Oil and Gas News | Oil and Gas Jobs | Oil and Gas Engineering
The Oil & Gas Hub
Special Designed Oilfield Tally Book – Try Now
  • Main
  • News
  • Photo
  • Video
  • Oilfield Jobs
  • Learning Section
  • Oil & Gas Calculator

Shell starts with Penguins redevelopment in UK North Sea

2018.01.15
1 809

Royal Dutch Shell plc (Shell) has announced a final investment decision on the redevelopment of the Penguins oil and gas field in the UK North Sea.

The decision authorises the construction of a floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel, the first new manned installation for Shell in the northern North Sea in almost 30 years.

The redevelopment is an attractive opportunity with a competitive go-forward break-even price below $40 per barrel. The FPSO is expected to have a peak production (100%) of circa 45,000 boepd.

“Penguins demonstrates the importance of Shell’s North Sea assets to the company’s upstream portfolio,” said Andy Brown, Upstream Director. “It is another example of how we are unlocking development opportunities, with lower costs, in support of Shell’s transformation into a world class investment case.”

The Penguins field currently processes oil and gas using four existing drill centres tied back to the Brent Charlie platform. The redevelopment of the field, required when Brent Charlie ceases production will see an additional eight wells drilled, which will be tied back to the new FPSO vessel. Natural gas will be exported through the tie-in of existing subsea facilities and additional pipeline infrastructure.



Steve Phimister, Vice President for Upstream in the UK and Ireland said: “Shell has had a strong presence in this part of the northern North Sea for more than forty years. Having reshaped our portfolio over the last twelve months, we now plan to grow our North Sea production through our core production assets. In doing so, we will continue to work with the UK government, our partners and the regulator to maximise the economic recovery in one of Shell’s heartlands.”

The Penguins field is in 165 metres (541 feet) of water, approximately 150 miles north east of the Shetland Islands. Discovered in 1974, the field was first developed in 2002 and is a joint venture between Shell (50% and operator) and ExxonMobil (50%).

A joint venture-owned/Shell-operated Sevan 400 FPSO has been selected as the development option for the field. Oil will be transported via tanker to refineries and gas will be transported via the FLAGS pipeline to the St Fergus gas terminal in north-east Scotland.

Related Posts

Weekly Energy Digest - March 30, 2026
2026.03.30
190
Weekly Energy Digest - March 30, 2026
Oil prices remain high amid the ongoing war in the Middle East, following a volatile week with some…
Weekly Energy Digest - March 24, 2026
2026.03.25
431
Weekly Energy Digest - March 24, 2026
Oil benchmarks hit four-year highs this week as the war choked off Hormuz transit flows. The IEA lau…
Oil and Gas Consulting in the Clean Energy Transition: Strategies for Resilience
2025.12.10
969
Oil and Gas Consulting in the Clean Energy Transition: Strategies for Resilience
Build resilience in the energy transition with expert oil and gas consulting strategies for operatio…
Weekly Energy Digest - October 1st,2025
2025.10.01
2 695
Weekly Energy Digest - October 1st,2025
Oil prices rose last week to their highest levels since last month, on growing tensions and supply r…
Market quotes are powered by TradingView.com
© Oil and Gas News | Oil and Gas Jobs | Oil and Gas Engineering, 2026
ADVERTISE  | Contact Us  | Privacy Policy  
Made in studio Zuber