Seria Field

Seria Field

Location within Brunei

Country Brunei
Location Seria
Coordinates 4°37′00″N 114°19′02″E / 4.61667°N 114.31722°E / 4.61667; 114.31722Coordinates: 4°37′00″N 114°19′02″E / 4.61667°N 114.31722°E / 4.61667; 114.31722
Operator Brunei Shell Petroleum
Field history
Discovery 1929
Production
Producing formations Upper Miocene

Seria Field is the largest oil field in northwest Borneo, discovered in 1929. The oil is accumulated in Upper Miocene sandstone, trapped in Seria Anticline that straddles the present day coastline. This field has produced more than 1 billion barrels of oil for more than 75 years. Brunei Shell Petroleum (BSP) is the operator of this field.[1]

The exploration of the field started in late 1926, when F. F. Marriot (British Malay Petroleum Company Field Superintendent) and T. G. Cochrane (General Manager of Sarawak Oilfields Limited) smelled oil in the Kuala Belait area and asked Straub, a Swiss geophysicist, to do a geophysical analysis of the area.[2]

At the end of World War II, the Japanese ignited 14 of the 21 wells in the Seria field before evacuating. Australian servicemen attempted to control the fires by stopping the flow of the wells.[3]

Wells

To date, more than 900 wells have been drilled in Seria Field, and more than 350 wells are still in production. Key wells include:

References

  1. "History of Oil & Gas". Brunei Shell Petroleum. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  2. "The discovery of the Seria Field". Brunei Shell Petroleum. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  3. "14 Brunei oil wells ablaze". Dundee Evening Telegraph. Angus, Scotland. 1945-06-30. Retrieved 2015-01-21.


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