Bombay High

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Bombay High

Oil Rig at Bombay High
Bombay High is located in India
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Location of Bombay High
Country India
Region Gulf of Khambhat
Location off the coast of Mumbai
Offshore/onshore Offshore
Coordinates 19°25′00″N 71°20′00″E / 19.41667°N 71.33333°E / 19.41667; 71.33333Coordinates: 19°25′00″N 71°20′00″E / 19.41667°N 71.33333°E / 19.41667; 71.33333
Operator(s) ONGC
Field history
Discovery 1965
Start of production 1974
Production
Current production of oil 347,197 barrels per day (~1.730×10^7 t/a)
Year of current production of oil 2009

Bombay High is an offshore oilfield 160 kilometres (99 mi) off the coast of Mumbai (Bombay), India. The oil operations are run by India's Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC).

Bombay High field was discovered by a Russian and Indian oil exploration team operating from the seismic exploration vessel Academic Arkhangelsky during mapping of the Gulf of Khambhat (earlier Cambay) in 1964-67. The naming of the field is attributed to a team from a survey run in 1965 analysed in the Rashmi building in Peddar Road, Cumballa Hill, Bombay. The first offshore well was sunk in 1974.

Every oil resource rock requires oil trap structures which are mainly salt dome, coral reefs, fault trap and fold trap. In case Bombay High it is anticlinal fold trap and this is the most probable reason to call it "Bombay High".

[edit] Production

ONGC platform at Bombay High in the Arabian Sea

As of 2004, it supplied 14% of India's oil requirement and accounted for about 38% of all domestic production.

On 27 July 2005, a major fire destroyed the production platform, leaving at least 11 people dead despite rescue measures taken by the Indian Coast Guard. The platform accounted for 110,000 barrels per day (17,000 m3/d), or 15% of India's oil production. Rebuilding this is expected to take upwards of 4 months and estimated to cost around Rs. 1200 crore or US$300 million.

Crude oil produced from Bombay High is of very good quality as compared to crudes produced in middle east. Bombay High crude has more than 60% paraffinic content while light Arabian crude has only 25% paraffin.[1]

In November 2009, output of Bombay High fields, that accounts for half of the India's domestic oil production, fell 5.3% to 347,197 barrels per day (55,199.9 m3/d).[2]

[edit] References

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