Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding Co yesterday delivered the hull
of the nation's biggest floating production, storage and offloading
vessel to ConocoPhillips China.
The 300,000-deadweight-ton vessel is valued at US$230 million,
is the largest of its type - and the most expensive ship China has
ever built.
Tan Zuojun (left), vice
general manager of the China State Shipbuilding Corp, shakes hands
with J.D. McColgin (right), president of ConocoPhillips Asia
Pacific, after the signing of a delivery paper for the hull of an
ocean giant. The ship, built by the state ship-building company's
Shanghai Waigaoqiao subsidiary, is among the largest such vessels
in the world.
The ship, named Hai Yang Shi You 117, is among the largest of
its type in the world.
"The ship used the most advanced technologies in the world and
is the first in China with its own intellectual property right,"
said Wang Qi, assistant to the president of the Shanghai
shipyard.
"Its timely delivery marks Waigaoqiao becoming a qualified
subcontractor in the global offshore engineering industry."
Besides being able to load and process raw crude, and to store
and offload stabilized crude, an FPSO vessel can also serve as the
production unit for an offshore crude or natural gas exploration
project.
China first home-made
floating production, storage and offloading vessel was named
"Offshore Oil 117" at Shanghai Waigaoqiao Shipbuilding on Monday,
April 30, 2007.
The new FPSO vessel, which can store as much as two million
barrels of crude oil, will be used at China's largest offshore oil
field, Peng Lai 19-3, located in Bohai Bay in the country's
northeast. The vessel is 323 meters long and 63 meters wide. To put
this into perspective, it equates to the size of three standard
football fields.
The depth of the hull is 32.5 meters and the distance from the
bottom to the chimney is 71 meters, which is as high as a 24-floor
building.
"The ship will next be towed to Singapore, where the FPSO
topside modules are being fabricated," said J.D. McColgin,
president of ConocoPhillips Asia Pacific. "Once the modules are
installed on the deck and integrated with the hull, they will be
commissioned prior to the vessel's return to China in
mid-2008."
The new FPSO is expected to be put into operation before the
Beijing Olympic Games, company officials said. Shanghai Waigaoqiao
signed a deal with ConocoPhillips China in March, 2005, to build
the vessel.
COPC is cooperating with the China National Offshore Oil Corp in
the Peng Lai project. It is a subsidiary of Houston-based
ConocoPhillips Petroleum Company, the world's fourth-largest
refiner.
Waigaoqiao expects the construction of FPSO vessels to further
propel the country's ship-building industry.
(Shanghai Daily, Xinhua News Agency May 1,
2007)