Page 31: of Maritime Reporter Magazine (August 1986)

Read this page in Pdf, Flash or Html5 edition of August 1986 Maritime Reporter Magazine

deputy director general, Royal Nor- wegian Ministry of Petroleum and

Energy, Oslo 9:30 am—"The Impact of Technolo- gy Advances on the Conversion of

Remote Northern Norwegian Gas to

Marketable Liquid Products," by G.

Atkinson, supervisory process en- gineer, and P. Pool, process man- ager, Fluor Europe Ltd., London 10:15 am—Coffee break 10:30 am—"Concepts for Seaborne

Transportation of Liquefied Gases and Gas Products," by H.H. Iver- sen, assistant director, Moss Rosen- berg Verft A/S, Oslo 11:15 am—"The Economics of Al- ternative Transportation Solutions for Norway's Northern Gas Re- serves," by T. Wergeland, assis- tant professor, Institute for Ship- ping Research, Norwegian School of

Economics and Business Adminis- tration, Bergen

Noon—Lunch 2:00 pm—Panel presentations of main conclusions from the morning session

Chairman: M. Reed, vice president,

Norwegian Shipowners' Associa- tion, Oslo 2:30 pm—General discussion 3:15 pm—Coffee break 3:30 pm—"Statpipe—Early Experi- ence from Operation of an Inte- grated Gas Gathering and Terminal

System," by E. Sael, general man- ager-Statpipe, Statoil, Haugesund 4:15 pm—"Two-phase Flow Re- search at Sintef and IFE: Some

Experimental Results and a Dem- onstration of the Dynamic Two- phase Flow Simulator 'Olga'," by P.

Fuchs, staff engineer, Statoil,

Trondheim

Reservoir Engineering

Some of the technical challenges that must be overcome in order to produce North Sea reservoirs effi- ciently will be covered in this after- noon session through a series of case studies from four Norwegian North

Sea oil and gas fields.

Chairman: S. Nja, director, Norwe- gian Petroleum Directorate, Stavan- ger 2:00 pm—"Preliminary Reservoir

Development Evaluation—Snorre

Field," by R.R. Rounsaville, res- ervoir section manager, Esso Norge

A/S (E&P), Oslo 2:40 pm—"Oseberg: Late Stage De- velopment," by T. Torvund, de- partment manager, Norsk Hydro

A/S, Bergen 3:20 pm—Coffee break 3:40 pm—"Valhall: Production from High Porosity Chalk," by G.

King, research engineer, Amoco

Research Center, Tulsa 4:20 pm—"The Analysis of Water

Encroachment in the Frigg Field," by A. De Leebeeck, head of stud- ies section, Elf Aquitaine Norge

A/S, Stavanger

Friday, August 29:

Drilling

This special conference on drill- ing has been divided into two ses- sions, in the morning covering the impact of petroleum legislation on drilling, and in the afternoon the needs, direction, and aims of re- search in this field.

Chairman: O. Tuxen, general man- ager-drilling department, Norsk

Hydro A/S, Stavanger

August, 1986 33 9:00 am—"Impact of Norwegian

Regulations on Statfjord Field

Drilling Operations," by D.N. Wil- lis, drilling engineering supervisor,

Mobil Exploration Norway Inc.,

Stavanger 9:40 am—"A Rig Owner's View on

Norwegian Regulations," by H.

Krafft, technical director, Gotaas-

Larsen Offshore Ltd., London 10:20 am—Coffee break 10:40 am—"The New Petroleum

Legislation: Its Enforcement and Its

Implications with Regard to Drilling

Operations," by M. Ognedal, di- rector-safety department, Norwe- gian Petroleum Directorate, Stavan- ger 11:20 am—Panel Discussion

Moderator: O.J. Kvinnsland, di- rector, Noroil Publishing House

Ltd., Stavanger

Panel members: K. Kjeldstad, drilling manager, Statoil; H.

KrafFt, technical director, Gotaas-

Larsen Offshore; B. Legris, drill- ing operations manager, Elf Aqui- taine Norge; E.B. Nagell Bjordal, safety manager, Norsk Hydro; M.

Ognedal, safety department direc- tor, NPD; and D.N. Willis, drilling engineering supervisor, Mobil Ex- ploration Norway

Noon—Lunch

Afternoon chairman: C. Kwantes, operations superintendent, E&P,

A/S Norske Shell, Stavanger 2:00 pm—"Needs of Drilling R&D," by R. Rose, director, A/S Norske

Shell, Oslo (continued)

High-Quality Components for Marine Applications

Shown are only o few of the hundreds of high-quality marine products available from a single source.

Designed for a range of shipboard or offshore applications.

Pressure

Switches

Broad choice of electromechanical or solid-state switches to provide shipwide pressure control. Included are diaphragm, bourdon tube and sealed piston types; many are explosion-proof.

Unique

Sounding

Tope Ullage

Indicator

Self-contained, battery-powered unit is convenient to use in shipboard and offshore tanks.

Pressure Transmitters and Transducers

A group of lightweight transmitters and transducers are ideal for monitoring the mechanical health' of shipboard machinery and systems and for gauging tank contents. Included are signal con- ditioned models and vibration versions for monitoring rotating machinery.

Single or Multi-Station

Level

Switches

Ruggedly built for use in liquids from crude to chemicals.

Broad choice includes single station with slosh shielding, oil/water inter- face models, externally mounted styles where access is limited, and multi-station units with up to six stations spaced to suit.

SureSite Liquid Level

Indicators

Bi-colored, interlocking magnetic lings change ' color as float moves with changing liquid levels

Meet requirements of

MIL-I-20037B for indirect reading sight glasses. Withstand shock and vibration.

Unlike cloudy, break- able sight glasses, these SureSite

Indicators are highly visible, accurate and safe. Used with water, oil, or corrosive, flammable or explosive liquids.

Temperature

Switches

Local mount or remote bulb and capillary switches provide accurate, high-stability temperature control. Ideal for sensing engine mani- fold, lube oil and ventilation ducts, salt and fresh water cooling.

Pumps

Axial Multi-Rotor screw pumps are designed for lube and fuel oil service, fuel transfer and hydraulic service on

Naval combatant ships and auxiliary vessels.

Flow rates to 1250 GPM and pressures to 3000

PSIG with the lowest noise levels available.

Get your FREE 28-page catalog now which describes products shown here as well as dozens more.

Any of the products in this catalog may be supplied from cither location shown. Write for your FREE copy of the new catalog or circle the appropriate reader service number. 1 fp Transamerica Delaval

For customers in Europe:

Transamerica Instruments Ltd., Marine Dept.

Lennox Road

Basinqstoke, Hampshire RG22 4AW

ENGLAND

Telephone: (0256) 20244,

Telex 858103 (CECBAS G)

For customers in the U.S. or Far East:

Transamerica Delaval

Cowles Road

Plainville, CT 06062 U S A, (203) 677-1311,

Telex: 99306

Circle 222 on Reader Service Card Circle 220 on Reader Service Card 33

Maritime Reporter

First published in 1881 Maritime Reporter is the world's largest audited circulation publication serving the global maritime industry.