Statoil has awarded Maersk Drilling a contract for chartering a completely new jackup rig for the Dagny field on the Norwegian continental shelf (NCS).
The jackup rig will drill on the Dagny oil and gas field in the North Sea. Earlier this year, Statoil and its partners chose a fixed processing platform concept, by which the gas is to be connected to the Sleipner field while the oil is to be transported by ship.
Before the investment decision is made, the selected solution is to be quality-assured in part through various front-end, engineering and design studies, which are now taking place.
The investment decision is expected at the end of 2012 or beginning of 2013, with estimated production start at the end of 2016.
“This will be a completely new jackup drilling rig that is to be built at KeppelFels in Singapore. It will be the third of this type of rig built with the CJ-70 design. Valued at $605 million, the contract runs for four years with two one-year options,” said Jon Arnt Jacobsen, chief procurement officer at Statoil.
Production drilling is scheduled to start the summer of 2015 by pre-drilling through the jacket before the platform deck is installed the summer of 2016. With pre-drilling, production from Dagny can be accelerated.
“Dagny and its satellite tie-in Eirin are among Statoil’s major developments, containing an estimated 300 million barrels of oil and gas, and we are satisfied that Statoil has now ensured capacity in the rig market in connection with this. The field development will extend the life and utilize the available capacity on Sleipner for many years to come,” added Ivar Aasheim, senior vice president for NCS field development at Statoil.

