Malampaya Gas Field | |
---|---|
Country | Philippines |
Region | West Philippine Sea / South China Sea |
Location | Northwest Palawan |
Block | SC 38 |
Offshore/onshore | offshore |
Operator | Shell Philippines Exploration B.V. |
Partners | Chevron Malampaya LLC, PNOC-EC |
Field history | |
Discovery | 1989 |
Start of production | 2001 |
Production | |
Producing formations | Nido Formation |
Location: Offshore Palawan, Philippines
Depth: Wells are in 820 metres (2,690 feet) of water depth and the reservoir is 2,990 metres below sea level
Interests: Shell Philippines Exploration B.V. 45% (Shell-operated), Chevron 45%, Philippine National Oil Corporation-Exploration Corporation (government) 10%
Key contractors: Malampaya is a joint undertaking of the Philippine national government and the private sector. The project is spearheaded by the Philippine Department of Energy (DOE) and developed and operated by Shell Philippines Exploration B.V. (SPEX) on behalf of joint venture partners Chevron Malampaya LLC and the Philippine National Oil Corporation-Exploration Corporation
Fields: Camago-Malampaya gas reservoir
Production (100%): ~ 380 mmscf/d natural gas production; ~ 15 kb per day condensate
The Malampaya gas field or the Malampaya-Camago field is a deepwater gas-condensate reservoir, located in the Service Contract 38 license area, located offshore, 65 km northwest of the island of Palawan, Philippines. The field was discovered during the drilling of the Camago-1 well in 1989, and following successful appraisal of the Malampaya field in the 1990's, first gas flowed in September 2001. Commercial production started in January 2002. The field was developed and currently operated by Shell Philippines Exploration B.V. (SPEX), under the Royal Dutch Shell; with joint venture partners - Chevron Malampaya LLC and Philippine National Oil Company Exploration Corporation.
The Malampaya Phase 1 development included five production wells, tied back via flowlines to the Shallow Water Platform. Gas is exported through a 504-km subsea Gas Export Pipeline that delivers to the Onshore Gas Plant in Batangas, Luzon Island, for the final treatment and metering.
Shell successfully completed Malampaya Phase 2 in 2013, which added two new production wells. Malampaya Phase 3 saw the design, fabrication and installation of a new depletion compression platform to maintain levels of gas production, which began operating in October 2015. This was the first oil and gas platform to be designed and built in the Philippines, and its successful completion has made the country a player in construction for the oil and gas industry.
The upstream component of the $4.5 billion USD Malampaya gas-to-power project is expected to provide substantial long-term revenue of between $8–10 billion USD to the Philippine government over its life span. Malampaya is benefiting the Philippines in countless ways, including reducing oil imports, assuring a more stable supply of energy and a cleaner source of power, and meeting up to ~30% of Luzon’s energy requirements. The operation of Malampaya in the power stations’ full capacity of 2,700 megawatts is displacing an estimate of some 1.35 million kilograms of CO2 per hour–a cleaner and more sustainable process, as compared to energy generation using coal or fuel oil.