Chevron announces first oil from Jack/St. Malo Project in the Gulf of Mexico

Staff Report

SAN RAMON, Calif., – Chevron Corporation announced that crude oil and natural gas production has begun at the Jack/St. Malo project in the Lower Tertiary trend, deepwater U.S. Gulf of Mexico in a news release Tuesday.
Jack/St. Malo is a key part of Chevron’s strong queue of upstream projects and was delivered on time and on budget, the release stated.
The Jack and St. Malo fields are among the largest in the Gulf of Mexico, the company said. They were discovered in 2004 and 2003, respectively, and production from the first development stage is expected to ramp up over the next several years to a total daily rate of 94,000 barrels of crude oil and 21 million cubic feet of natural gas, the news release stated. With a planned production life of more than 30 years, current technologies are anticipated to recover in excess of 500 million oil-equivalent barrels, the news release said. Successive development phases, which could employ enhanced recovery technologies, may enable substantially increased recovery at the fields, the company said.
George Kirkland, vice chairman and executive vice president, Upstream, Chevron Corporation, said, “The Jack/St. Malo project delivers valuable new production and supports our plan to reach 3.1 million barrels per day by 2017.”
Jay Johnson, senior vice president, Upstream, Chevron Corporation, said, “This milestone demonstrates Chevron’s capital stewardship and technology capabilities, featuring a number of advances in technology that simply didn’t exist when the fields were discovered.”
Johnson added, “These learnings can now be transferred to other deepwater projects in our portfolio.”
The Jack and St. Malo fields are located within 25 miles of each other in approximately 7,000 feet of water in the Walker Ridge area, approximately 280 miles south of New Orleans.
The fields were co-developed with subsea completions flowing back to a single host, semi-submersible floating production unit located between the fields. The facility is the largest of its kind in the Gulf of Mexico and has a production capacity of 170,000 barrels of oil and 42 million cubic feet of natural gas per day, with the potential for future expansion, he company said.
Jeff Shellebarger, president, Chevron North America Exploration and Production Company, said, “Jack/St. Malo is the result of the collaboration of hundreds of suppliers and contractors and many thousands of people across nine countries over a 10-year period.”
Shellebarger said, “This project highlights our long-term commitment to the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, where Chevron is among the top leaseholders. Moreover, we expect Jack/St. Malo will continue to deliver sustained economic and community benefits, including job creation, along the Gulf Coast.”
The project, which was sanctioned in 2010, has delivered new technology applications, including the industry’s largest seafloor boosting system and Chevron’s first application of deepwater ocean bottom node seismic technology in the Gulf of Mexico, providing images of subsurface layers nearly 30,000 feet below the ocean floor, the company said.
Chevron, through its subsidiary, Chevron U.S.A. Inc., has a working interest of 50 percent in the Jack field, with co-owners Statoil (25 percent) and Maersk Oil (25 percent). Chevron, through its subsidiaries, Chevron U.S.A. Inc. and Union Oil Company of California, also holds a 51 percent working interest in the St. Malo field, with co-owners Petrobras (25 percent), Statoil (21.5 percent), ExxonMobil (1.25 percent) and Eni (1.25 percent); and a 40.6 percent ownership interest in the host facility, with co-owners Statoil (27.9 percent), Petrobras (15 percent), Maersk Oil (5 percent), ExxonMobil (10.75 percent) and Eni (0.75 percent).

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