SeaRose FPSO

SeaRose FPSO is a floating production, storage and offloading vessel located in the White Rose oil and gas field, approximately 350 kilometres (217 Nm) east-southeast off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada in the North Atlantic Ocean. The White Rose field is operated by Husky Energy, with a 72.5% interest, with Petro-Canada owning a 27.5% share.

SeaRose FPSO coming into Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom on June 6th 2012
History
Name: SeaRose FPSO
Owner: Husky Oil Operations Limited
Operator: Husky Oil Operations Limited
Port of registry:
Ordered: March 2002
Builder:
Launched: April 2004
Identification:
Status: Operational
Notes: [1]
General characteristics
Type: FPSO
Tonnage:
  • 93,984 GT
  • 40,132 NT
  • 150,000 DWT
Displacement: 187,100 long tons (190,102 t)
Length: 258 m (846 ft)
Beam: 46 m (151 ft)
Draught: 18.043 m (59.20 ft)
Propulsion:
  • Wärtsilä 8L46B generators (7,800 kW)
  • Wärtsilä SCV95 gearboxes
  • Lips 5.5 m-diameter controllable pitch propellers
Speed: 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Capacity:
  • Oil storage: 940,000 bbl (149,000 m3)
  • Oil production: 140,000 bbl (22,000 m3)/day
  • Gas production: 180 million cu ft/d (5.1 million m3/d) at 1 bar.
Notes: [1]

SeaRose is approximately 50 km (31 mi) east of the successful Hibernia field and the more recent Terra Nova field. All three fields are in the Jeanne d'Arc Basin on the eastern edge of the famous Grand Banks fishing territory.

SeaRose made her way from the Samsung Heavy Industries shipyard in Geoje South Korea to Marystown, Newfoundland, for final preparation, in April 2004; a 14,000 nmi (26,000 km; 16,000 mi) trip that took two months. In August 2005 she left Marystown for her work duty at Husky Energy's White Rose oil field.

In January 2018, the C-NLOPB suspended White Rose operations because of Husky's failure to disconnect when an iceberg approached, contrary to Husky's ice management plan.[2]

References

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