ExxonMobil's
Uaru project, the fifth offshore development in Guyana's Stabroek
Block, will use more subsea tiebacks than any of its predecessors
when it begins production in 2026, with the Mako and Snoek fields
connected to the Uaru anchor via tieback infrastructure,
OilNow reported.
Subsea
tiebacks connect wells drilled on the ocean floor to existing
floating production, storage and offloading vessels through
pipelines and subsea equipment, allowing multiple fields to be
produced through a single offshore hub and reducing capital costs.
Previous Stabroek developments have used the same approach, with
Pacora tied back to the Payara anchor and Redtail tied back to the
Yellowtail anchor.
ExxonMobil
operates the Stabroek Block with a 45% stake alongside Hess at 30%
and CNOOC at 25%. The block holds an estimated 11 billion barrels
of oil-equivalent in discovered resources.
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