Brown

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 3

P

earl GTL, the largest, fully integrated gas to liquids


project, has risen from the sands of the Arabian
desert under the Development and Production
Sharing Agreement (DPSA) between the State of
Qatar and Royal Dutch Shell. The project covers ofshore
and onshore development and operations, with Shell
providing 100 per cent of the projects US$18-19 billion
funding the largest equity investment made by Shell in a
single project. Pearl GTL will add around 8 per cent to Shells
production worldwide and will be a major contributor to
growth for the company in 2012 and beyond. It will also
provide the state of Qatar an opportunity to generate large
quantities of high quality liquid fuels and products from its
abundant gas resources for many decades to come. From
announcing Final Investment Decision (FID) on 27 July
2006, it has taken less than fve years to see the frst cargo
leave the plant.
Pearl GTL is the largest and the most complex energy
project launched in Qatar. At the height of construction,
over 52,000 people were employed on site. Building QP
and Shells biggest engineering project to date in Ras
Lafan, a vast industrial zone on Qatars east coast, has been
a major achievement. Around two million freight tonnes of
equipment and materials have been imported to the site,
some 800,000 cubic metres of concrete have been poured,
and 13,000km of cables have been laid. At the peak, piping
and steel equivalent to two and a half Eifel Towers were
being erected every month. The project is not only the
largest GTL plant, it also features the largest oxygen plant
ever built, the largest hydrocarbon industry process water
treatment facility with zero liquid discharge capability and
the largest high quality baseoil plant in the world.
KBR and JGC were the main contractors in a Joint
Venture agreement. The JV was awarded contracts to
provide the Basis of Design (BOD) / Basis Design Package
(BDP), Front-End Engineering Design (FEED), project
management and start-up support of the overall onshore
complex, along with engineering, procurement and
construction management of the GTL synthesis, utilities
and infrastructure sections of the complex. But many
other major contractors from the US, Europe and the
Far East were also involved. During detailed design, 13
design ofces in 10 diferent countries were designing
diferent sections of the plant. By the end of 2010 major
Pearl GTL: Making liquids
out of gas on a grand scale
138 20TH WORLD PETROLEUM CONGRESS
BY ANDREW BROWN
EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT, SHELL QATAR
Innovation
The Pearl Gas-to-Liquids (GTL) plant in Qatar
ENERGY SOLUTIONS FOR ALL 139
construction was complete. On 23
March 2011 the wells, 60km ofshore,
were opened and gas began fowing
into the plant. 13 June saw the frst
cargo of on-spec GTL gasoil sail away
from Ras Lafan Port.
When fully operational, the
integrated project will produce 1.6
billion cubic feet of gas per day from
the North Field, considered to be the
largest single non-associated gas
reservoir in the world with estimated
recoverable resources in excess of 900
trillion cubic feet.
Once onshore the gas will then be
processed into 140,000 barrels a day
(b/d) of GTL products, comprising mainly
GTL gasoil which is clear, odourless,
has low emissions and can be used in
modern diesel engines; GTL kerosene
for aviation fuel; high quality baseoils for
advanced lubricants; GTL naphtha used
in the production of plastics and normal
parafn for detergents. The plant will
produce enough diesel fuel to fll over
160,000 cars a day and enough synthetic
oil to make lubricants for more than 225
million cars every year. Additionally, Pearl
will produce 120,000b/d of upstream products including
ethane, sulphur, LPG and condensate.
The technology which supports the two train Pearl
GTL plant is called Shell Middle Distillate Synthesis
(SMDS). In the 1920s, German scientists Franz Fischer
and Hans Tropsch invented a chemical synthesis
process to convert syngas into liquids. Some 50 years
later, Shell developed this into an advanced proprietary
version SMDS. This technology was tested and
proven at the SMDS GTL plant in Bintulu, Malaysia in
1993 and has evolved over three decades of research
and development. The Bintulu plant has a capacity of
14,700b/d and is operating reliably and profitably.
Pearl GTL will use technology to limit its environmental
impact. It features one of the largest steam systems in
the oil and gas industry which will circulate 8,000 tonnes/
hour of steam, capturing as much heat as possible from
the chemical reactions to reuse the energy to drive the
large quantity (1.2 GW) of rotating equipment on the
plant. In addition, the water processing plant allows all
the water produced to be recycled, giving it a zero liquid
discharge capability.
The process on Pearl GTL begins with two 30 inch
pipelines carrying the natural gas onshore from the two
platforms standing in water up to 40 metres deep. On
reaching the plant it enters the gas separation unit which
extracts all the naturally occurring hydrocarbons such as
natural gas, ethane and condensate. This separation process
also removes contaminants like metals and sulphur.
The pure methane that remains will then fow to the
GTL section of the plant where it will be converted to
wax. Finally, the liquid hydrocarbon wax is upgraded using
specially developed catalysts into a range of high quality
gas to liquid products.
Making syngas: In the gasifer at around 1,300C,
methane and oxygen from the air separation unit are
converted into a mixture of hydrogen and carbon
monoxide called synthesis gas (syngas). The reaction
Innovation
Feedgas
preparation
Two train
GTL plant
Ofshore
Platforms
Natural Gas Liquids
/Ethane
Gas-to-Liquids
Gas Oil
Base Oil
Naphtha
Kerosene
N-Parafn
Condensate
Ethane
LPG
Full integration from ofshore to rened products
produces heat which is recovered to produce steam
which in turn powers the process via the large steam
turbines.
Making liquid waxy hydrocarbons: The next stage in
the process sees the synthesis gas entering one of 24 reactors
in the plant. Each reactor holds tens of thousands of tubes
containing a Shell proprietary cobalt synthesis catalyst. The
surface area of the catalyst used in the plant would cover
an area equivalent to 18 times the surface area of the State
of Qatar, and if the tubes were laid end to end they would
stretch from Qatar to Japan. The catalyst serves to speed up
the chemical reaction in which the synthesis gas is converted
into long chained waxy hydrocarbons and water. Shell has
fled over 3,500 technical patents for its GTL process. For the
Pearl GTL project, Shell will have spent approximately four
years using dedicated facilities in full-time production to
provide the thousands of tonnes of catalysts required.
Making GTL Products: Using another Shell proprietary
catalyst, the long hydrocarbon molecules from the GTL
reactor are fed into the hydrocracker where they are cut
(cracked) into a range of smaller molecules of diferent
lengths and shape. The process changes the molecular
structure of the very heavy long chained hydrocarbons
into products with lighter, shorter chains. They are then
fed into a distillation column to separate the various
components. In liquid form they are safe, ready to be used
and easily distributed around the world.
Safety
Despite the massive number of workers involved and the
complexity of the construction of Pearl GTL, a strong and
focused safety culture has helped Qatar and Shell achieve a
record-breaking 77 million hours onshore without injuries
leading to time of work.
A benchmark for worker welfare has been set on Pearl
with the introduction of Pearl Village, a 170 acre residential
area that was specifcally built to house construction
workers. It was designed to meet rigorous standards in
sanitation, health, safety, catering, recreation, IT, multi-faith
worship, and banking facilities. Central to the Pearl Village
is Al Muntazah, the Arabic word for park.
This recreation area forms the backbone of the village
and provides extensive sports facilities including cricket,
football and baseball pitches, an outdoor cinema, safety
training centre and shaded seating areas.
The ethos of the facility is to create a home away
from home where the welfare of each and every worker
is looked after holistically. A community environment
has been formed with a Mayor and a dedicated team
who are responsible for welfare, cultural festivals and
act as advocates within the community. To overcome
communication barriers, courses have been given at
the onsite training centre in seven languages including
Hindi, Arabic and Tagalog. By early 2011, workers had
participated in some 367,500 training sessions. At the
peak of construction, it took a huge workforce of over
1,800, including 500 cleaners and over 1,000 kitchen staf,
to ensure that the village ran smoothly.
Research demonstrates that this unique
village community has greatly helped
to consolidate, motivate and focus
the workers and in doing so increase
productivity, efciency and output. Qatar
Shells commitment and focus on safety
was recognised by HE Dr Mohammed Al-
Sada, Minister of Energy and Industry, on
16 May 2011, when it was awarded the
inaugural Oil and Gas Industry Gold Award
for Safety.
In terms of advances in new technologies,
the number of new patents raised, the
magnitude of the scale of construction,
signifcant developments in worker welfare,
outstanding health and safety records,
Pearl GTL is a colossal and remarkable
achievement by all those involved. n
ENERGY SOLUTIONS FOR ALL 141
Innovation
1.00
0.50
0
2009 2008 2007 2010
0.66
0.55
0.45
0.23
0.23
0.10
0.04
Oil and gas producers
Pearl GTL
HSE on Pearl demonstrates a performance of 10 times
lower lost time incidents than the Industry average

You might also like