I started my career at TechnipFMC working in Low Bay and then over to High Bay. Throughout this time I was proficient at servicing and refurbishing a variety of subsea equipment. Soon after excelling within these positions, I was offered an field role and can now apply the extensive knowledge gained from the shop to installing the equipment offshore.
Here's a brief description of my experience...
Shell OWIRS
TechnipFMC's Open Water Intervention Riser System (OWIRS), which is a large, complex pressure control device that is placed on the wellhead once the subsea tree is removed, considered one of the most cost effective ways to enter a well for light workovers. Once the OWIRS is lowered to the seabed by a rig or vessel, coiled tubing or wireline is run through the unit, controlled by an intervention workover control system (IWOCS). Historically, the OWIRS system has been owned and maintained by the operator, with about 30 units believed to be in the market, and TechnipFMC is operating several of these units for customers.
Shell Perdido
Perdido is the world’s deepest spar, and the second-deepest oil and gas production hub after Shell’s Stones development. Moored in around 2,450 metres (8,000 feet) of water in the US Gulf of Mexico, Perdido started production in 2010, opening up a new frontier in deep-water oil and gas recovery.
LLOG Who Dat
Shell Stones
The Stones field, located 200 miles southwest of New Orleans in the Gulf of Mexico, is ultra deepwater discovery that’s spurred unprecedented innovation. In September 2016, the world’s deepest oil and gas project began producing through subsea infrastructure beneath 9,500 feet of water.
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