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Pipeline crossing, Strait of Magellan

The project involved the construction of a new, strategically important, 24" natural gas pipeline across the Strait of Magellan, linking Cabo Espíritu Santo in Tierra del Fuego province with Cabo Vírgenes in Santa Cruz province. The new pipeline was built as an expansion of the existing San Martín pipeline in an effort by the government to increase gas supplies from Tierra del Fuego to the Argentinian mainland.

The new submarine pipeline runs parallel 50 meters west of the existing pipeline that was built in 1978. The link was the final piece of a significant onshore project involving the construction of a pipeline stretching thousands of kilometers to carry the gas recovered from fields in the south to the distribution network in the north. The ‘Gasoducto Transmagallánico’, as the pipeline is called in Argentina, will transport 18 million m3 of gas a day. Boskalis Offshore’s scope consisted of pre-trenching both shore approaches, pipeline pull-in and pull-out at the landfalls, submarine tie-in, hydrotesting and backfilling of the trenches. The multidisciplinary project has been completed in eight months after contract award, which is exceptionally fast considering the remote location, limited infrastructure, lack of local facilities and complexity of the project. Weather conditions in the Strait of Magellan can be notoriously severe. The harsh local conditions feature rapid weather changes, storms, strong currents and a tidal range of more than ten meters.

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Seabed preparations, PGN

The pipeline between Pulau Pemping, Indonesia, and Pulau Sakra, Singapore, is the final link of the transportation system for natural gas from onshore fields on South Sumatra to Singapore. The successful completion of the Engineering, Procurement and Construction contracts for the 27-kilometers 28-inch gas pipeline with a 96-core fibre optic cable in one of the busiest ports and shipping traffic zones of the world marked a milestone for Boskalis. The scope of work comprised not only seabed preparations and protective rock berm installation - Boskalis Offshore core activities - but also pipeline manufacturing and installation.

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Deepening of the Eems-pipeline

The 42" Eems pipeline is part of the pipeline connection between the gas cleaning and drying plant of Phillips Petroleum at Rysumer Nacken in Germany, and the natural gas pipeline network in the Netherlands. The gas is obtained from the Ekofisk gas field in the Norwegian region of the North Sea. The pipeline crosses the morphologically dynamic Eems estuary over a length of 4 km, passing both the deep shipping lane ‘Oostfriesche Gaatje’ and the shallow sand bank ‘Paap’.

Development gas export pipeline,
Hibiscus to Point Fortin

The NCMA Development Project comprised the development of the North Coast Marine Area, which is located in the Caribbean Sea and Bay of Paria, Trinidad. The project included the installation of a 24" Gas Export Pipeline from the Hibiscus Platform to a landfall at Point Fortin. From the landfall the pipeline was routed by directional drilling and by surface laid pipeline, to a termination point in the Atlantic LNG Terminal at Point Fortin. As part of this project Boskalis was awarded the contract for the provision of landfall, directional drilling and onshore pipeline installation and testing of the 24" gas pipeline system.

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Hanze F2a Development Project

Hanze, 200 kilometers offshore Den Helder in block F/2 of the North Sea, is the first operated development in the Dutch sector by Germany's Veba Oil. The oilfield reserved approximate 34 million bbl, plus 40 bcf of associated gas. 

Installation gas pipeline, Takoradi

Late November 1998 Boskalis was awarded a subcontract for the installation of two marine pipelines to supply and discharge cooling seawater for the Takoradi thermal power plant that was under construction for the Volta River Authority, near the village of Aboadze approximately 20 kilometers north-east of Takoradi, Republic of Ghana.

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Re-insulation Gannet 'C' Bundles, North Sea

The Gannet 'C' satellite field, which is located in the North Sea at 112 miles East of Aberdeen in 95-meter water depth, comprises four drill centres, each having one or more producing wells. The drill centres are connected to the local platform Gannet 'A' by four flowline bundles with a total length of 10 kilometers. A glycol-based gel, filling the annulus of the Gannet 'C' carrier pipe, insulated the individual flow lines. Prompted by degradation of the gel and the resulting drop in oil and gas arrival temperatures at the platform, an EPIC project took off for a re-insulation system. The objective of the re-insulation system was that it should provide sufficient insulation to the bundles in order to safeguard production during the total field life of Gannet 'C', being a minimum lifetime of 15 years. Boskalis Offshore was supported by Hydronamic - the in-house engineering department.