Eiffage: central hub completed for BP’s Tortue FLNG project

BP’s Greater Tortue Ahmeyim FLNG project located offshore Mauritania and Senegal continues to progress towards the start of production next year.

France’s Eiffage Genie Civil said in a statement on Wednesday it had finished the central platform of the hub located 10 km from the coast on the Mauritania-Senegal border.

This platform represents more than 3200 tonnes of steel structure and 200 prefabricated concrete elements installed by two 300-tonne cranes moving forward, according to Eiffage.

The firm said that it supplied all these elements by cargo barges from its marine base in the port of Dakar.

In addition, a fleet of fifteen vessels was operated by Eiffage Genie Civil Marine teams, including a 300-bed floatel.

“Close management of simultaneous operations with our partner Saipem ensured safety and adherence to the schedule,” the firm said.

Eiffage and Italy’s Saipem won the contract from BP for the Tortue development back in 2019.

The hub includes the berthing facilities for the FLNG and the breakwater.

Earlier this year, Eiffage completed the construction of 21 mega caissons at its Dakar site in Senegal.

These caissons constitute the breakwater that would protect the project’s FLNG and LNG carriers offshore the coast of Saint-Louis.

Eiffage: central hub completed for BP’s Tortue FLNG project
Gimi FLNG (Image: Golar LNG)

Gimi FLNG conversion

According to BP, the Tortue/Ahmeyim gas field, located offshore on the border between Mauritania and Senegal, has about 15 trillion cubic feet of gas.

The project’s FPSO will process the gas, removing heavier hydrocarbon components, prior to delivering it to the floating LNG provider which will be located at the hub.

Singapore’s Keppel shipyard is currently converting Golar’s Gimi FLNG for the project.

Golar said in May the FLNG was 83 percent technically complete. The yard should deliver the unit in the first half of the next year.

Once deployed offshore Mauritania and Senegal, it would provide about 2.5 million tonnes of LNG per annum on average.

Besides operator BP, the project includes Kosmos Energy and national oil companies Petrosen and SMHPM.

- Advertisements -

Most Popular

Commissioning of India’s Chhara LNG terminal delayed

India’s Hindustan Petroleum, a unit of state-owned ONGC, has reportedly delayed the commissioning of its Chhara LNG import terminal...

MOL’s LNG carrier fleet to grow to 104 vessels by March 2025

Japan's shipping giant MOL expects its huge fleet of liquefied natural gas (LNG) carriers to increase to 104 vessels...

Tellurian’s net loss widens in Q1, Driftwood LNG talks continue

US LNG firm Tellurian reported a widening first-quarter loss on Thursday, as it continues to work to secure financing...

More News Like This

BP, Kogas ink new long-term LNG supply deal

UK-based energy giant BP has signed a new long-term liquefied natural gas (LNG) sale and purchase deal with South...

Mitsui: no decision on Adnoc’s LNG project

Japan's trading house Mitsui & Co said nothing has been decided on an LNG project in the United Arab...

China’s Dapeng LNG terminal boosts gas deliveries in Q1

China’s Guangdong Dapeng LNG import terminal has increased its deliveries of natural gas to downstream customers in the first...

Saipem ships North Field modules from Indonesia to Qatar

Italian contractor Saipem has shipped the first three modules from Indonesia to Qatar, where they will be installed as...