Norwegian gas processing plant due capacity revamp

April 11, 2016
Gassco AS, operator for Gassled-a joint venture of oil and gas companies on the Norwegian continental shelf and the owner of Norwegian gas transportation systems-is planning to boost capacity for handling rich gas by yearend at its 90 million-cu m/day Karsto gas processing plant near Haugesund on Norway's west coast.

Robert Brelsford
Downstream Technology Editor

Gassco AS, operator for Gassled-a joint venture of oil and gas companies on the Norwegian continental shelf and the owner of Norwegian gas transportation systems-is planning to boost capacity for handling rich gas by yearend at its 90 million-cu m/day Karsto gas processing plant near Haugesund on Norway's west coast. Approved at the beginning of 2015, the expansion will include modifications designed to increase the plant's rich-gas processing capacity by 5.7 million cu m/day, Gassco said. The expansion is due to be completed and operational by the start of the 2016 contract year on Oct. 1, the company said.

Gassco AS will boost capacity for handling rich gas by yearend at its 90 million-cu m/day Karsto gas processing plant near Haugesund on the west coast of Norway. Photo from Gassco.

While Gassco disclosed no further details regarding Karsto's capacity expansion project, the company did confirm the plant is scheduled for an upcoming planned maintenance shutdown this year. Gassco will execute the Karsto turnaround in conjunction with work to phase in upgraded systems as part of its Kalsto robustness project (KaRP), which aims to rehabilitate aging installations at the 30-year-old Kalsto landfall facility where the Statpipe, Sleipner Condensate, and Asgard Transport pipelines come ashore. KaRP, which began in September 2014, is scheduled to be completed by 2017, the company said.

During the past 7 years, Gassco has invested nearly 10 billion kroner on upgrades at the Karsto plant, the most recent of which includes a 600 million-kroner upgrade of two steam boilers that was completed in 2015. Gassco said it also is evaluating an additional investment of about 1 billion kroner on a project to upgrade Karsto's fire water and blowdown systems, as well as two additional boilers.