Polish firm launches world’s longest heated gas pipeline
Poland’s state-owned oil and gas firm PGNiG has launched the first part of a heated pipeline that will connect three of its Norwegian production wells with a floating production and storage unit. At 14.5 kilometres in length, it is the longest such installation of its type in the world.
The Electrically Heat Traced Flowline (EHTF) aims to decrease the risk of pipes becoming blocked by hydrates, an ice-like mixture of water and methane that is particularly common in the Ærfugl gas field, where the pipeline plunges to 400 metres below sea level and temperatures drop to 3°C.
🇳🇴 #PGNiG Upstream Norway uruchomiło 1-szą nitkę podgrzewanego gazociągu obsługującego złoże Ærfugl. – To najdłuższa instalacja tego typu na świecie. Sukces projektu otwiera nowe perspektywy zagospodarowania podmorskich złóż – mówi prezes Paweł Majewski.
➡️https://t.co/uZJkwiEnIM pic.twitter.com/2oj0WucXBM— PGNiG (@GK_PGNiG) December 29, 2021
The pipeline is heated through wires in an insulated space between the inner and outer pipe. ”[It] is the longest installation of this type in the world and the first one longer than 1.5 kilometres,” said PGNiG’s CEO Paweł Majewski.
“The success of the project opens new perspectives for the development of offshore deposits,” he added, noting that it would enable connections between even more remote fields and existing production infrastructure in a “more cost and energy effective manner” than other available solutions to mitigate hydrate formation.
The heated pipeline will also “reduce the total carbon footprint” associated with the exploitation of remote deposits, claimed Majewski. His firm estimates recoverable resources of gas-condensate at the Ærfugl field at 274.7 million barrels of oil equivalent, of which 210 million are yet to be extracted.
PGNiG has expanded its Norwegian operation over recent months. In September, it received approval from local authorities to purchase 21 new licences, making it the owner of 58 gas concessions on the Norwegian continental shelf.
PGNiG’s total natural gas output from the Norwegian shelf in 2022 is forecast at 2.5 billion cubic metres. The investments fit with Poland’s planned Baltic Pipe, which will bring gas from Norway to Poland via Denmark, as Warsaw seeks to diversify away from Russian supplies.
The investment is being conducted by PGNiG Upstream Norway, a subsidiary of Poland’s state-owned energy giant, which holds an 11.9% interest in the Ærfugl licence. It is operated by Aker BP, a Norwegian firm holding 23.8% interest. Other partners include Equinor Energy (36.2%) and Wintershall DEA (28.1%).