Brazil Starts 4-Mile-Deep Extraction of Oil in the Ocean

Petrobras offshore rig Petrobras, Brazil's state-controlled oil and gas multinational, will extract its first crude oil from the potentially huge offshore Tupi field find, of late 2007, below the salt layer of the Santos basin next May, announced Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

The oil will be extracted from the sub-salt reserves found in the 5-to-8-billion-barrel Tupi oil field, one of the largest deep water finds in history. Tupi is part of a broader structure of oil at a depth of up to 7 kilometers that analysts have said could contain 50-80 billion barrels.

"What will happen is very important. We're going to extract the first barrels of oil at a depth of 6,000 meters. That is no small feat" said Lula on Friday during the inauguration of a gas treatment plant in Espí­rito Santo state.

According to Petrobras initial sub-salt output from the Tupi field will be around 15,000 barrels per day rising to 30,000 barrels a day during a later stage of testing and then to around 100,000 barrels per day by 2010 when it will be in a more advanced pilot phase.

However the Tupi oil will not be the first sub-salt crude drilling. Crude was pumped last September from a much smaller field in Espí­rito Santo state.

Petrobras also announced on Friday that it posted its largest-ever one-day output of Brazilian crude last week after several new platforms recently came on line. Production on Wednesday, March 4, reached 2,012,654 barrels which was 12,420 barrels more than the previous record set on Christmas day of 2007.

"This result is due mainly to the coming on line of three new production platforms in the last months in the Campos basin (off Rio de Janeiro): P-51 and Cidade de Niterói in the Marlim Sul field; and P-53, in Marlim Leste," according to the company's release.

Petrobras said good performance on several of its other platforms, notably P-52 and P-54, also helped push output to a new record. It said several more platforms would begin producing in 2009, some part-owned by other oil firms.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Raça, a magazine for Brazilian blacks

In Race Matters the US Is Becoming More and More Like Brazil

As several historical studies have proven, descriptions of rape and the subsequent effects on ...

Brazil Urges Israel to Use Restraint in Gaza Strip

Brazil says it is worried with the developments in Gaza Strip, where 18 Palestinians ...

Brazil’s Speaker of the House Scolds US$ 44 Million Spent on Special Session

It is estimated that around US$ 44.44 million (95 million reais) were spent to ...

Brazil: Indians Celebrate Supreme’s Ruling on Land, But Farmers Vow to Fight

Across Brazil Indians are celebrating a resolution by the Brazilian Supreme Court, where the ...

In Brazil, Only 9% of Congress Members Are Women

Yesterday was World Population Day. The theme of the celebration this year was gender ...

Bombarded by Angry Brazilians Cicarelli Says She Can’t Be Blamed for YouTube Ban

After Brazil's MTV was inundated by over 20,000 emails from angry viewers threatening a ...

Globo TV reporter Guilherme Portanova after being released from captivity

Gangs Have Brought Brazil to Its Knees. Kidnap for TV Air Time Proves It

Not only São Paulo, but the whole country breathed a sigh of relief upon ...

The Groups Behind the Immigration-Is-Bad Movement

Stereotypes and labels hinder understanding of the intensifying immigration debate in the United States. ...

Brazil and 17 Countries Unite to Get Better Prices for AIDS Drugs

After three days of debates last week in BrasÀ­lia, the capital  of Brazil, governmental ...

Group Gathered in Brazil Wraps Up Bank Created to Counter US Influence

Brazil and six other South American countries agreed to establish Banco del Sur (Bank ...