Turkey kick starts drilling at new location in Black Sea

DM Monitoring

Ankara: Turkey’s first drillship Fatih has kickstarted drilling at a new location in the Black Sea, where the country recently made its largest-ever natural gas discovery, the nation’s energy and natural resources minister announced.
The vessel arrived at the Türkali-1 borehole in the Sakarya gas field Monday after completion of maintenance works at a port in the Black Sea coastal town of Filyos, where it had arrived on Oct. 19. “We have started drilling in the Türkali-1 borehole after preparatory work. Our drilling will take 75 days. May it be fruitful,” Energy and Natural Resources Minister Fatih Dönmez said on Twitter. Fatih recently discovered 405 billion cubic meters (bcm) of natural gas at the Tuna-1 location in the Sakarya gas field, located about 100 nautical miles north of Turkey’s Black Sea coast. Turkey expects the first gas flow from the field in 2023, with an envisaged annual gas flow of between 5-10 bcm. The field is expected to reach plateau production of around 15 bcm as of 2025. The country plans to open up to 40 wells in the field, of which up to 10 wells are projected to be completed by 2023, officials said earlier.
The country is expected to kick-start seismic works within this month and has a five-to-six-month seismic program for the Sakarya gas field. The third drillship, Kanuni, which joined the fleet earlier this year, is currently located off Istanbul and will soon also depart for the coastal town of Filyos before joining Fatih in January of next year. Turkey currently has three drillships in its fleet operating in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Yavuz operates in the Eastern Mediterranean, while Fatih has been carrying out activities in the Black Sea. Dönmez last month said the country is exploring and analyzing options for leasing or acquiring a new drilling vessel as activities intensify in both seas.
“Our plans were that two to three drillships would be enough until the first discovery. But we will have intensive drilling work after the first find,” the minister had said. “One of our vessels is in the Mediterranean. We have two ships in the Black Sea.