Caley Ocean Systems has been awarded a contract by Cameron to develop a new deployment and overboarding system for the Multiple Application Re-injection System (MARS) for deepwater scale squeeze applications.
The modular handling system will allow the MARS hardware to be more easily deployed onto the seabed from smaller vessels.
The MARS system is used to improve oil recovery as part of enhanced oil recovery (EOR) in mature basins, brownfield developments and greenfield projects. Caley, an offshore handling systems specialist, is supplying a standalone handling system comprising a high performance spooler, hydraulic power unit (HPU) and control station.
According to the release, it will use a flexible riser to deploy the MARS system, and feature Caley's proven clamping technology to reduce fatigue loading on the riser.
Recommended Reading
Air Liquide to Add CO2 Recycling at Plant in Germany
2024-02-08 - In a supply agreement, Air Liquide and Dow plan to add a new CO2 recycling solution to two air separation units and one partial oxidation plant.
SAF End-users, Producers Talk Challenges, Solutions
2024-02-07 - The lower lifecycle emissions of sustainable aviation fuel are seen as a key lever for airlines to reduce carbon emissions, but cost is a challenge.
A Different Way to Approach Energy Industry Hiring
2024-02-07 - Modern energy companies have embraced competitive efficiency, cutting-edge innovation and ESG transparency. It is time for modern energy hiring to do the same.
CAPP Forecasts $40.6B in Canadian Upstream Capex in 2024
2024-02-27 - The number is slightly over the estimated 2023 capex spend; CAPP cites uncertain emissions policy as a factor in investment decisions.
Majority of Recent CO2 Emissions Linked to 57 Producers - Report
2024-04-03 - The world's top three CO2-emitting companies in the period were state-owned oil firm Saudi Aramco, Russia's state-owned energy giant Gazprom and state-owned producer Coal India, the report said.