Statoil awards contract to Foster Wheeler for Snøhvit development project in Norway
Foster Wheeler announced today that a subsidiary of its global engineering and construction group has received a contract from Statoil Petroleum AS for the pre-front-end engineering (pre-FEED) for the Snøhvit future development project at Statoils Melkøya-based LNG facility on Melkøya Island.
The Foster Wheeler contract value for this project was not disclosed, and the first release of work will be included in the company's first-quarter 2011 results. Statoil has informed Foster Wheeler that further releases of pre-FEED work under the existing contract are likely to be made during 2011, depending upon the development option(s) selected by Statoil.
Foster Wheelers scope of work will include concept design activities in order to finalize the development concept and plant capacity for the production expansion at the Melkøya LNG facility, as well as energy optimization investigations. Foster Wheelers involvement through this contract will continue through 2011.
We have been working with Statoil for some time on a number of studies for the expansion of the Melkøya LNG facility, said Umberto della Sala, interim chief executive officer of Foster Wheeler AG.
This latest award reflects Statoils confidence in our in-depth LNG expertise and the combined added value delivered by our specialist studies team in our business solutions group and by our engineering, procurement and construction experts in developing execution strategies to underpin the concept development, including modularization, he continued.
Delivering technically complex projects in challenging locations is an area in which we specialize and have a long and proven track record.
The existing Snøhvit LNG facility is the worlds northernmost LNG facility and has a design capacity of 4.2 million metric tons/year. Commissioned in 2007, it processes gas transported through 143-km pipeline from the subsea facilities on the Snøhvit and Albatross fields, which comprise the first offshore developments in the Barents Sea.
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