Kollsnes

View of Kollsnes, looking south

Kollsnes is a natural gas processing plant operated by Statoil on the southern part of the island Oøy in the municipality of Øygarden in Hordaland county, Norway. It processes the natural gas from the Troll, Kvitebjørn, and Visund gas fields. Kollsnes has a capacity of 143,000,000 cubic metres (3.8×1010 US gal) of natural gas per day.[1]

Operation

At Kollsnes the Natural gas liquids (NGL) are separated out of the gas. The dry gas is compressed and then shoved by large compressors out in the pipe systems that transport it to the customers. In 1999, it was decided that the gas from Kvitebjørn was to be landed at Kollsnes. The consistency of the gas from the field made it well suited to be reprocessed to upgraded products. The new plant that was built cost NOK 3 billion, with operations starting on 1 October 2004. Starting in October 2005, the gas from Visund is also landed at Kollsnes. With a capacity of 25,000,000 cubic metres (6.6×109 US gal) gas per day and large flexibility, the new NGL plant can process gas from new fields that would be built.[1]

Though the Vestprosess gas pipeline, the plant at Kollsnes is linked to the plants at Mongstad, where the NGL from Kollsnes is fractioned into propane, butane, and naphtha. The gas from Kollsnes is transported through the four pipe systems Statpipe, Zeepipe, Europipe I, and Franpipe to continental Europe and supplies Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Spain, and the Czech Republic with gas. The pipes are owned by Gassled, operated by Gassco while the technical responsibility is handled by Statoil.[1]

Power Consumption

In 2009, the electric power consumption of the plant was 2,000 gigawatt-hours (7,200 TJ) per year. This had increased from 1,000 gigawatt-hours (3,600 TJ) per year in 1996.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Store norske leksikon. "Kollsnes" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2014-11-25.

External links

Coordinates: 60°32′55″N 4°50′14″E / 60.5486°N 4.8371°E / 60.5486; 4.8371

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.