Wood Group wins UK refinery contact
Published by Anna Nicklin,
Assistant Editor
Hydrocarbon Engineering,
The contract will commence on 1 January 2018. It builds on Wood Group’s support of Total’s assets across the globe, including its UK offshore portfolio. In 2015, the company secured a five-year contract to deliver engineering, procurement, construction and commissioning services to four of Total’s offshore assets and two onshore facilities in the UK continental shelf; the Alywn, Dunbar, Elgin and Franklin platforms, St Fergus Gas Terminal and Shetland Gas Plant (SGP).
Robin Watson, CEO of Wood Group, commented: “We are strategically focused on leveraging our proven offshore track record of strong service, to broaden our downstream footprint in the UK; and this contract win achieves this.
“Our extensive capabilities in offshore maintenance gained from over two decades of working with Total, position us uniquely to maximise the productivity while maintaining the integrity of this significant asset.”
The contract will commence on 1 January 2018. It builds on Wood Group’s support of Total’s assets across the globe, including its UK offshore portfolio. In 2015, the company secured a five-year contract to deliver engineering, procurement, construction and commissioning services to four of Total’s offshore assets and two onshore facilities in the UK continental shelf; the Alywn, Dunbar, Elgin and Franklin platforms, St Fergus Gas Terminal and Shetland Gas Plant (SGP).
Robin Watson, CEO of Wood Group, commented: “We are strategically focused on leveraging our proven offshore track record of strong service, to broaden our downstream footprint in the UK; and this contract win achieves this.
“Our extensive capabilities in offshore maintenance gained from over two decades of working with Total, position us uniquely to maximise the productivity while maintaining the integrity of this significant asset.”
Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/refining/11102017/wood-group-wins-uk-refinery-contact/
You might also like
Low US distillate consumption reflects slow economic activity and biofuel substitution
The EIA reports that US distillate consumption so far this year is lower than usual because of warm winter weather, reduced manufacturing activity, and continued substitution of biofuels in place of petroleum distillate on the US West Coast (PADD 5).