Cuba: Scarabeo 9 rig arrives for offshore exploration work
19 January 2012
Source: Reuters
19 Jan 2012
A Chinese-built drilling rig to be used in the first major
exploration for oil in Cuba's offshore waters arrived on Thursday
off the coast of the communist-ruled island's capital. The rig,
known as Scarabeo 9, could be seen as it sailed slowly westward,
miles off the north coast and Havana's famed Malecon seaside
boulevard. Its arrival went mostly unnoticed by people in the
capital, but it was a long-awaited and landmark day for the
island's oil industry, which believes the platform will tap into
rich oil fields in Cuba's part of the Gulf of Mexico.
Starting next week, Spanish oil giant Repsol YPF, working in
partnership with Norway's Statoil and ONGC Videsh, a unit of
India's Oil and Natural Gas Corp, is expected to drill at least two
wells in Cuban waters about 70 miles from the Florida Keys.
Malaysia's Petronas, in partnership with Russia's Gazprom Neft,
will also drill a well using the Scarabeo 9. The rig has been
contracted from its owner Saipem, a unit of Italian oil company
Eni.
All the wells will be in water at least a mile deep, like that
of the BP well that blew out and spilled millions of gallons of oil
in the U.S. part of the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. Cuba has said it
may have 20 billion barrels of oil in its parts of the Gulf, but
the U.S. Geological Survey has estimated about 5 billion.
Repsol drilled the only previous offshore well in Cuba in 2004
and said it found oil, but said it was not 'commercial.' It has
been trying for several years to bring another rig for more
drilling, a task that was complicated by the longstanding U.S.
trade embargo against Cuba and the limits it places on the amount
of U.S. technology that can be used.
The Scarabeo 9, a semi-submersible rig that floats on four giant
pontoon legs and has living quarters for more than 200 crewmembers,
was built in China, then sent to Singapore in late 2010 for
completion. The only part of the rig said to be American-made is
the blowout preventer, the part that failed in the BP disaster.
Cuba is hoping oil will ease its chronic economic woes and bring
energy independence. It currently receives 115,000 barrels a day
from its oil-rich socialist ally Venezuela. Cuban exile leaders in
the United States fear that oil could help the communist government
stay in power for years to come. They have filed several pieces of
legislation trying to scuttle the offshore project.
Floridians have worried that Cuba could suffer a BP-style
blowout that would send oil into the Straits of Florida and stain
the coast and coral reefs of both the island and the U.S. state 90
miles to the north. Drillers in Cuban waters could get within about
45 miles of Florida, more than twice as close as they can in U.S.
waters, where no oil exploration is permitted with 125 miles of the
Florida coast.
At Repsol's invitation, a team from the U.S. Bureau of Safety
and Environmental Enforcement and the U.S. Coast Guard inspected
the Scarabeo 9 last month in Trinidad and Tobago and found it to
'generally comply with existing international and U.S.
standards
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