Magnus
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The Magnus Oilfield was discovered in March 1974 in acreage licensed to BP in the 4th licensing round. Oil was found 2,709 metres below the seabed in a water depth of 186 metres. The discovery by the semi-sumersible drilling rig Sedco 703 was made in the younger sands of the Upper Jurassic. The field was named after the Viking saint of Orkney - Magnus. Magnus is the UK's most northerly field, located 160 kilometres NE of the Shetland Islands, mainly in Block 211/12a. The reservoir is estimated to contain 1.54 billion barrels of oil, of which 869 million (56%) are recoverable. |
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The water depth and hostile environment of the Northern North Sea put severe constraints on the development of the field. The development plan set out the following system:
- A single central combined drilling and production platform of conventional steel structure.
- Seven subsea producing wells, capable of being converted to water injection, each with a remotely-controlled wellhead, and connected to the platform by a buried control umbilical and flowline.
- A 24-inch crude oil pipeline from the Magnus field to the Ninian Central platform
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Oil from the Magnus reservoir is recovered by 14 deviated platform wells. The produced oil flows to collector manifolds and is processed through two indentical production trains.
In each train the oil passes through two separation stages at decreasing pressures to the main oil line booster pumps. Oil from the two trains is then combined, metered and exported to the Sullom Voe Terminal. Gas separated from the oil is cooled and compressed to recover valuable gas liquids. The gas is then dried, compressed and exported via the FLAGS line to St Fergus. Some of the processed gas is also used to power the platform. Produced water is cleaned and discharged to the sea.

