top of page
Oil wells2.png

Boomvang

Online

Operator:

Anadarko

Image Source: Anadarko (All rights belong to the original owner.)

Tree5.png
turbine2.png

Type:

Oil & Gas

Design:

Spar

Installed:

2002

Facility:

Production

Water Depth:

1113

meters

Country:

USA - Lake Jackson District

Block:

EAST BREAKS 60. Block 643

Intro

Boomvang is a deepwater spar platform in the Gulf of Mexico, producing oil and gas since 2002. It operates as a regional hub, processing hydrocarbons from its own wells and multiple subsea tie-backs. The facility is permanently moored and connected to export pipelines, supporting long-term production in the East Breaks area.

Field

The Boomvang field is located in East Breaks, Gulf of Mexico, producing from Miocene turbidite sandstone reservoirs. The field is moderate in size and part of a cluster of developments in the area. Reservoirs consist of deepwater channel systems with compartmentalization typical of turbidite sequences. Development integrates nearby discoveries via subsea tie-backs.

Facilities

The Boomvang facility is based on a classic deep-draft spar platform supporting dry-tree wells and subsea tie-backs. Production wells are drilled from the spar and supplemented by subsea wells tied in through manifolds. Fluids are routed to topside processing facilities including separation trains, gas compression, and produced water treatment. Oil is exported via pipeline, while gas is compressed and transported through offshore gas networks. The platform includes water injection systems for pressure maintenance. Subsea infrastructure includes flowlines, risers, and umbilicals for control and chemical injection. Power is generated onboard using gas turbines. The spar design provides stability in deepwater conditions, with risers accommodating both production and export flows. The facility is designed to handle multiple reservoirs and tie-backs, with flexible routing and control systems enabling efficient management of inflow from different sources.

drill2.jpg
Drilltower.jpg

Image Source: Igor Prislin, "Use of Field Monitored Data for Improvement of Existing and Future Offshore Facilities",[https://www.researchgate.net/]. (All rights belong to the original owner.)

Heat Exchanger2.png
marineengine.png
valve2.png

SUBMIT YOUR STORIES AND PHOTOS

RigOil is built on the stories of the people who lived and worked offshore. If you have photos or memories from life on a North Sea platform, we’d love to include them in the archive.
 

Upload your photos and help preserve this shared history.*

Image Upload

*By submitting content, you confirm you have the right to share it and grant RigOil a non-exclusive, royalty-free licence to use the material for editorial, promotional, and commercial purposes. Copyright remains with the contributor.

bottom of page