To main content

Dredging, reclamation and
shore protection, Soyo LNG

Angola is one of the world’s deep water oil exploration ‘hot spots’. More than 50 significant oil discoveries in Blocks 14, 15, 17 and 18 are believed to contain at least 10 billion barrels of oil. With the increase in oil production comes large quantities of associated gas. Historically, in the absence of a local market, associated gas has been flared or reinjected into the reservoirs. Sonangol, the state oil company, and some of its oil producing partners developed the Angola LNG Project to reduce flaring of gas and curtail gas injection. Angola LNG is a joint venture project involving the major oil producers in the country. Sonangol and Chevron are the co-leaders of the project; the other partners are Total, ENI and BP.

The LNG plant will be built on a site south of the Congo River, in Zaire Province, West of the city of Soyo. The plant will have a capacity of 5.0 million tonnes per year, a full containment LNG storage, a LPG and condensate storage and a loading jetty. Angola LNG Limited awarded the contract for preparation of the plant site to the joint venture of Boskalis International B.V. and Jan de Nul Dredging Ltd., in which Boskalis had the lead. The preparation of the plant site consisted of widening and deepening the existing shipping channel in the ‘Baia de Diogo Cão’; dredging a turning basin for the LNG facility and improving the existing Kwanda Basin. The volume dredged was 28 million m3. The land reclamation works for the LNG facility consisted of raising 125 hectares of existing land on the north side of Kwanda Island and creating 65 hectares new land in the Congo river estuaria. The reclamation works required a total of 7 million m3 suitable material. Besides dredging and land reclamation, the works involved the construction of 1.5 km shore and slope protection, the installation of 4.5 km drainage around the fill areas, the installation and monitoring of geo instrumentation, the installation of a concrete oil/water separator and floodvalve as well as the placing of navigation aids in the channel and basins. The design and construct works were awarded by the end of January 2007, and all operations had to be completed by December 2008. The works entailed a highly challenging timeline and required a high degree of flexibility as the scope of work changed over time. This demanded maximum adaptability and fast decisionmaking, particularly in the design phase. Extensive environmental mitigation measures presented a further challenge, as did the unexploded bombs and other ordnance lying on the seabed in the area, a legacy from Angola’s 27-year civil war, which ended in 2002.

Related projects

Selected filters
IMG_0064_header.jpg

Port development, Gothenburg

Gothenburg turns around some 34 million tons of cargo annually, including 700,000 TEU (containers), and is unique in the region. With regard to the variety and frequency of calls from intercontinental liner trade the port is outstanding in Sweden. The port can be reached from the sea via two different channels: Torshamnen Fairway and Böttö Fairway. From a navigational point of view both channels needed to be deepened and widened at a number of places. Thus there were two good reasons to enhance the fairways: securing the port’s future as the premier port for liner trade and creating safer navigation. This resulted into a major dredging contract which was awarded in June 2002 to Boskalis Westminster Dredging Company.

03_header.jpg

Remediation, Urk harbor area

Many port areas requiring dredging works have been forced to put projects on hold due to the absence of an environmentally safe solution for the disposal or processing of contaminated sediments. While this is a global problem, the availability of central, large-scale repositories in the Netherlands has transformed disposal economics at the national level. Nevertheless, the high level of debris encountered during the dredging of ports and harbors remains a major challenge to all contractors. The hydraulic transport of sediments with a high debris content is impossible.

Pusan_New_Port_5_header.jpg

Port construction, Pusan

The 4th largest container terminal in the world is located in the South East of the South Korean peninsula at Busan. As the old port is completely surrounded by the metro-city, expansion of the old port is restricted. To solve the chronic phenomenon of cargo congestion MOMAF (Ministry of Marine and Fisheries) decided in 1997 to construct a new port situated 20 km west of Busan with a final total handling capacity of 4.6 million TEU and total expenses of 4.2 billion USD.

mejillones_5_header.jpg

Port construction and environmental monitoring, Mejillones

Boskalis International B.V. was working as a subcontractor to the Chilean civil contractor Empresa Constructora BELFI SA, which was awarded the contract to construct phase 1 of the New Mega Port Mejillones. This port has been developed in order to ship the copper of the Chilean mining corporation CODELCO.

Luchtfoto_milieubrochure_header.jpg

Cleanup, Ketelmeer

Ketelmeer, a lake in the Netherlands with a length of some 10 kilometers and a width varying from two to three kilometers, separates the North Eastern and Southern Polders constructed during the late 1960s and early 1970s. It is a major example of the problem of 'historic pollution'. Lake Ketelmeer receives the waters of the Rijn and IJssel and over a period of three or more decades, tens of millions of cubic meters of highly contaminated sediments entered Ketelmeer from hundreds of upstream locations. The bottom was covered by polluted sediments to an average depth of 50 cm. A significant proportion of this material had to be removed, or capped by the cleaner sediments of recent years, if a normal aquatic environment was to be restored.

Warnow_Tunnel__3__header.jpg

Tunnel construction Warnow, Rostock

The Warnow Tunnel is located in Rostock, Germany, at the old mouth of the river Warnow in the Baltic Sea. In the DDR period this area grew out to be the main harbor of East-Germany. After the 'turn' (die Wende) in 1989 the port more or less died. Goods came cheaper and quicker from Rotterdam, Bremen and Hamburg by rail.