNG’s speedy development times suggest it could play a major role in responding to heightened LNG demand as Europe turns away from Russian gas. [Gas in Transition, Volume 2, Issue 3]
Located 18 km south-east of Sapakara South, Krabdagu-1 was drilled at a water depth of 780 m and encountered approximately 90 m of net oil pay in good quality Maastrichtian and Campanian reservoirs.