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BOEMRE Approves Deepwater Drilling Permit for New Well included in First Approved Exploration Plan
NEW
ORLEANS - The
Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and
Enforcement (BOEMRE) today approved a deepwater drilling
permit for a new well that was described in Shell
Offshore Inc’s recently approved Exploration Plan. The
proposed well was also considered in the Site-Specific
Environmental Assessment (SEA) completed as part of the
plan review. In order to receive the permit approval,
Shell complied with rigorous new safety standards
implemented in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon
explosion and resulting oil spill. This includes
satisfying the requirement to demonstrate the capacity
to contain a subsea blowout. The approved permit is a
permit to drill a new well for Shell’s Well #DC001 in
Garden Banks Block 427 in 2,721 ft. water depth,
approximately 137 miles off the Louisiana coastline,
south of Lafayette.
“Today’s permit approval
represents a culmination of a broad and comprehensive
review process involving an exploration plan, a
site-specific environmental assessment, and the
application for the drilling permit - all of which
complied with our rigorous safety and environmental
standards,” said BOEMRE Director Michael R. Bromwich.
“The completion of this process further demonstrates
that we are proceeding as quickly as our resources allow
to properly regulate offshore oil and gas operations in
the most safe and environmentally-responsible manner.”
All offshore wells are
identified in either an exploration or development plan,
which require approval prior to drilling permits being
issued. Shell’s supplemental Exploration Plan, which
includes Well #DC001, was approved March 21, 2011, as
the first new deepwater exploration plan approved since
the Deepwater Horizon explosion and resulting oil spill.
As part of the plan’s review process, BOEMRE prepared a
SEA to examine Shell’s proposed exploration activities
in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act
and the implementation of departmental and bureau
regulations. For more
information, go to:
http://www.doi.gov/news/pressreleases/Interior-Approves-First-Gulf-of-Mexico-Deepwater-Exploration-Plan-with-Post-Deepwater-Horizon-Environmental-Review.cfm
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As part of the permit
approval process, the bureau reviewed Shell’s
containment capability available for the specific well
proposed in the permit application. Shell has contracted
with the Marine Well Containment Company to use its
capping stack to stop the flow of oil should a well
control event occur. The capabilities of the capping
stack meet the requirements that are specific to the
characteristics of the proposed well.
BOEMRE has worked
diligently to help industry adapt to and comply with
new, rigorous safety practices. These standards ensure
that oil and gas development continues, while also
incorporating key lessons learned from the Deepwater
Horizon oil spill. This new permit meets the new safety
regulations and information requirements in Notices to
Lessees N06 and N10, and the Interim Final Safety Rule.
Today’s permit adds to the
number of permits that have been approved since new
safety regulations have been put in place. For a list of
well types, pending and approved permits, and
information on new safety regulations, go to:
http://www.gomr.boemre.gov/homepg/offshore/safety/well_permits.html.
Contact:
BOEMRE
Public Affairs-Gulf |