To main content

Transport and installation Aasta Hansteen
spar platform

For the Statoil Aasta Hansteen project, Dockwise has transported the newbuild spar hull from the HHI fabrication yard in Ulsan, South Korea to the offshore discharge location near Høylandsbygd, Norway. The spar is the world’s largest spar ever built to date. 

On 26 April 2017, Statoil's huge Aasta Hansteen spar - the world's largest and Norway's first - set sail from Hyundai Heavy Industries shipyard, bound for Norway. The journey, aboard Boskalis' Dockwise Vanguard heavy transport vessel is about 14,500 NM long and will take about two months. Once in Norway, the spar hull will be floated off and later this year the 25,000-tonne topsides will be mated by means of a catamaran float-over. Following commissioning work, the spar will then be towed into the Norwegian Sea to be moored at the Aasta Hansteen field and is due onstream in 2018. Statoil’s Aasta Hansteen spar development will move Norwegian operations into a new deepwater environment. The spar will be moored in 1300m water depth in the Norwegian Sea – the deepest previous project is Shell’s Ormen Lange, at 900m. The Aasta Hansteen facility will be Norway’s first spar project (as well as being the world’s largest spar), the country’s first use of steel catenary risers (SCRs), the first synthetic rope mooring spread offshore Norway and the first use of mechanically lined pipe installed using reel-lay in the country.

Living quarters

For this project the Dockwise already loaded the Aasta Hansteen living quarters on board the semi-submersible vessel Swan in November 2015 and transported it to the Hyundai Heavy Industries construction yard where it was integrated with the new-build topsides.

Topsides installation

In the summer of 2017 the Aasta Hansteen topsides will be transported on board the Dockwise White Marlin from South Korea to Norway. Later this year the topsides will be installed by means of a dual-barge float-over by two Dockwise semi-submersible vessels.

Related projects

Selected filters
Rion_Antirion_header.jpg

Heavy lift operations, Rion Antirion bridge

The Rion Antirion bridge, a 2.3 km long cable stayed bridge, consisting of 4 pylons from which the bridge deck is suspended. SMIT was involved in two phases of the project. During the construction of the pylons, SMIT carried out the management for the tow-out and positioning. For the installation of the steel components SMIT carried out the heavy lift operations.

quarry.jpg

Pipeline survey and freespan correction, Bach Ho

The Bach Ho Gas Pipeline is located at the South Coast of Vietnam in the province of Vung Tau and comprises a 16" pipeline installed in 1994. The 16" pipeline is one of the main production lines of Petrovietnam Gas Company (PVGAS) and important for the supply of natural gas to electrical power plants, production and export of LPG and other domestic users.

Gas pipeline project, Trans Thailand Malaysia

The Trans Thailand Malaysia Gas Pipeline Project comprised the installation of a 34 inch concrete coated gas pipeline, running from the joint Thai-Malaysia development area approximately 270 kilometers offshore towards the southern Thai coast near Chana. As part of this project a contract was awarded to the Boskalis Offshore B.V. - Tideway B.V. consortium for the provision of the dredging and backfilling works, whereas Boskalis Offshore provided the main equipment and project support.

Taurus___BKM100_header.jpg

Shore approach and landfall works, Libyan gas transmission system

West Libya aimed to enhance its position in the supply of continental Europe's energy needs. As the demand for cleaner energy was rising and gas consumption in Italy wasexpected to increase, Libya and Italy found common ground for cooperation. Construction of a 700 million USD gas treatment plant in Mellitah was the centrepiece of this West Libya gas project. The Mellitah plant is supplied with gas from the desert Wafa field, 520 kilometers south-west of Tripoli, and from the offshore Bahr Essalam field, 110 kilometers north of Tripoli.

Seahorse_04_header.jpg

Glory hole excavation, White Rose

The White Rose offshore oil field is the third major oil field in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin on the Grand Banks, some 350 kilometers east of St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada and within 50 kilometers from the Terra Nova and Hibernia fields. The South White Rose oil pool covers approximately 40 square kilometers and contains an estimated 200-250 million barrels of recoverable oil.

Woodside_3_header.jpg

Dredging and backfilling, TSEP

In order to increase the production capacity from the gas condensate fields located off the North West Coast of Western Australia, Woodside Energy Limited, on behalf of the North West Shelf JV Participants, has realized the installation of a multiphase subsea 42" pipeline. The new trunkline supplements an existing 40" pipeline, which conveys gas/condensate from the North West Shelf fields - North Rankin, Goodwyn and Cossack/Wanaea - to onshore treatment facilities located on the Burrup Peninsula near Dampier, Western Australia.