BW Offshore
Type | Public (OSE: BWO) |
---|---|
Industry | Petroleum |
Founded | 1982 |
Headquarters | Oslo, Norway |
Key people | Carl K. Arnet (CEO) |
Products | FPSO |
Revenue | ▲ USD 662.6 million (2007) |
Operating income | ▲ USD 81.1 million (2007) |
Net income | ▲ USD 54.6 million (2007) |
Employees | 1,200 |
Subsidiaries | Advanced Production and Loading (APL) [1] |
Website | www.bwoffshore.com |
BW Offshore (OSE: BWO), previously known as Bergesen Worldwide Offshore is a Norwegian operator of Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO). It is currently one of the leading Floating Production Storage and Offloading (FPSO) contractors in the world with its fleet of vessels operating across the globe. The company is listed on Oslo Stock Exchange. The company has its headquarters in Oslo, Norway but operates internationally. The largest owner is Bergesen Worldwide Group in Hong Kong with a 2/3 share.
The company has operations in Malaysia, Mauritania, Mexico, Nigeria and Russia with a total of 12 FPSO vessels.
History
Bergesen Worldwide Offshore was originally part of the company Bergesen d.y. ASA who acquired its first FPSO Berge Sisar in 1982 and installed it off Angola. Since then acquired numerous FPSO's until 2001 when it left the North Sea and entered exclusively other areas. In 2003 Bergesen was merged with World-Wide Shipping and became Bergesen Worldwide. The company was listed on Oslo Stock Exchange in 2005. The company has been renamed to BW Offshore operating under its parent company BW Group.
BW Offshore is currently the largest shareholder of Prosafe Production, the spun off FPSO division of Prosafe holding approximately 24 percent shares.
Presence and Units
As of December 31, 2007, BW Offshore owned a fleet of 12 vessels. It has operations primarily in offshore waters in Nigeria, Mauritania, and Russia, as well as in Malaysia and Mexico.
BW Offshore has been selected for the conversion, installation and operation of an FPSO at the Chinook and Cascade fields in the Gulf of Mexico in Walker Ridge Block 469 and Walker Ridge Block 206, respectively. The FPSO will be installed on the field with a water depth of 2,600 meters, probably the deepest water depth on which an FPSO has ever been installed. In June of the same year, they delivered the first FPSO ever in the Gulf of Mexico to the Mexican State owned oil company, Pemex further strengthening its position in the typhoon prone region.
Fleet:
- Sendje Berge
- Berge Helene
- YÙUM K'AK'NÀAB
- BW Nisa
- BW Peace
- Berge Okoloba Toru
- Belokamenka
- BW Endeavour
- BW Carmen
- Tiara
- BW Pioneer
FPSO Vessel Name | Oilfield | Location | Operator | Entered service | Water depth (m) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berge Helene | Chinguetti | 22x20px Mauritania | Petronas | 2006 | 850 |
Sendje Berge | Okwori | 22x20px Nigeria | Addax Petroleum | 2005 | 140 |
YÙUM K'AK'NÀAB | Ku-Maloob-Zaap | 22x20px Mexico | Pemex | 2007 | 90 |
BW Nisa | |||||
BW Peace | TUPI | 22x20px Brazil | Petrobras | 2009 (Under conversion) | 2,500 (max) |
Berge Okoloba Toru | Bonny River | 22x20px Nigeria | Global Gas and Refining | 2005 | 20 |
Belokamenka | Kola Bay | 22x20px Russia | Rosneft Oil Company | 2004 | |
BW Endeavour | Basker-Manta-Gummy | Australia | Anzon Australia | SCRAPPED | |
BW Carmen | North Sea | StatoilHydro | 2008 | ||
Tiara | |||||
BW Pioneer | Cascade & Chinook | Template:Country data US Gulf of Mexico | Petrobras America | 2010 (Under conversion) | 2,600 |
Advanced Production and Loading (APL)
In July 2007, BW Offshore acquired the ownership of Advanced Production and Loading (APL), making the company its technology division.[1] APL which is based in Arendal, Norway and is a specialist in the engineering and supply of offloading and transfer systems for ships and terminals. It has delivered loading equipment for production vessels, storage vessels and tankers in a wide range of field developments in the North Sea, Africa, Asia, Oceania, Russia, Latin-America, and the USA.
In year 2006, APL ventured into FPSO contracting by establishing Nexus Floating Production.
References
- ↑ APL: History website : http://www.apl.no/aplweb/templates/Level2Page.aspx?id=532
|