Jubilee | |
---|---|
Country | Ghana |
Region | Atlantic Ocean |
Offshore/onshore | offshore |
Coordinates | 4.49278,-2.916667 |
Operator(s) | Tullow Oil - 49.95% Kosmos - 18% Anadarko - 18% Ghana National Petroleum Corporation - 10% Sabre Oil & Gas - 4.05% |
Field history | |
Discovery | 2007 |
Start of development | 2007 |
Start of production | 2010 |
Production | |
Current production of oil | 1,900 barrels per day (~95,000 t/a) |
Estimated oil in place | 600 million barrels (~8.2×10 7 t) |
Estimated oil in place (million tonnes) | 82 |
Estimated gas in place | 800 billion cubic feet (23×10 9 m3) |
Estimated gas in place (billion cubic meters) | 23 |
The Jubilee oil field is an oil field located in the Atlantic Ocean.
The Jubilee field is located 60km offshore between the Deepwater Tano and West Cape Three Points blocks in Ghana. It consists of the Odum, Mahogany-2, Heydua-2 and Mahogany-3 wells.
It was discovered in 2007 and developed by Tullow Oil.
Equity partners of the Deepwater Tano block are Tullow with 49.95%, Kosmos with 18%, Anadarko with 18%, Sabre Oil & Gas with 4.05%, and Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) with 10%.
West Cape Three Points is held by Tullow with 22.9%, Kosmos with 30.88%, Anadarko with 30.88%, Sabre Oil & Gas with 1.85%, Ghana National Petroleum (GNPC) with 10%, and EO Group with 3.5%.
The Jubilee appraisal and development programme began at the end of 2008 and the Odum, Mahogany-2, Heydua-2 and Mahogany-3 wells were drilled.
Parallel to the appraisal drilling programme, phase I development of the core field has progressed at a rapid pace since July 2008. Tullow is the operator and Kosmos Energy is the technical operator of the phase I development plan.
The tanker vessel Ohdoh was converted for the Jubilee field and christened the floating, production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel Kwame Nkrumah MV21.
It began production in 2010 and produces oil. The total proven reserves of the Jubilee oil field are around 600 million barrels (82×106tonnes), and production is centered around 20,000 barrels per day (3,200 m3/d).[1]