Puneet Varma (Editor)

Samotlor Field

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Country
  
Russia

Partner
  
Rosneft

Discovery
  
1965

Peak year
  
1980

Start of development
  
1967

Operator
  
Samotlorneftegaz

Year of current production of oil
  
2013

Offshore/onshore
  
onshore

Producing formations
  
Cretaceous ages

Start of production
  
1969


Location
  
Lake Samotlor, Nizhnevartovsk district,

Current production of oil
  
332,782 barrels per day (~1.658×10^ t/a)

Regions
  
Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Tyumen Oblast

Samotlor Field is the largest oil field of Russia and the sixth largest in the world, owned and operated by Rosneft. The field is located at Lake Samotlor in Nizhnevartovsk district, Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug, Tyumen Oblast. It covers 1,752 square kilometres (676 sq mi).

Contents

History

Samotlor Field Cassandra39s Legacy Russian oil and the future of catalytic chemistry

The field was discovered in 1965. Development started in 1967 and first oil was produced in 1969. Discovery of this field had changed Nizhnevartovsk from a small nearby village into a busy oil city as Samotlor used to be the most important oil production base of the Soviet Union. After breakup of the Soviet Union the field was owned by Samotlorneftgaz and TNK-Nizhnevartovsk, which later formed TNK-BP.

Over the all development period a total of 2,086 well clusters (containing more than 17,000 wells) have been built and about 2.6 billion tons of oil has been produced. The peak production occurred in 1980 when Samotlor produced 158.9 million tons of oil (7 Mbbl/d or 1.1×10^6 m3/d). The production has been in decline ever since, although according to TNK-BP the field production has stabilized over the past last years after.

Reserves

Samotlor Field GEO ExPro Khanty Mansiysk Oil Sport and Woolly Rhinos

The in-place oil reserves of the Samotlor field were equal to 55 billion barrels (8.7×10^9 m3) and as of 2009 estimated at 1 billion barrels (160×10^6 m3). The proven reserves are approximately 44 billion barrels (7.0×10^9 m3). The field is 80% depleted with water-cut exceeding 90%.

At the end of the 1990s, production rate dropped to 300,000 barrels per day (48,000 m3/d). However, through an aggressive exploration program and application of cutting-edge technologies TNK-BP had raised production up to 750,000 barrels per day (119,000 m3/d). Up to 2012, TNK-BP plans to invest US$1 billion per year for maintaining oil production in it at the level of 30 million tons per year.

In media

The oil processing plant in Nizhnevartovsk is the scene of (but referred to by location rather than directly by name) the beginning of Tom Clancy's 1986 novel Red Storm Rising.

References

Samotlor Field Wikipedia