The Wood Group said yesterday (11th April)that one of its divisions has been awarded a major contract to modify onshore oil and gas equipment in Algeria.
A spokeswoman for the Aberdeen-based energy services firm said its engineering and production facilities unit won a multimillion-dollar deal to service equipment for the In Amenas Project (IAP) in south-eastern Algeria.
She said it is the division's first big contract in the oil-rich North African region. The initial contract is for 18 months, with a possible two-year extension, and is expected to create more than 100 jobs in Algeria.
The IAP is run by three partners – BP, the Norwegian oil and gas company Statoil, and Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company.
Algeria is the second-largest natural gas exporter to Europe after Russia.
The onshore IAP project is the largest wet gas project in Algeria and involves the development and production of natural gas and gas liquids from four wet gas fields in the Illizi basin in the south-eastern part of the country. Wet gas is natural gas containing significant amounts of liquifiable hydrocarbons.
The project is expected to produce around nine billion cubic metres of gas per year of wet gas and 50,000 barrels of liquids starting in 2006, sustained over the next 20 years.
Wood said it will transfer techniques developed in its North Sea projects to North Africa.
"This contract represents a strategic application of Wood Group's proven ability to deliver added value in the challenging mature fields of the North Sea to new prospects in Algeria," said John Stewart, director of Wood Group, Middle East and North Africa. "It is the group's policy, wherever possible, to use local skills and expertise, so we will be transferring North Sea knowledge into Algeria."
The Wood Group said yesterday that one of its divisions has been awarded a major contract to modify onshore oil and gas equipment in Algeria.
A spokeswoman for the Aberdeen-based energy services firm said its engineering and production facilities unit won a multimillion-dollar deal to service equipment for the In Amenas Project (IAP) in south-eastern Algeria.
She said it is the division's first big contract in the oil-rich North African region. The initial contract is for 18 months, with a possible two-year extension, and is expected to create more than 100 jobs in Algeria.
The IAP is run by three partners – BP, the Norwegian oil and gas company Statoil, and Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company.
Algeria is the second-largest natural gas exporter to Europe after Russia.
The onshore IAP project is the largest wet gas project in Algeria and involves the development and production of natural gas and gas liquids from four wet gas fields in the Illizi basin in the south-eastern part of the country. Wet gas is natural gas containing significant amounts of liquifiable hydrocarbons.
The project is expected to produce around nine billion cubic metres of gas per year of wet gas and 50,000 barrels of liquids starting in 2006, sustained over the next 20 years.
Wood said it will transfer techniques developed in its North Sea projects to North Africa.
"This contract represents a strategic application of Wood Group's proven ability to deliver added value in the challenging mature fields of the North Sea to new prospects in Algeria," said John Stewart, director of Wood Group, Middle East and North Africa. "It is the group's policy, wherever possible, to use local skills and expertise, so we will be transferring North Sea knowledge into Algeria."
The Wood Group said yesterday that one of its divisions has been awarded a major contract to modify onshore oil and gas equipment in Algeria.
A spokeswoman for the Aberdeen-based energy services firm said its engineering and production facilities unit won a multimillion-dollar deal to service equipment for the In Amenas Project (IAP) in south-eastern Algeria.
She said it is the division's first big contract in the oil-rich North African region. The initial contract is for 18 months, with a possible two-year extension, and is expected to create more than 100 jobs in Algeria.
The IAP is run by three partners – BP, the Norwegian oil and gas company Statoil, and Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company.
Algeria is the second-largest natural gas exporter to Europe after Russia.
The onshore IAP project is the largest wet gas project in Algeria and involves the development and production of natural gas and gas liquids from four wet gas fields in the Illizi basin in the south-eastern part of the country. Wet gas is natural gas containing significant amounts of liquifiable hydrocarbons.
The project is expected to produce around nine billion cubic metres of gas per year of wet gas and 50,000 barrels of liquids starting in 2006, sustained over the next 20 years.
Wood said it will transfer techniques developed in its North Sea projects to North Africa.
"This contract represents a strategic application of Wood Group's proven ability to deliver added value in the challenging mature fields of the North Sea to new prospects in Algeria," said John Stewart, director of Wood Group, Middle East and North
The herald.