DeepStar enters fifth phase of deepwater mission
Paul R. HaysIn its first eight years, this colossal industry effort has accomplished much in the field of offshore R&D. Still more remains to be done, and an ambitious agenda has been set for the program's next two-year phase
DeepStar is an industry-led cooperative effort to develop economically viable, fit-for-purpose, deepwater production technology that has global applicability. This program also supports efforts to gain regulatory acceptance of any technology that is developed.
Although DeepStar's focus has centered on the deepwater Gulf of Mexico (GOM), much of the technology will have worldwide application. Organized in 1992 and managed by Texaco, DeepStar has sought to upgrade and advance deepwater subsea and floating production systems technology. It also has brought together the industry's leading experts in a common, multidisciplinary forum to address technical issues confronting economically viable deepwater output.
The program also has established a strong working relationship with the U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS) and the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG), to assist in resolving regulatory issues that potentially could affect the risk and safety aspects of design, implementation and operation of future deepwater production systems.
DEEPSTAR'S GOALS
DeepStar's vision for development of deepwater technology is closely tied to the concept of cooperation, including evolution of a synergistic relationship with all members of the oil community. In today's competitive environment, development of deepwater fields will be difficult, if not impossible, without significant improvements in production technology.
DeepStar has several primary goals, one of which is to improve the profitability, execution, operability and reliability of existing deepwater production system technology. Another goal is to develop new technology to enable production in areas that, in technical terms, are currently unproven. A specific target is to develop the technology required for economic production in water depths as great as 10,000 ft.
Furthermore, DeepStar will work to ensure the acceptance of such deepwater technology, including the development of industry standards and practices, as appropriate. The program also will provide a forum for discussion, guidance and feedback with contractors and vendors regarding deepwater production system technology capability gaps, and to promote standardization of component interfaces. This new technology will most likely not evolve outside a jointly funded, cooperative effort.
DEEPSTAR'S VISION
The program has been very active over the past eight years. DeepStar originally was envisioned as being a five-to-six-year program that would evolve and demonstrate the technical feasibility of components associated with identified development concepts. The evolution has been gradual, and progress has been steady.
DeepStar has fostered numerous technological successes over its first eight years. These include:
* Testing and evaluation of polyester rope for use in Taut Leg Mooring Systems, resulting in a proposed API standard
* Successful model testing of a system to prevent or minimize leakage/ spillage from deepwater pipelines during repair operations
* Initiation of governmental efforts to develop a generic Environmental Impact Statement related to FPSOs operating in the GOM
* Advancement of fiber optics and sensor technology, to detect and measure flowline conditions relating to paraffin and hydrate deposition
* Development and commercialization of an extended-reach, coiled tubing system for wax remediation
* Development of guidelines for an industry-supported Deepwater Pipeline Alliance that will provide the required pipeline repair equipment
* Identification of new chemical inhibitors for paraffin remediation
* Successful and safe demonstration of hydrate blockage removal in flowlines by lowering pressure in one side of the line
* Offshore deployment and successful testing of an electrically heated pipe system.
The goal remains to provide technology, so that new systems can be implemented with a relatively high degree of confidence. Timing and scope of various DeepStar phases have been expanded and structured to progress from initial feasibility evaluations to detailed technical studies and, on occasion, hardware/systems development.
With the January 2000 "kick-off" of the program's newest two-year period--the Phase V projects--further evolution of the program depends on participants' technology interests and the real or perceived need to establish prototype hardware with associated qualification programs. A deepwater component and/or field demonstration project also may be necessary to establish sufficient industry confidence in the commercial viability of a concept and its associated technology. However, at this point, DeepStar is pausing to undertake a systematic assessment of technological gaps that need to be filled, so that the industry can produce from water depths out to 10,000 feet.
When DeepStar began in 1992, phased subsea production systems, operating as extensions of shallow-water platforms, were identified as an essential mechanism for commercial development of deepwater prospects. Although long-offset, subsea tie-back production systems may provide commercially attractive solutions for many deepwater fields, alternative floating production systems are now incorporated into DeepStar's technology program, to offer other potential development scenarios. Today's deepwater development solutions still appear to give preference to surface-based completions, as evidenced by the number of developments utilizing TLPs, spars and compliant towers since 1992.
Even though the price of oil now appears high, incremental production/development remains vital for controlling risk and minimizing capital exposure. Examples of ideas to be pursued include: 1) Completing and producing field delineation wells, rather than abandoning them following exploration; 2) Designing modular equipment for the initial production program that can be integrated into any subsequent field development; and 3) Using the production experience from initial wells to improve on subsequent, full-field development optimization. Such elements are supportive of strategies to give world-class economic returns to deepwater opportunities.
At Shell's Mensa subsea tie-back, GOM production is now occurring in water depths greater than 5,000 ft. The industry is very interested in flow assurance issues, and methods to reduce cost and improve equipment reliability. Field qualification of the emerging technologies could become a significant part of DeepStar's future work following the Systems Engineering Committee's gap analysis effort. In DeepStar Phase IV, water depth range was extended to 10,000 ft from 6,000 ft, with a thrust placed on high-impact, near-term applications with clear deliverables--preferably field qualification of equipment or collection of field-quality data. The focus is on applied work rather than fundamental or basic research.
PHASE V PROGRAM GOALS
The Phase V approach to achieving DeepStar's goals will be to address five topics. First of these is to perform a full-system analysis on a range of deepwater production systems to identify issues associated with developing technically feasible production systems in 10,000 ft of water ("enabling technology"), and with improving existing production system technology ("enhancing technology").
A second item is to consolidate results of the full-system analyses, to identify key enabling and enhancing technology issues that need to be addressed to achieve the overall goals. Issues unique to certain concepts will be identified, as will issues that pertain to a range of concepts. Issues will be high-graded to ensure that the most important are addressed first. Priority will be placed on true feasibility issues. It is anticipated that many issues will pertain to a specific technical area or subsystem and will not necessarily be concept-specific.
The third topic is to identify potential means of addressing these issues, which may include DeepStar-funded studies; separate, spin-off, joint industry projects (JIPs); other ongoing JIPs or deferral. Fourth among Phase V tasks is to work with the technical committees to develop projects that address key issues that should be handled within DeepStar. The fifth and last goal is to implement projects with the highest potential value to participants.
The technical committees already have developed several projects for Phase V that have been approved by DeepStar's Management Committee for execution prior to completion of the full systems analysis. These were projects that were well-aligned with the Phase V goals, addressed known technology gaps/opportunities and provided clearly understood, tangible value. A breakdown of the budget for the Pre-Gap Analysis technical work is provided in Fig. 1.
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EARLY TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM
Critical technical areas of common interest identified in earlier DeepStar work were initiated in January 2000. Following the Management Committee's final ballot, the program's early makeup is shown in the accompanying table. The key technology areas, along with regulatory considerations, have been categorized into various DeepStar V groups, discussion of which follows.
Regulatory issues. This committee acts as the liaison group between the other DeepStar technical committees and the regulators, such as the MMS and the USCG. The committee's objective centers on the exchange of technical information between DeepStar's working technical groups and regulatory representatives of the MMS and USCG. The MMS has participated actively in the Phase IV Regulatory Committee, to become more aware of key technology issues that pose barriers to deepwater development or require greater definition to avoid confusion over interpretation. The Regulatory Committee also works and communicates with leading industry organizations, such as OOC, API and others. The objective of this interface between DeepStar and other parties is expedient full review of the relevant issues involved in deployment of new tools or processes while developing GOM fields.
Flow assurance. This committee has been one of the most aggressive panels with respect to achieving coherent understanding of state-of-the-art flow assurance technology. Committee members have worked hard to define both near- and long-term goals to advance knowledge of flow assurance. The "stretch" goal of the Flow Assurance Committee is to ensure reliable, economic deepwater production by appropriate design and operation through: 1) Prediction; 2) Management; and 3) Remediation of deposition and line plugs.
Controls, pipelines and subsea equipment. The Subsea Committee's goal is to develop technology and qualify equipment, to enable deployment of "subsea facilities for 60-mile tie-back from 10,000-ft water depth." The minimum-facilities buoy is being explored as an economic alternative to an electrohydraulic umbilical-based system. The pipe-in-pipe external pressure and bending collapse study should lead to modification of the API-RP for collapse.
Another effort will develop guidelines and a strategy for remediating different types of blockages in long-offset subsea flowlines and pipelines. Another technical project will assess state-of-the-art, subsea processing systems and the overall feasibility of using them to enhance output performance in deepwater oil production applications.
Vessels, mooring and risers. This committee's role is to further technology and fill gaps for deepwater floating systems, and their associated moorings and risers. Most prominent over the last several years has been the advancement of polyester mooring technology. DeepStar will continue work to gain regulatory acceptance of these moorings in the GOM.
During Phase IV, the committee began an effort to advance industry's understanding of floating systems' analytic capabilities. During Phase V, model tests will be used to verify analysis capabilities for a variety of deepwater production concepts ("theme structures"), and their associated moorings and risers. In addition, model tests will be used to augment industry's knowledge of vortex-induced vibrations on deepwater riser systems.
Drilling and completion. Committee members are sharing experience and data to improve deepwater GOM drilling operations. The Drilling Committee is now pursuing other technologies actively, including prediction of pore pressure ahead of the bit, in addition to updating a database on shallow-water flow phenomena.
Reservoir engineering. This committee looks at trends that are of significant generic interest to the industry, while avoiding detailed reservoir issues where participants have competitive concerns. Early in Phase V, the Reservoir Committee will summarize and identify the pros and cons of procedures used to measure formation compressibility and pressure-dependent permeability.
Met-Ocean. This committee is conducting a program that will compile the first comprehensive measurements of current inflow into the GOM. This project's ultimate goal is to improve knowledge and modeling capabilities of GOM circulation, which will provide more accurate design criteria and reduce downtime during deepwater drilling. Phase V efforts extend Phase IV's current data acquisition work and allow for early data retrieval, as well as collection of a second data set.
SYSTEMS ENGINEERING COMMITTEE EFFORTS
The "Systems Engineering" Committee takes on the responsibility of ensuring that these steps to achieve DeepStar's goals are taken in a timely and efficient manner, and for communicating progress and results to an oversight panel. This committee is therefore charged with developing criteria needed for the 10,000-ft study (e.g., reservoir characteristics, met-ocean criteria, etc.) and ensuring consistency between the various contractor studies. In particular, the Systems Engineering Committee is responsible for ensuring that the framework steps outlined above are accomplished.
The outcome of the full systems analysis will be an identification of "gaps" and "opportunities" for a range of production systems in water depths to 10,000 ft. The alternatives considered are shown in Fig. 2. This figure also broadly illustrates the time-line.
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The first step in this process was to develop a detailed work scope for the analysis, including specific goals, and the process to best achieve them. The Systems Engineering Committee began with a full-system analysis of extended reach tie-backs first, to ensure the process is well-suited to achieving the goals of this effort. The first effort's lessons will be incorporated into the subsequent four analyses. The path chosen was to build on the work already done to develop subsea systems in 10,000 ft of water; identifying additional work that is needed to perform a "full-system" analysis; and then developing work scopes for the subsequent system analyses to be performed on the remaining four concepts.
POST-SYSTEMS ANALYSIS
After the full-system analyses are completed, the Systems Engineering group in Phase V will consolidate results of the analyses, including a first-pass grouping and prioritization of issues. Issues will be grouped as "enabling" or "enhancing" and as "concept-specific" or "multi-concept." For example, TLP tendons in 10,000 ft would be an enabling, concept-specific technical issue, while top-tensioned riser design in 10,000 ft would be an enabling, multi-concept issue. A plan to address the issues identified in the full system analyses will be developed, and will include the following options:
* Address within DeepStar
* Address as a separate spin-off JIP
* Being addressed through a separate ongoing or proposed JIP
* Do not address at the present time.
Criteria used to determine whether to address an issue within DeepStar will include relative criticality of the issue (e.g., how big is the gap?), cost and duration needed to adequately address the issue, and whether the issue is already being addressed through separate JIPs.
The results of this evaluation would be reviewed with the Management Committee. Once final endorsements are achieved, the technical committees would be charged with developing technical projects to focus on issues the Management Committee has determined should be addressed within DeepStar. In some cases, a technical committee may have work scopes already prepared prior to Phase V, to address one or more of the issues considered critical.
An objective of the enabling technology development effort is to devise technically feasible configurations for three production systems in 10,000 ft of water--one surface tree concept, one subsea tree concept and an all-subsea approach. If a contractor identifies an alternative concept that the Management Committee feels offers incentives compared to the original five concepts, then this new concept will be considered for evaluation as part of Phase V.
WRAP-UP
DeepStar Phase V has kicked off with 16 participating oil companies (Fig. 3) and 31 vendor/service companies (Fig. 4) with a $8-million budget--not an inconsequential undertaking! The systems engineering effort was endorsed unanimously by the participants, and it provides the fertile ground for a very active program.
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On March 16, 2000, an effort was launched to obtain closer ties with the vendor community in a technology gap workshop focused on subsea, extended-reach tie-backs. DeepStar will continue to grow these relationships as it hosts workshops to focus on technology gaps for other systems needed to advance out to the 10,000-ft water depth. DeepStar Phase V is DeepStar renewed.
RELATED ARTICLE: Summary of Phase V's approved work
* Chilled, multiphase, single, bare flowlines
* Flow assurance operational practices manual for deep water
* Minimum facilities buoy for remote control of subsea production in deep water
* Pipe-in-pipe external pressure and bending collapse
* SCR fatigue damage monitoring and inspection
* Pipeline blockage remediation strategies for long-offset, subsea flowlines and pipelines
* Subsea processing feasibility study
* Coupled analysis/theme structures
* Improve pore pressure prediction ahead of the bit
* Update shallow water-flow database
* Formation compressibility
* Six-month turnaround cruise/Yucatan inflow measurement
* Execution of system engineering
Paul R. Hays, Texaco Inc., and G. Ray Seid, Paragon Engineering Services, Inc., Houston
Paul R. Hays, DeepStar Project Manager, Texaco Inc., Houston, received a PhD degree in theoretical and applied mechanics from the University of Illinois in Urbana in 1980. He worked for a year on flutter analysis for the aerospace industry before joining oil industry in 1981. His early involvement with deep water was with field development technology for 1,000-ft water offshore Norway, with initial technical focus on deepwater production/drilling. DeepStar was a $5-million program when he assumed leadership in February 1998. He has nurtured its growth into the Phase V program ongoing today.
G. Ray Seid is employed by Paragon Engineering Services Inc. and has been seconded to the DeepStar program for the past two years. Mr. Seid's career spans 35 years in the industry, the greater portion of which has been related to the development of subsea oil and gas production systems. He holds a BS degree from Penn State University (1954).
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