Abstract

Abstract The Viking Fields were a gas development in the UK Southern North Sea, c. 130 km east of the Lincolnshire coast in 30 m water depth and covering Blocks 49/11d, 49/12a, 49/16a, 49/16c, 49/17a. The area comprised the Viking A, B, C, D and E Fields. The Viking Fields were discovered in 1965 and started producing in 1972. The development was in two phases from 1971 to 1994 and from 1995 to 2000; the latter phase included the ‘Phoenix development’. The fields continued to produce until September 2015. Plugging and abandonment of the Viking Field wells was complete in 2017, with final decommissioning planned for 2021. The Viking Fields have produced 3.3 tcf of gas from the Rotliegend Group, Leman Sandstone Formation, aeolian-dominated reservoir rocks with a porosity range of 7–25% and average permeability of >100 mD. The Viking reservoirs are impacted by NE--SW De Keyser faults which often delineate and compartmentalize the reservoirs. The final recovery factor for the Viking Fields was 90%. This paper summarizes the geology, development history and performance of these legacy assets.

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