杏吧原创

Oil company to build longest floating vessel ever

Shell's proposed 468-metre floating liquefied natural gas plant will extract and process gas off the coast of Australia
Building it will be a challenge
Building it will be a challenge
(Image: Shell)

IT WILL be the longest floating vessel ever to ease its way out of a shipyard 鈥 468 metres long, to be precise.

Oil giant Shell wants to exploit the Prelude gas field 475 kilometres north-east of Broome, Western Australia, by building a Floating Liquefied Natural Gas (FLNG) plant. This 鈥渟tranded field鈥 is too far from land for a pipeline to connect an extraction rig to a gas liquefaction plant on shore, so Shell plans to combine the two at sea. 鈥淚n simple terms, the facility can be compared to an island with a liquid natural gas plant on it,鈥 says Shell鈥檚 Neil Gilmour.

鈥淚n simple terms, the facility can be compared to an island with a natural gas plant on it鈥

If built, the vessel will be 10 metres longer than the biggest supertanker ever, the Knock Nevis, scrapped in late 2009. Afloat, it will displace 600,000 tonnes of water 鈥 six times that displaced by the US Navy鈥檚 Nimitz-class nuclear-powered aircraft carriers. No floating oil or gas rig come close to this.

Building such a vast vessel will be an engineering challenge, says Mark Lambert of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects in London. 鈥淚t鈥檚 feasible,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut they will have to be very careful about how it flexes along its length if fatigue cracking is to be avoided.鈥

If the Australian government gives the project the go-ahead after an environmental impact assessment, the vessel will be built in a Korean shipyard and then towed to the Prelude field, where Shell says it could be installed in 2015.

Oil company to build longest floating vessel ever
Topics: Energy and fuels